Brian Docherty is a resident alien. He grew up in Scotland in the 1960s listening to Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon on the radio, hitched across Europe in the 1970s to an FM soundtrack, and followed the Vikings West to Vinland, that green utopia ‘where everything seemed possible’, only to find himself caught in ’the blizzard of history’.
Woke Up This Morning is an index of possibilities, a hitch-hikers guide to cultural alienation and appropriation, from Glasgow to San Francisco and back.
It is a book about real and imagined journeys to other worlds that always seem less alien than our own, a series of studies in estrangement and exile - Stanley Spencer in Cookham, Dracula in Whitby, Gauguin on Tahiti, Otis Redding sitting on the dock of the Bay. Listen carefully and somewhere on the radio-dial between the Voice of America and Radio Landlady, you can hear the music of a place called home, where everyone 'is nostalgic for different things’, and each New World can still be imagined with ‘wild surmise’.
’the reader enters a world that is personal but always worked out against a detailed social backcloth. It’s a politics of everyday that comes through.’ - Jim Burns, Poetry London Newsletter
'it is a pleasure to find work that has something to say and says it with with and perspicuity.' - Vernon Scannel, Ambit
'such a generous spirit, as well as a writer of honesty, perception, and sensitivity' - Maura Dooley
'Woke Up This Morning is a hitch-hikers guide to cultural alienation and appropriation, from Glasgow to San Francisco and back. It is a book about real and imagined journeys to other worlds that always seem less alien than our own, a series of studies in estrangement and exile - Stanley Spencer in Cookham, Dracula in Whitby, Gauguin on Tahiti, Muddy Waters in Chicago.' - Andy Croft, New Poetry column, Morning Star
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