Description

Book Synopsis

Like a toboggan of wolves who have eaten their driver, The Solex Brothers rushes blindly through the forest, drawing on the tropes and archetypes of folk tales, parables, political manifestos, philosophical tracts and grammar. Unlike a toboggan of wolves, The Solex Brothers explores the fate of the individual – albeit a rather feeble individual – and of personal responsibility in a culture of absurd, inexorable forces. Farce navigating towards moral absolution in narratives at once Fauvist and Baroque, expunging the twee with a reformist's remorseless vigour; cherishing its influences with a poststructuralist’s vertical rigour; and, at times, chasing its tail with a schoolboy’s reductive snigger. Like a toboggan of wolves who are beginning to regret having set-upon and eaten their driver, the world of “The Solex Brothers” is funny, sad and irretrievably lost



Trade Review

Kennard’s imaginative range is constantly awe-inspiring, coupling as it does seeming absurdities with healthy doses of down-to-earthiness to concoct, well, I don’t care to try to name what it concocts, because to name it would spoil my day. Reading “The Esplanade”, which concerns a spy and an assassin, sort of, it occurred to me somewhat belatedly that the voice behind these, um, things (the narrator? Well, maybe) is consistent. It belongs to a participant in what’s going on, someone who is a part of things but somehow adrift, at times very switched on and self-assured, at other times bemused and something of a spectator.

-- Martin Stannard * Litter Magazine *

The Solex Brothers struck me as probably the most interesting debut of 2005 ... original and startlingly imaginative lyrical pyrotechnics.

-- Nathan Thompson * Shearsman Magazine *

He is a talent to watch out for. He's got it. Let's hope he doesn't lose it, either to the world of performance cliché or the mainstream's emasculating embrace.

-- Tim Allen * Terrible Work *

Table of Contents
  • The Solex Brothers
  • To a Wolf
  • Log Cabin
  • Scarecrow
  • The Wolf’s Career
  • The Esplanade
  • Notes

The Solex Brothers (Redux): And Other Prose Poems

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    A Paperback by Luke Kennard

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      View other formats and editions of The Solex Brothers (Redux): And Other Prose Poems by Luke Kennard

      Publisher: Salt Publishing
      Publication Date: 05/07/2010
      ISBN13: 9781844715480, 978-1844715480
      ISBN10: 1844715485

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Like a toboggan of wolves who have eaten their driver, The Solex Brothers rushes blindly through the forest, drawing on the tropes and archetypes of folk tales, parables, political manifestos, philosophical tracts and grammar. Unlike a toboggan of wolves, The Solex Brothers explores the fate of the individual – albeit a rather feeble individual – and of personal responsibility in a culture of absurd, inexorable forces. Farce navigating towards moral absolution in narratives at once Fauvist and Baroque, expunging the twee with a reformist's remorseless vigour; cherishing its influences with a poststructuralist’s vertical rigour; and, at times, chasing its tail with a schoolboy’s reductive snigger. Like a toboggan of wolves who are beginning to regret having set-upon and eaten their driver, the world of “The Solex Brothers” is funny, sad and irretrievably lost



      Trade Review

      Kennard’s imaginative range is constantly awe-inspiring, coupling as it does seeming absurdities with healthy doses of down-to-earthiness to concoct, well, I don’t care to try to name what it concocts, because to name it would spoil my day. Reading “The Esplanade”, which concerns a spy and an assassin, sort of, it occurred to me somewhat belatedly that the voice behind these, um, things (the narrator? Well, maybe) is consistent. It belongs to a participant in what’s going on, someone who is a part of things but somehow adrift, at times very switched on and self-assured, at other times bemused and something of a spectator.

      -- Martin Stannard * Litter Magazine *

      The Solex Brothers struck me as probably the most interesting debut of 2005 ... original and startlingly imaginative lyrical pyrotechnics.

      -- Nathan Thompson * Shearsman Magazine *

      He is a talent to watch out for. He's got it. Let's hope he doesn't lose it, either to the world of performance cliché or the mainstream's emasculating embrace.

      -- Tim Allen * Terrible Work *

      Table of Contents
      • The Solex Brothers
      • To a Wolf
      • Log Cabin
      • Scarecrow
      • The Wolf’s Career
      • The Esplanade
      • Notes

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