Iain Bamforth's third collection applies carnival licence to various
kinds of histories: personal, symbolic, ethnographic, social--even to a
history of representations in the 101 epigrams and "autographemes" that
make up the Paris sequence "Impediments." Away from the city, the
narratives of patients based on his experience as a country doctor in
the south west of Scotland, and the poems set in a mining town in the
Australian outback, contribute to the social history of their
communities as they examine how far a rural doctor--"a fortunate man" in
John Berger's phrase--can negotiate against the sheer weight of common
sense.