Zoom! (poetry Book)
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''Zoom!'' is a 1989 book of poetry by the British poet Simon Armitage, and his first full-length collection. It was selected as a Poetry Book Society Choice, shortlisted for the
Whitbread Poetry Award The Costa Book Awards were a set of annual literary awards recognising English-language books by writers based in UK and Ireland. Originally named the Whitbread Book Awards from 1971 to 2005 after its first sponsor, the Whitbread company, then ...
, and was made the PBS Autumn choice. The book has been welcomed by critics, who have noted its variety of literary devices including alliteration, assonance, enjambment, and
imagery Imagery is visual symbolism, or figurative language that evokes a mental image or other kinds of sense impressions, especially in a literary work, but also in other activities such as psychotherapy. Forms There are five major types of sensory ima ...
. They have admired his witty understated style and use of real-life speech to examine ordinary life in West Yorkshire.


Author

Simon Armitage is an English poet, playwright and novelist. He was appointed as Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom in 2019. He is professor of poetry at the University of Leeds and became Oxford Professor of Poetry when he was elected to the four-year part-time appointment from 2015 to 2019. He was born and raised in Marsden, West Yorkshire. At the start of his career, and at the time ''Zoom!'', his first full-length poetry collection, was published, he was working as a
probation officer A probation and parole officer is an official appointed or sworn to investigate, report on, and supervise the conduct of convicted offenders on probation or those released from incarceration to community supervision such as parole. Most probati ...
. He gained the confidence to submit his poetry to magazines through weekly poetry workshops run by the poet
Peter Sansom Peter Sansom (born 1958) is a British poet. Biography Sansom was born in 1958 in Nottinghamshire. For ten years Peter taught the MA Poetry at Huddersfield University before becoming a Fellow in Creative Writing at Leeds University. He is current ...
at Huddersfield Polytechnic (as it then was). Looking back on the work he did in that period, Armitage comments that "the writing was just for fun", and that Sansom was "a guru figure for me".


Book


Publication history

''Zoom!'' was published in 1989 as a paperback by
Bloodaxe Books Bloodaxe Books is a British publishing house specializing in poetry. History Bloodaxe Books was founded in 1978 in Newcastle upon Tyne by Neil Astley, who is still editor and managing director. Bloodaxe moved its editorial office to Northumbe ...
in
Hexham Hexham ( ) is a market town and civil parishes in England, civil parish in Northumberland, England, on the south bank of the River Tyne, formed by the confluence of the North Tyne and the South Tyne at Warden, Northumberland, Warden nearby, and ...
, Northumberland. Many of the collected poems were first published in three of Armitage's pamphlets, namely the 1986 ''Human Geography'', the 1987 ''The Distance Between Stars'' and the 1987 ''The Walking Horses''. It was reprinted in 2002, and translated into German as ''Zoom! Gedichte'' in 2011.


Synopsis

''Zoom!'' is a collection of 61 poems, 49 of them less than a page in length. They are grouped in a single list. There is no introduction, and there are no illustrations.


Awards

The book was selected as a Poetry Book Society Choice. It was shortlisted for the
Whitbread Poetry Award The Costa Book Awards were a set of annual literary awards recognising English-language books by writers based in UK and Ireland. Originally named the Whitbread Book Awards from 1971 to 2005 after its first sponsor, the Whitbread company, then ...
. It was also the PBS Autumn choice; John Harvey of ''Slow Dancer'', which published some of Armitage's works including ''The Walking Horses'' in 1988, commented that "this kind of success is not so much rare as unheard of."


Analysis

Sarah Crown, writing in '' The Guardian'', comments that "Snow Joke", the first poem in the collection, at once set up his style with its opening line "Heard the one about the guy from Heaton Mersey?" Crown describes the poem as playing out a classic Armitage psychodrama, as a
hubris Hubris (; ), or less frequently hybris (), describes a personality quality of extreme or excessive pride or dangerous overconfidence, often in combination with (or synonymous with) arrogance. The term ''arrogance'' comes from the Latin ', mean ...
tic middle-aged married man, complete with mistress in another town, is found dead in his car, having ignored police warnings and driven through the snow. She admires the poem's ending, with its "final, ethereal image of the car buried in snow, its 'horn, moaning / softly like an alarm clock under an eiderdown'". In her view, comparing Armitage to Philip Larkin, this elevates the poem from its humdrum setting "to ethereal heights with a well-placed phrase". The critic and scholar of English literature Oliver Tearle, analysing the poem "Poem" in the collection under the subtitle "A reading of one of his best poems", calls everything about it understated, including its title. He notes that it begins with "And", as if it was part of something else, and that each line ends unexpressively with a full stop. In terms of content, he states, the poem is an
obituary An obituary ( obit for short) is an article about a recently deceased person. Newspapers often publish obituaries as news articles. Although obituaries tend to focus on positive aspects of the subject's life, this is not always the case. Ac ...
, speaking about and explicitly rating a man in the past tense. The poem names the good things he did, and three times mentions his "darker and less pleasant" side, occasionally being angry and violent. In Tearle's view, Armitage invites the reader to see the man as an average person, "a decent enough sort", with the implication that "nobody is outright good" or bad. The poem has fourteen lines, and its structure as three
quatrain A quatrain is a type of stanza, or a complete poem, consisting of four lines. Existing in a variety of forms, the quatrain appears in poems from the poetic traditions of various ancient civilizations including Persia, Ancient India, Ancient Greec ...
s and a rhymed couplet suggest that it is a
sonnet A sonnet is a poetic form that originated in the poetry composed at the Court of the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in the Sicilian city of Palermo. The 13th-century poet and notary Giacomo da Lentini is credited with the sonnet's invention, ...
. However, Tearle writes, Armitage's rhyming structure is innovative, so that in the first two ABAB couplets, the rhymes could almost be AAAA, all four lines ending with an assonant syllable containing long "I" vowel; and so on throughout. This has the effect, Tearle suggests, of mixing up and aligning the man's good and bad deeds, implying
moral A moral (from Latin ''morālis'') is a message that is conveyed or a lesson to be learned from a story or event. The moral may be left to the hearer, reader, or viewer to determine for themselves, or may be explicitly encapsulated in a maxim. A ...
complexity in the actions of everyman. Emma Baldwin writes on ''Poem Analysis'' that the title poem, ''Zoom!'', which appears last in the book, makes use of a variety of literary devices including alliteration, enjambment, and
imagery Imagery is visual symbolism, or figurative language that evokes a mental image or other kinds of sense impressions, especially in a literary work, but also in other activities such as psychotherapy. Forms There are five major types of sensory ima ...
. The poem is in free verse but has structure, each couplet consisting of a long line and a much shorter line, in Baldwin's view forcing the reader to move their eyes rapidly from side to side, creating a rapid pace.


Reception

Poetry critics have stated that ''Zoom!'' marked Armitage as an exciting new voice in English poetry, and gained him wide critical acclaim. Jo Livingstone, in '' The New Yorker'', calls Armitage "a decidedly modern poet", citing the collection's title, albeit "one who is known for his accessibility and his respect for the performative aspect of poetry." Crown describes Armitage's style in the book as "Northern and vernacular, dramatic and jaggedly witty". The poet and novelist Ruth Padel writes in '' The Independent'' that the book "made real-life speech and activity the centre of a tungsten-tough poetry of deadpan flair and casual, leave-it-there humour. The cleverness was in the angle. Armitage wrote about grow-bags, walk-in wardrobes, brake-fluid, cashing the Giro, dumping granny at the old people's home." Recalling the period when he was writing ''Zoom!'', Armitage stated that he had no realistic expectation of being published, so writing poetry was "just for fun", something that is inevitably lost after becoming "an 'author'". He quoted a "blurb writer" who wrote that "''Zoom!'' rocketed rmitageto poetic stardom", noting that he was still working in probation four years later. Stating that the book was "never intended as a manifesto", he writes that what ''Zoom!'' actually achieved was to magnify everyday life in semi-rural West Yorkshire, the twenty-something Armitage "trying to articulate inner landscapes against a backdrop of knackered industries and sweeping moors, using a language and dialect passed down through generations but spiked with the vernacular of postmodernism and post-punk."


References


Bibliography

*


External links


Book's page
on Armitage's website, with poem "Ten Pence Story"
"Poem"
(single poem) on Poem Hunter's website
"Zoom!"
(single poem) on Poetry Foundation's website {{Simon Armitage 1989 poetry books Bloodaxe Books books