In Hannah Regel’s brilliant collection, Oliver Reed, the figure of the horse becomes an object for language’s brutality and the all too familiar subjugation of women’s voices, bodies, and labour. An impressive hyperbolic pastiche of pleasurable misbehavior guides a girl named Sorry through her own undoing while naming new tools for calculated resistance. ‘Kill the language. Kill it. Get the shovel. We’re making a belt.’ I would gladly do whatever she tells me to do and wouldn’t think of doing otherwise. Regel creates a new order for the ecstatic wreckage of obedience. – Cassandra Troyan, author of Blacken Me Blacken Me, Growled Regel doesn’t really sound like anyone. Oliver Reed introduces a poetic sensibility that seems as at odds with convention as it is equal to the moment: fully formed, virtuosic, kind of lethal. These are pitiless, discomforting poems that explore our own creatureliness with a deadly curiosity. Each is a transformation: the actor becomes a strange muse and guiding presence, to ‘smoulder a mobile furnace’; the horse, another of the book’s recurring figures, becomes more than an emblem of eros, labour and suffering; the young girl’s bratty insolence turns defiant and stricken. The voice wills these changes into being even as she ‘wills herself barren’. As much as they trouble and seduce, the poems are also watchful, vigilant – they seem to offer a means of protection. Oliver Reed is an astonishing, masterful first book. – Sam Riviere, author of 81 Austerities The second edition of Oliver Reed, published February 2024, includes a newly commissioned introduction by Olivia Kan-Sperling. In Oliver Reed, growing-up happens naturally, clip clip clop, at the same time as it requires someone or something—line break or literal incision—to break you in. Oliver Reed is about how a pony body gets trained and a pony mind gets educated, over and over and over again. Time, in this book, loops more than it progresses: “Sorry attends her Birth” after “Sorry is a Girl, Grown Up.” I wish I’d read Oliver Reed at fourteen or eighteen; then again, I sort of feel like I did. This we already know: if looking at young girls never gets old, writing about them doesn’t, either. — Olivia Kan-Sperling, editor at The Paris Review and author of Island Time
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Hannah Regel was born in Nottingham and now lives in London. From 2012-2019 she was the co-editor of the feminist art journal SALT. Her pamphlet & poetry collection, When I Was Alive and OLIVER REED, are both published with Montez Press. She is the editor at Bookworks and her forthcoming novel, The Last Sane Woman, will be published by Verso in July 2024.
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Paperback. Etat : New. In Hannah Regel's brilliant collection, Oliver Reed, the figure of the horse becomes an object for language's brutality and the all too familiar subjugation of women's voices, bodies, and labour. An impressive hyperbolic pastiche of pleasurable misbehavior guides a girl named Sorry through her own undoing while naming new tools for calculated resistance. 'Kill the language. Kill it. Get the shovel. We're making a belt.' I would gladly do whatever she tells me to do and wouldn't think of doing otherwise. Regel creates a new order for the ecstatic wreckage of obedience.- Cassandra Troyan, author of Blacken Me Blacken Me, GrowledRegel doesn't really sound like anyone. Oliver Reed introduces a poetic sensibility that seems as at odds with convention as it is equal to the moment: fully formed, virtuosic, kind of lethal. These are pitiless, discomforting poems that explore our own creatureliness with a deadly curiosity. Each is a transformation: the actor becomes a strange muse and guiding presence, to 'smoulder a mobile furnace'; the horse, another of the book's recurring figures, becomes more than an emblem of eros, labour and suffering; the young girl's bratty insolence turns defiant and stricken. The voice wills these changes into being even as she 'wills herself barren'. As much as they trouble and seduce, the poems are also watchful, vigilant - they seem to offer a means of protection. Oliver Reed is an astonishing, masterful first book.- Sam Riviere, author of 81 AusteritiesThe second edition of Oliver Reed, published February 2024, includes a newly commissioned introduction by Olivia Kan-Sperling.In Oliver Reed, growing-up happens naturally, clip clip clop, at the same time as it requires someone or something-line break or literal incision-to break you in. Oliver Reed is about how a pony body gets trained and a pony mind gets educated, over and over and over again. Time, in this book, loops more than it progresses: "Sorry attends her Birth" after "Sorry is a Girl, Grown Up." I wish I'd read Oliver Reed at fourteen or eighteen; then again, I sort of feel like I did. This we already know: if looking at young girls never gets old, writing about them doesn't, either.- Olivia Kan-Sperling, editor at The Paris Review and author of Island Time. N° de réf. du vendeur LU-9783945247297
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Etat : New. In Hannah Regelâs brilliant collection, Oliver Reed, the figure of the horse becomes an object for languageâs brutality and the all too familiar subjugation of womenâs voices, bodies, and labour. An impressive hyperbolic pastiche of pleasurable misbehavior guides a girl named Sorry through her own undoing while naming new tools for calculated resistance. âKill the language. Kill it. Get the shovel. Weâre making a belt.â I would gladly do whatever she tells me to do and wouldnât think of doing otherwise. Regel creates a new order for the ecstatic wreckage of obedience.â" Cassandra Troyan, author of Blacken Me Blacken Me, GrowledRegel doesnât really sound like anyone. Oliver Reed introduces a poetic sensibility that seems as at odds with convention as it is equal to the moment: fully formed, virtuosic, kind of lethal. These are pitiless, discomforting poems that explore our own creatureliness with a deadly curiosity. Each is a transformation: the actor becomes a strange muse and guiding presence, to âsmoulder a mobile furnaceâ; the horse, another of the bookâs recurring figures, becomes more than an emblem of eros, labour and suffering; the young girlâs bratty insolence turns defiant and stricken. The voice wills these changes into being even as she âwills herself barrenâ. As much as they trouble and seduce, the poems are also watchful, vigilant â" they seem to offer a means of protection. Oliver Reed is an astonishing, masterful first book.â" Sam Riviere, author of 81 AusteritiesThe second edition of Oliver Reed, published February 2024, includes a newly commissioned introduction by Olivia Kan-Sperling.In Oliver Reed, growing-up happens naturally, clip clip clop, at the same time as it requires someone or somethingâ"line break or literal incisionâ"to break you in. Oliver Reed is about how a pony body gets trained and a pony mind gets educated, over and over and over again. Time, in this book, loops more than it progresses: âSorry attends her Birthâ after âSorry is a Girl, Grown Up.â I wish Iâd read Oliver Reed at fourteen or eighteen; then again, I sort of feel like I did. This we already know: if looking at young girls never gets old, writing about them doesnât, either.â" Olivia Kan-Sperling, editor at The Paris Review and author of Island TimeHannah Regel has two published collections of poetry, When I Was Alive and Oliver Reed (both Montez Press, 2017 and 2020). Her debut novel, The Last Sane Woman, will be published in July 2024 by Verso. She lives in London and works as an editor at Book Works. N° de réf. du vendeur 9783945247297
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. In Hannah Regels brilliant collection, Oliver Reed, the figure of the horse becomes an object for languages brutality and the all too familiar subjugation of womens voices, bodies, and labour. An impressive hyperbolic pastiche of pleasurable misbehavior guides a girl named Sorry through her own undoing while naming new tools for calculated resistance. Kill the language. Kill it. Get the shovel. Were making a belt. I would gladly do whatever she tells me to do and wouldnt think of doing otherwise. Regel creates a new order for the ecstatic wreckage of obedience. Cassandra Troyan, author of Blacken Me Blacken Me, GrowledRegel doesnt really sound like anyone. Oliver Reed introduces a poetic sensibility that seems as at odds with convention as it is equal to the moment: fully formed, virtuosic, kind of lethal. These are pitiless, discomforting poems that explore our own creatureliness with a deadly curiosity. Each is a transformation: the actor becomes a strange muse and guiding presence, to smoulder a mobile furnace; the horse, another of the books recurring figures, becomes more than an emblem of eros, labour and suffering; the young girls bratty insolence turns defiant and stricken. The voice wills these changes into being even as she wills herself barren. As much as they trouble and seduce, the poems are also watchful, vigilant they seem to offer a means of protection. Oliver Reed is an astonishing, masterful first book. Sam Riviere, author of 81 AusteritiesThe second edition of Oliver Reed, published February 2024, includes a newly commissioned introduction by Olivia Kan-Sperling.In Oliver Reed, growing-up happens naturally, clip clip clop, at the same time as it requires someone or somethingline break or literal incisionto break you in. Oliver Reed is about how a pony body gets trained and a pony mind gets educated, over and over and over again. Time, in this book, loops more than it progresses: Sorry attends her Birth after Sorry is a Girl, Grown Up. I wish Id read Oliver Reed at fourteen or eighteen; then again, I sort of feel like I did. This we already know: if looking at young girls never gets old, writing about them doesnt, either. Olivia Kan-Sperling, editor at The Paris Review and author of Island Time Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9783945247297
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