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Where I'd Watch Plastic Trees Not Grow
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Where I'd Watch Plastic Trees Not Grow

Book Details

Format Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10 1912565536
ISBN-13 9781912565535
Publisher Verve Poetry Press
Imprint Verve Poetry Press
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Feb 18th, 2021
Print length 30 Pages
Weight 70 grams
Dimensions 20.90 x 14.90 x 0.70 cms
Product Classification: Poetry by individual poets
Ksh 1,350.00
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‘I’m a widower grieving herself. / My stem still living / while all the petals have died; / my body has begun to droop.’

Hannah has taken her regular hospitalization due to serious illness and made it into astonishing poetry. Her world of the hospital is sometimes like a zoo, sometimes like a gallery and sometimes a crowded town square. The wards contain tigers and crows, butterflies – doctors become poets, the dead turn into an art installation, while outside, the trees are plastic – as unchanging as Hannah’s shielding days that ‘drag like a foot.’ But between the pulled curtains of these words the details of real-life amongst the terminally ill are depicted in full colour. A daughter ‘cries neatly in a corner’ while her mourning father spins ‘his wedding band around his finger.’ Nurses fill ‘carrier bags marked ‘patient’s property’,’ while ‘the industrial plastic’ crinkles as a body is lifted from bed to trolley in its bag. The poet’s eye feels unblinking at times – unable but also unwilling to blink. How could it when it has so much to show? These poems are heavy with import, but they are light with the liveliness of art that is beautifully rendered.

These are extraordinary poems that contain both humour and grief towards a world that continually dehumanizes disabled people in multiple ways. With startling images, Hannah Hodgson balances anger and love, despair and hope – this is a pamphlet that will leave any reader irrevocably changed. – Kim Moore


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