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The Shout: Selected Poems [Hardcover]

Simon Armitage (Author), Charles Simic (Introduction)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 4, 2005
Simon Armitage is one of Britain's most respected poets. He is considered Philip Larkin's successor in both the easy brilliance of his verse and the national acclaim he has received. His subjects have ranged from yardwork to politics, from the fidelity of dogs to the negotiations of lovers. A selection of poetry that is wry, unpretentious, and constantly inventive, The Shout collects Armitage's best work from the past three decades and includes many of his most recent poems.

Man with a Golf Ball Heart

They set about him with a knife and fork, I heard,
and spooned it out. Dunlop, dimpled, perfectly hard.
It bounced on stone but not on softer ground-they made
a note of that. They slit the skin-a leathery,
rubbery, eyelid thing-and further in, three miles
of gut or string, elastic. Inside that, a pouch
or sac of pearl-white balm or gloss, like Copydex.
It weighed in at the low end of the litmus test
but wouldn't burn, and tasted bitter, bad, resin
perhaps from a tree or plant. And it gave off gas
that caused them all to weep when they inspected it.

That heart had been an apple once, they reckoned. Green.
They had a scheme to plant an apple there again
beginning with a pip, but he rejected it.

(20050401)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Bitter wit, laddish insouciance, mysterious story lines and up-to-the-minute, sometimes satirical topics made Armitage's verse a big hit in early-1990s Britain: his first three books (among them ZOOM! and Kid) pushed the former probation officer to the forefront of the so-called New Generation Poets, whose frequently rhymed and metered verse aspired to the immediacy and accessibility of rock music. Though Armitage has 11 books of verse in the U.K., this selection is his first in America, sacrificing chronological order to create provocative juxtapositions. A sonnet about a "Man with a Golf Ball Heart" rubs shoulders with a disquietingly flip, propulsively metred poem about failed suicides. Stanzas about all too ordinary failed love affairs, or about the disillusioned Everyman "Robinson" (whom Armitage borrows from the American poet Weldon Kees) offset weirder, wilder verse in which "there's more going on/ than they'd have us believe": an automobile tire hops between dimensions, an amputee becomes a super-strong cyborg, and Robin tells Batman it's over. Armitage so often depends on nuances of English middle-class life that Americans may not fall for him, though his tough-guy persona, good jokes and metrical skills could help. Charles Simic provides a short but appreciative preface. Harcourt has invested heavily in contemporary British verse and could probably gain from a group promotion. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

UK PRAISE FOR SIMON ARMITAGE
"Armitage creates a muscular but elegant language of his own out of slangy, youthful, up-to-the-minute jargon and the vernacular of his native northern England. He combines this with an easily worn erudition . . . to produce poems of moving originality." -THE SUND AY TIMES



"Armitage''s clever, surprising poems recall both Paul Muldoon and James Tate."
(New York Sun )

"The Shout cements two truths simultaneously: Armitage knows what he''s doing, and it''s time America knew too.."
(Phildelphia Inquirer )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; First Edition edition (April 4, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0151011184
  • ISBN-13: 978-0151011186
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,606,517 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rock'n'Roll mixed with haunting lyricism, July 17, 2007
By 
Margaret E. Smith (Fort Worth, Texas; Winston-Salem, North Carolina; or New York, New York) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Shout: Selected Poems (Hardcover)
The Shout is a compilation of poems from past works by Armitage. The very readable poems in the book, both traditional and experimental, encompass a world of subject matter. I don't usually read much poetry, preferring fiction, but after stumbling on this collection I might start.

The poems freshly explore both the banal and the transcendent with wry humor, authenticity, lyricism and originality.

Darkly humorous "Gooseberry Season" tells the story of an annoyed family calmly murdering an unwelcome houseguest. The elegant, melancholic "To His Lost Lover" is a man's reflection on the experiences he never had in a relationship, regretting "how they never slept like buried cutlery," and he "never drank intoxicating liquors from her navel/ Or christened the Pole Star in her name." "You're Beautiful" is one of my favorites, which you can find online with some searching. Order this book!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Language lovers, delight, January 12, 2007
By 
Julynn (Philadelphia, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Shout: Selected Poems (Hardcover)
All too often these days poetry is something like "I am/but I am not/and there is a puzzle/piece/on the wall" and you feel like it should mean something but you're not sure what.

Simon Armitage is different. The imagery is clear and the language he uses is crystalline in its sharpness and exactitude. The verses are structured with a seamless fluidity so that they flow effortlessly, and yet you are aware of how tightly regimented the words are. This is the work of a master poet, and it shows. All of his poems, no matter how short or long, require several readings: the first time, you are only aware of the precision in the cadence and the evocative images he uses; the second, you start to understand the story he's telling (all of his poems are, essentially, stories); third, you are trying to come to terms with the whys and the hows; fourth, you start to grasp the symbolism and the meaning.

And the strange thing--it never gets old. You read the poems once, twice, ten, fifty times, and each time there is something to marvel at. It's like an old Beatels' LP--you know all the songs on there by heart, you know every note, and yet when you listen to it yet again, there's always something more.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A poet in full command of his art, November 8, 2009
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This review is from: The Shout: Selected Poems (Hardcover)
Simon Armitage's poetic presence in Britain may be an answer to the absence of Philip Larkin; every line in these very poemly poems (Armitage is clearly a master of craft) smell of that same chilling, melancholic smoke Larkin could produce with just a few short lines.

While the title poem is devastating and to be read and re-read for poets who are just getting on to the business of "short impact" poetry: ("The Shout" is a three line stanza, 20 word gunshot blast to the reader's psyche) we find more of who Armitage is by perusing the entire collection. He goes from blazing hot to blazing hot, only occasionally to lukewarm when he writes "love affair" poems that are at times indistinguishable from any younger poet's attempt to convey these kinds of things.

The poems take off when Armitage decides to adopt Weldon Kees' doomed Everyman Robinson. Adding a sort of irascibility and rebelliousness to Kees' mostly helpless and docile figure, "Mr Robinson's Holiday" shows some lifeblood in the otherwise flaccid persona: "Robinson damned if he'll pay an extra pound/for a plug in the bath, soaking for an hour at least/with his heel in the hole/Then without a towel/drying off on a curtain/Typical, Robinson/Typical."

The sole flaw I find in this collection is that Armitage tries on so many new faces, uses so many different poetic devices, that it becomes a bit confusing. Who *is* the poet underneath all of these disguises? On the other hand this is also to be praised: in the contemporary world of poetry there are so many one note numbers and lazy mediocrities propelling postmodern drivel that to encounter a flesh and blood poet as the one we have here is an absolute reward.

A great collection.
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We went out into the school yard together, me and the boy whose name and face I don't remember. Read the first page
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