King Driftwood teems with characters and narratives: treasure hunters,
drug dealers, small-town eccentrics - blue-rinsed Mrs Dawes-Llewellyn,
John the Song and Mothman, George Bush and Saddam Hussein glimpsed at a
phantasmagoric funfair; the mourning women of Baghdad. Driven by a
vigorous rhythmic energy, Robert Minhinnick's poems evoke the dense and
different realities of communities, the cadences of voices and weather,
shared maps of streets and cafés, custom and memory, that define life in
Wales, Iraq and Argentina. To a vivid sense of the textures of place,
Minhinnick brings the internationalism of twenty-five years' work in the
environmental movement, an awareness of the dramas of the natural and
human world that is profoundly political but never polemical.
Cover painting Franz Marc (1880-1916), The Fox, 1913. Kunstmuseum,
Dusseldorf, Germany/ The Bridgeman Art Library. Cover design by
StephenRaw.com.