The Sugar Mile

by Glyn Maxwell

24 Members 1 Review ½ (4.50)

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In this book of poetry, Maxwell returns to the extended verse narrative he employed in Time's Fool, to juxtapose two cities on the brink of irrevocable change. The book begins when the poet steps into an uptown Manhattan bar a few days before September 11, 2001. He is confronted by a regular, a fellow British expatriate. It has been almost exactly sixty-one years since London's "Black Saturday," the start of the worst of the Blitz during World War II. Joe is a survivor of the bombing, and show more his insistent story brings his lost neighbors back to share the terror and the peculiar beauty blooming in the chaos of their last days. The bartender interrupts to brag about New York's wonders--as we begin to understand that the city soon will face its own catastrophic moment in history.--From publisher description. show less

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On September 8, 2001, a British poet, an English gent named Clint, walked into a bar on 86th and Broadway. He began a conversation with the bartender Raul, who was about to move up with a new position at Windows on the World, and an old Englishman, Joey Stone, who had survived "Black Saturday," September 7, 1940, the beginning of the Nazi Blitz on London. Most of the voices in this poetic narrative are those who took shelter in South Hallsville School in Canning Town, waiting for buses to evacuate them into the country. The counterpoint of London, on the brink of destruction, and NYC, oblivious of the terror that awaits, is at the same time subtle and horrifying. Maxwell never gets to 9/11 -- he doesn't have to -- we all know what show more happened.

Each voice has a different poetic rhythm and meter, granting each their individuality. On the back jacket quotes, Derek Walcott praises Maxwell: "Glyn Maxwell's originality lies in his astounding ability to orchestrate asides, parenthetical quips, side-of-the-mouth ruminations into a formal verse with a bravura not dared before." I heartily agree.
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ThingScore 100
Even language in The Sugar Mile is always losing and reclaiming its innocence. The most everyday of words - 'windows', 'world', 'Tate & Lyle' - become loaded with a terrible freight of hindsight, but they cannot be destroyed by it. This is a bold, beautiful and deeply rewarding poem.
Helen Dunmore, The Observer

Lists

Narrative verse for pleasure
75 works; 8 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
32+ Works 574 Members
Glyn Maxwell was born in 1962 in Hertfordshire, England. He studied English at Oxford & poetry at Boston University. Among the honors he has received are the Somerset Maugham Prize & the E.M. Forster Prize. He now lives with his wife & their daughter in Massachusetts, where he teaches at Amherst College. (Bowker Author Biography)

Classifications

Genres
Poetry, Fiction and Literature, Music, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
811.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican poetry20th Century1945-1999
LCC
PR6063 .A869 .S84Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
24
Popularity
1,109,310
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (4.50)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3
UPCs
1
ASINs
1