Further to the last,
I'm reminded I didn't provide an email address for equipage. Orders to
Rod Mengham at
[log in to unmask]
best
s
2009/6/16 Sam Ladkin <[log in to unmask]>:
> Dear All,
>
> Great news from Rod Mengham of Equipage about the lost now found new
> (old) Raworth publication - THERE ARE FEW PEOPLE WHO PUT ON ANY
> CLOTHES (starring it). This sounded terrific in a recent
> reading.Herein advertised with due mention of the new Salt book of
> Raworth's prose - Earn Your Milk. Letters from Yaddo and Serial
> Biography are tremendous works. A good new swathe eh.
>
>
> NEW PUBLICATION
>
> Tom Raworth
>
> THERE ARE FEW PEOPLE WHO PUT ON ANY CLOTHES (starring it)
>
>
> A prose work in 23 sections, mislaid for 35 years and then found in an
> attic, this is a classic Raworth text from the era of Logbook: fast,
> profound, knockabout, intense, tricky, brainy, daft, those were the
> days once again…
>
> A5, 28pp (price £4.50 including P&P)
> Cheques to ‘Equipage’
> c/o Rod Mengham, Jesus College, Cambridge, CB5 8BL
>
>
> And from Salt - Earn Your Milk.
>
> For the Salt seller see
>
> http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/sml/9781844715084.htm
>
> Main description: Earn Your Milk contains all the uncollected prose
> works of Tom Raworth, gathering together Letters from Yaddo, The Vein
> and Letter to Martin Stannard with his uncategorizable prose-work A
> Serial Biography, an extraordinary assembly memoir and reportage. This
> invaluable collection now makes widely available work which was
> previously hard to obtain or long out of print, it will delight fans
> as well as general readers wanting to discover more about one of the
> UK’s most widely-celebrated poets.
>
> Tom Raworth was born in London just before the Second World War and
> has done everything wrong since. For half-a-century he has printed,
> published, translated and written poetry; has occasionally taught in
> several countries; and has read his own work and performed with other
> artists all over the world. He has a taste for spicy food from his
> father’s service in Burma and a quick temper from his Irish mother. He
> is at the moment of no fixed abode. In 2007, in Modena, he was awarded
> the Antonio Delfini Prize for “lifetime career achievement” though as
> he remarks “he is not yet dead.”
>
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