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A poetry collection that weaves family history into an abrasive cloth, tailored into the full regalia – pre-moth-eaten and torn – of everyday life.
With dry and unflinching humour, Richard-Yves traces traumas back four generations and across families to reveal the flimsiness of male self-images, the perils of silence and the latent power of women oppressed by toxic beliefs.
His poetry surprises and unsettles with haunting images like empty hands that always seem to hold a hammer and sharp knives that are invisible in soapy water. As a spoken word artist, Richard-Yves’ infuses his words with pulse and rhythm creating evocative snapshots: a father as a derelict house, love like the last trip to the vet.
But he tackles the dark side of domestic life with compassion, honesty and a tinge of bewilderment: “Sometimes love / is a thing you catch with bare hands, carefully, / so as not to crush it.
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84 Pages
9in * 6in * 0in
10gr
September 26, 2025
9781553807360
eng
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