The Hate Poems Spiral-Bound | 2018-10-15

John Tottenham

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John Tottenham writes poetry. But don't hold that against him. It's the kind of poetry that is accessible to people who don't read poetry, i.e. everybody. This new collection, 'The Hate Poems', presents a further elaboration on the themes addressed in his two earlier volumes - 'The Inertia Variations' and 'Antiepithalamia & Other Poems of Regret and Resentment'. In elegantly-wrought laments of self-deprecation and hateful love poems, the author finds that he has more to say on already exhausted subjects, and gives voice to the kind of thoughts most people prefer not to express but will automatically relate to and be entertained by. Poets are doomed, among other fates, to repeating themselves. Another potential fate is to be consigned to a world of embittered obscurity, and this is the world that Tottenham restlessly inhabits and relentlessly explores. He has staked out a singular terrain where egotism and self-loathing meet, where futility merges with urgency, and beauty is created out of bitterness. He furnishes mesmerizing proof that a poet maudit can still, if not thrive, at least survive, alive and unwell, in this benighted age, and that the dregs can sometimes be the cream.
Publisher: SCB Distributors
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 80 pages
ISBN-10: 1878923293
Item Weight: 0.25 lbs
Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.3 x 8.4 inches
"It's difficult to account for how pleasurable these bitter, coruscating, perverted, hopeless, self-lacerating poems are. They milk levity out of hate, and elegance out of shit, among other alchemical feats."--Laura Kipnis, Against Love: A Polemic
After many years of resistance, John Tottenham finally sold out to the lucrative, fast-paced world of poetry. He is the author of 'The Inertia Variations', an epic poetic cycle on the subject of work-avoidance, indolence and failure (a multi-media interpretation of this work by English musician Matt Johnson, otherwise known as The The, was released in 2017), His work has been described as "magnanimous misanthropy," "magical cynicism," and "an acquired taste that's for everybody."