Edge of the Orison: In the Traces of John Clare's 'Journey Out Of Essex'

Edge of the Orison: In the Traces of John Clare's 'Journey Out Of Essex'

by IainSinclair (Author)

Synopsis

The story goes that in 1841, the poet John Clare escaped from High Beach Asylum in Epping Forest and, heading towards his home in Northborough, covered eighty miles over three-and-a-half days. On foot and alone, he was searching for his lost love, Mary Joyce - a woman already three years dead... In Iain Sinclair 's hands, the bare facts of John Clare's story turn both strange and elliptical. Armed with curiosity and a sense that his work has from the first been haunted by Clare, Sinclair - together with fellow diviners and other stragglers of the road - sets out to recreate Clare's walk away from madness and to explore his own obsession with the poet. Keats, De Quincey, Blake, Pepys, Shelley, Joyce, Beckett, artist Brian Catling and magus Alan Moore - along with Sinclair's wife Anna, who shares a connection with Clare - are his fellow travellers on a journey that becomes an exercise in memory and erasure encompassing parents, grandparents and other ancestral ghosts.

The mad, wonderful, hallucinatory and physical prose of Clare finds new expression in Sinclair's deep-digging fiction of biography where memoir, history, travel, mystery and dreamstory combine in a magnificent eulogy to madness and to sanity - along the borders of which may lie the poet's muse.

$25.87

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 400
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Hamish Hamilton
Published: 29 Sep 2005

ISBN 10: 0241142180
ISBN 13: 9780241142189

Author Bio
Iain Sinclair is the author of numerous works of fiction, poetry non-fiction, including Lud Heat; White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings; Downriver; Radon Daughters; Lights Out for the Territory; Rodinsky's Room, with Rachel Lichtenstein; Landor's Tower; London Orbital; Dining On Stones; Hackney, That Rose-Red Empire and Ghost Milk; American Smoke and London Overground. Downriver won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Encore Award. He lives in Hackney, east London.