Synopses & Reviews
Midnight in the City of Clocks is the first full collection of poetry from this talented young writer born in 1970 and already well ensconced in the literary world. This lively collection is a study of life in various cities: London, from hangover to Underground; Hiroshima, at noon and midnight; and the "City of Clocks," a fusion of cities and ages as the millennium countdown approaches. Written over the last five years, the poems fall into two parts: "Transit," which includes poems of travel and living abroad (particularly in Japan, where Hill spent two years); and "Back to the City," urban, mostly London poems, crammed with a young man's curiosity and eye for detail and story-telling.
Synopsis
This lively first collection from a young, much-travelled writer, falls into two parts. Transit' includes poems of abroad, especially Japan, where Tobias Hill lived for two years. Back to the City' is about London, from hangover to Underground; Hiroshima; and the City of Clocks', a fusion of cities and ages. They are poems crammed with a young man's curiosity and eye for detail, and show his great ability for story-telling. Tobias Hill lives in London, and besides writing (his short stories are to be published by Faber) he reviews and edits several new magazines. This book is intended for poetry readers, especially younger ones (schools/colleges).
About the Author
Tobias Hill, a poet and writer, is the literary editor of
Don't Tell It style magazine, associate editor of
Trafika International Review, and poetry editor of
The Richmond Review, Britain's premier Internet literary magazine.
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