**From the prize-winning poet and former Poet Laureate of the United
Kingdom comes a powerful collection of poetry that gives voice to the
people of Britain with a haunting grace.
**
We meet characters whose sense of isolation is both emotional and
political, both real and metaphorical, from a son made to groom the
garden hedge as punishment, to a nurse standing alone at a bus stop as
the centuries pass by, to a latter-day Odysseus looking for
enlightenment and hope in the shadowy underworld of a cut-price
supermarket. We see the changing shape of England itself, viewed from a
satellite "like a shipwreck's carcass raised on a sea-crane's hook, /
nothing but keel, beams, spars, down to its bare bones." In this
exquisite collection, Armitage X-rays the weary but ironic soul of his
nation, with its "Songs about mills and mines and a great war, / lines
about mermaids and solid gold hills, / songs from broken hymnbooks and
cheesy films"--in poems that blend the lyrical and the vernacular, with
his trademark eye for detail and biting wit.