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$6.41The Story
Twinning is well embedded in Lawrence Sailās family: himself the son of a twin, he also has a twin sister and ā youngest of his four children ā twin daughters. His book's title Double Takes reflects the poemsā central concern with many aspects of duality ā whether manifested in the context of human relations, translations, āthe moment saved from timeā or the touchstone of mortality. In some instances, juxtapositions and counterpoints bring affinities to light; in others, distance and difference. A number of the poems address the political and the public: the plight of refugees, a photo of Putin beside Gorbachevās coffin, Brechtās take on the ways of the world. Others confront the hard consequences of illness. Most of all, these are poems that pay proper attention to their subjects, and which amount to an appreciation of beauty and balance, however precarious, as in āMoving Outā, where it is only being āon the brink of removalā that makes it possible to āengage with the ins and outsā, and to benefit from āthe startle of those double takes / which reinterpret truthā. Lawrence Sail's retrospective, Waking Dreams: New & Selected Poems, a Poetry Book Society Special Commendation, was published by Bloodaxe in 2010, and followed by his later collections The Quick (2015), Guises (2020), and now, Double Takes (2026).
Description
Twinning is well embedded in Lawrence Sailās family: himself the son of a twin, he also has a twin sister and ā youngest of his four children ā twin daughters. His book's title Double Takes reflects the poemsā central concern with many aspects of duality ā whether manifested in the context of human relations, translations, āthe moment saved from timeā or the touchstone of mortality. In some instances, juxtapositions and counterpoints bring affinities to light; in others, distance and difference. A number of the poems address the political and the public: the plight of refugees, a photo of Putin beside Gorbachevās coffin, Brechtās take on the ways of the world. Others confront the hard consequences of illness. Most of all, these are poems that pay proper attention to their subjects, and which amount to an appreciation of beauty and balance, however precarious, as in āMoving Outā, where it is only being āon the brink of removalā that makes it possible to āengage with the ins and outsā, and to benefit from āthe startle of those double takes / which reinterpret truthā. Lawrence Sail's retrospective, Waking Dreams: New & Selected Poems, a Poetry Book Society Special Commendation, was published by Bloodaxe in 2010, and followed by his later collections The Quick (2015), Guises (2020), and now, Double Takes (2026).

