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Darkly comic, brilliantly allusive, elegiac - Martin Mooney's Grub marks the debut of an inventive and highly charged imagination. Dealing with political hypocrisy, the nature of creativity and love, his poems form a series of hard-edged satirical parables exploring an eclectic range of subject matter, including Anna Akhmatova's funeral, the Belfast shipyards, body piercing and poll tax evasion.
Weaving a magical realist fable of a young Irish expatriate adrift in Thatcherite London, Grub's title sequence - with its cast of corrupt policemen, malevolent ghosts and a rapidly disintegrating band of punks and down-and-outs - draws together elements as disparate as the Marchioness disaster and the murder of Roberto Calvi to create a powerful narrative constantly underpinned by 'the spiky friction of the fantastic and the everyday'.
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Previews available in: English
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Poetry, Irish poetry, Fiction, generalEdition | Availability |
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- Created April 1, 2008
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July 23, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
January 15, 2023 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
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April 1, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from Scriblio MARC record |