This new book of poems finds fresh ways of navigating a time of
continual surprise and uncertainty.
Jack Underwood's debut collection, Happiness (2015), was celebrated
for its unconventional and daring tone: 'conversational, arresting . . .
weird, singular' (Guardian). Such qualities are on accomplished
display in this anticipated new collection, as the poems mature and move
on to a wide range of preoccupations, including imminent societal
collapse and current riots; the limits of masculinity and complexities
of fatherhood; as well as uncanny, often amusing scenarios, such as
serving drinks to a gathering of fifteen babies or group kissing in
Empathy Class. Throughout, incongruous and domestic subjects re-align in
skewed lyrics and thought experiments, all presented with a generosity
and tenderness that makes the poet so unmistakable - and indispensable
for the strange times in which we live.