David Wheatley
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One Thousand Things Worth Knowing
By Paul Muldoon
Faber & Faber 117pp £14.99
Kim Kardashian’s Marriage
By Sam Riviere
Faber & Faber 96pp £10.99
Human Work
By Sean Borodale
Jonathan Cape 68pp £10
Paul Muldoon is the supreme mannerist of modern poetry: were he a painter, all his Madonnas would have long necks. His Heath Robinson rhyme schemes and formal experiments are among the most unmistakable signatures in contemporary poetry. A roll call of his prizes would be superfluous, yet acclaim for Muldoon has not been universal. There are those who think that in swapping Belfast for Princeton, and the short lyrics of Why Brownlee Left and Quoof for the baggy epics of Madoc and The Annals of Chile, his work lost something innocent and authentic. As One Thousand Things Worth Knowing virtuosically reminds us, this is a gross misrepresentation.
Perhaps virtuosically is the wrong word here, since at issue is the question of technique versus heart. Those in search of the latter need look no further than ‘Pelt’, which begins:
Now rain rattled
the roof of my car
like holy water
on a coffin lid,
holy water and mud
landing with a thud.
It’s an eerily
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