Susie Boyt
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Journalism
I Measured Out My Life In Greasy Spoons
Mrs Worthington Replies
A Guide to Modern Manners
Withdrawl Symptoms
Londoners Diary 2004 (ES)
Standing in the shadows...
Live lightly for Lent
An agony aunt resigns
Department stores
Best books [v6.0]
First days at university
I wish I'd written...
Londoners Diary (ES)
Consumer culture
No Shows
Badge Of Honour
Caviar Capers
Apron Strings
Child’s Play
Who’s The Baby
Summer Of Cakes
No Pain No Gain
Nightmare Without My Dream Neighbour
Grown Up, Own Up Spree
The End Of The Affair
Service With a Smile
Paris Party
Fantasy Gift Games
The Lemon Dress
The Judy Garland Dress Auction
Fantasy Wardrobes
The Ring and I
Relax
Big Birthdays
Parents Evening
A Blooming Minefield
A Little Sharpener
Casino Royale
Princess and the £23,000 Pea
Mother Kelly's Doorstep
Princess in Paradise
Me Me Me
Rude Encounter
Teething Troubles
Dressing for Radio
Strength and Quiet Substance
Doctor, Doctor
Home and Away
Going, Going, Gone
Persuasion
All Shopped Out
Self Storage
Save and Splurge
Gotta Dance
From the Heart
Party Girl
Sale Time Again
Snoozing at the Savoy
A Cut-the-Corners Christmas
Ill in Paris
Birthday Reins
A Little Princess
Nicer in Neice
Shush about Shoes
Same old Same Old
Pampering
I Need Tweed
Cupboard Love
Pants for the Memories
Braving the Sales
Run for your Life
The Reward Purchase
New York Beauty School
A Dress that Doesn't Bite
Present and Correct

I wish I'd written...

I wish I'd written my favourite poem, The Dream Songs, a sequence by the American poet John Berryman. His poetry has a very sincere waywardness to it, combining an acute delicacy of instinct with despair, huge amounts of learning and a humorous bravado.

Berryman's approach to language is daring, and filled with dazzling experiments. Baby talk, Negro slang, chat-up, prayer, cliché, epic tropes, advertising jargon, elegy, courtly love elements, clowning, the language of psychoanalysis all sit side by side in his work. He also uses a huge range of idiosyncratic verbal techniques to create a language which is continually wrenched and pummelled and remade to measure the intense struggles of his hero, who lives his life, as Berryman believed poets did, out at the edge of things.

There is an impressive braveness and honesty to The Dream Songs, for the poet takes his inner world and slaps himself in the face with it. At the same time he displays the same sort of grandness of interest in himself that other great poets reserved for important classical and biblical epic themes. Yet his writing always maintains a striking note of humility.

The main achievement of the Dream Songs is that the self that Berryman gives us again and again is completely interesting. The depths of the heart that are plumbed are of such high calibre, so intelligent, funny and poignant that the poet leaves us always longing to know him better.

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