Gratisversand in ganz Deutschland!
Bookbot

Tim Key

    Dieser Autor erforscht die zeitgenössische Existenz mit einer einzigartigen Mischung aus Humor und Introspektion. Seine Werke berühren oft alltägliche Themen, enthüllen jedoch tiefere Schichten von Absurdität und Menschlichkeit. Mit einem Gespür für Sprache und Rhythmus schafft er Stücke, die sowohl witzig als auch ergreifend sind.

    Tim Key: Chapters
    The Incomplete Tim Key
    He Used Thought as a Wife
    Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush
    • In March, Tim Key got locked down, found an orange pen and started writing poems. Then he started writing down his conversations. Zoom, phone, yelled heart-to-hearts from kitchen window to pavement. This book is the result. A paperback account of one man’s experience of the most peculiar moment in our recent history.

      He Used Thought as a Wife
    • The Incomplete Tim Key

      • 336 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      4,1(147)Abgeben

      This is Key's most comprehensive collection of poeticals put together to date. The sheer weight of the book is testament to this comprehensivality. Of course it is lighter than something like a Braun fridge or a fat guy. But as a book, you will note, it's of a nice weight. It's full of poems by Key (award-winning) primarily about love, sex, dreams, death, and fruit (strawberries, beans, etc). The publishing of the book in no way ties in with things like "demand" or "clamor" but is more a result of Key having a full English breakfast with the right person at the right time. Key is not the sort of person to take offense if you don't buy his book but instead replace it on its shelf or lazily slot it between a couple of DBC Pierres or dump it by a pot plant next to the till. Key's just happy that someone has bothered to touch it. That is enough for Key (Newswipe).

      The Incomplete Tim Key
    • Tim Key got ants in his pants and has written an anthology of poetry. It is his least ambitious project to date. A slim book of the crap he’s been churning out over the past eighteen months. Poems about men getting stuck in webs, poems about the ancient city of Canterbury, poems about canoodling with a rose. A prolific sod, he’s selected ninety of his trademark vignettes and packed them off to Emily Juniper for her to fling onto pages and shape into a book. Discussions ensued about what, if anything, the point of it all was, and a healthy debate as to whether it should be broken up into chapters and, if so, why. All of these discussions are documented in the leftover space around the poems. The result is a splurge of words which very occasionally shine a light on modern times. It is the third book Tim and Emily have generated together.

      Tim Key: Chapters