Poetry. As if Catullus and Jarvis Cocker had conjoined with John
Betjeman to pen catty, racy, brilliantly-rhyming poem-portraits of an
age enthralled with gin, football, sex and surgery, Dhuga's debut
collection of poetry is a tour de force -- echoing the formal tautness
of Muldoon, the observational nous of Larkin, the mordancy of Eliot.
Sinuous yet unfussy, hilarious yet heartbreaking, THE SIGHT OF A GOOSE
GOING BAREFOOT pushes at the boundaries of our sentiments without
succumbing to sentimentalism. It's no accident that this book takes as
its title a nod, paradoxically, both dull and extravagant, towards
proverbs whose provenances, however dubious, point up the painfully
obvious as it obtains in the banal.