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Cinnamon Press Paperback English

Streetwise

By David Burridge

Regular price £9.99 £8.49 Save 15%
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15% off

Cinnamon Press Paperback English

Streetwise

By David Burridge

Regular price £9.99 £8.49 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched tomorrow with Tracked Delivery, free over £15
Delivery expected between Wednesday, 8th October and Thursday, 9th October
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  • The art of people-watching is one we all engage in, and in Streetwise these observations, suffused with the many ways we imagine the lives of others, take on depth and focus as poet and passers-by interact without a word needing to be said. In nuanced and lyrical pieces, the poet draws on years of experience as an employment lawyer, aware of those turned out onto the street; reflects on personal experience of the paths that lead to medical diagnoses, aware of those whose news was less fortunate, and above all, simply watches with a humane and intelligent perspective. From city streets to the streets of history, from country paths to places of memory, David Burridge follows in the footsteps of the philosopher Rousseau, revealing how much can be discovered by simply walking through a forest or up a hill. A finely layered and compelling reflection on the many routes we take through life, Streetwise is a long-overdue debut to which readers will return. Bonjour Madame! She window-leans out from her living quarters, a crevice of cottage under the wall. Puycelsi – a village high above the Forêt de Grésigne, built to scour and beat off thugs marauding below. For centuries quiet was contained with height and stone. In the mid-morning bask, she presents her proud pots, and while the cat sleeks by, describes the season’s blooming. Her simple sense of completion dosed me with the need to peel back particulars of a simple day to find the universal, and this before darkness quietly closes in.
The art of people-watching is one we all engage in, and in Streetwise these observations, suffused with the many ways we imagine the lives of others, take on depth and focus as poet and passers-by interact without a word needing to be said. In nuanced and lyrical pieces, the poet draws on years of experience as an employment lawyer, aware of those turned out onto the street; reflects on personal experience of the paths that lead to medical diagnoses, aware of those whose news was less fortunate, and above all, simply watches with a humane and intelligent perspective. From city streets to the streets of history, from country paths to places of memory, David Burridge follows in the footsteps of the philosopher Rousseau, revealing how much can be discovered by simply walking through a forest or up a hill. A finely layered and compelling reflection on the many routes we take through life, Streetwise is a long-overdue debut to which readers will return. Bonjour Madame! She window-leans out from her living quarters, a crevice of cottage under the wall. Puycelsi – a village high above the Forêt de Grésigne, built to scour and beat off thugs marauding below. For centuries quiet was contained with height and stone. In the mid-morning bask, she presents her proud pots, and while the cat sleeks by, describes the season’s blooming. Her simple sense of completion dosed me with the need to peel back particulars of a simple day to find the universal, and this before darkness quietly closes in.