Non-fiction books by Bob

Poetry

 

Poetry

Bob is available for readings and talks on getting poems published in small press magazines. 
Contact him by email - mailto:raggedravenpress@aol.com 
or on 01789 730320 or write to
1 Lodge Farm, Snitterfield, Stratford-on-Avon, Warks CV37 0LR

Paradise Road

by

iota co-editor Bob Mee

104 pages

£7 inc. p + p (UK)
(£9 - overseas. N.B. we can only accept sterling)

Published by Blue Fish   
                                            Blue Fish

Now available from Ragged Raven Press

To order please make cheques payable to Ragged Raven Press and send to 1 Lodge Farm, Snitterfield, Stratford-on-Avon, Warks CV37 0LR

To pay by credit card: 

UK - £7

Overseas - £9


It's cold in the desert.
Friends die or get hooked.
And women walk the bleak night,
and some survive, but the way Sheila does.
Last night she wept beneath the Bourbon St. sign.
We have all come, as the girl said when I was young,
to fear the beating of the drum.

(from: At the time of nuclear testing in Nevada)

Reviews for Paradise Road:

...a wry conversational style that reminded me of Billy Collins. But as with Collins, the apparent simplicity can be deceptive. Paradise Road includes a handful of genuinely haunting pieces set in some kind of dystopian landscape.
Raw Edge

The only problem Paradise Road presents to the reviewer is how to adequately represent this beautifully produced, beautifully written book. With the poet as raconteur, each poem here - unpretentious, unaffected, pared to the bone - is a compulsive read...These are domestic, (auto)biographical, confessional poems even, but only in that they are of what has impacted on him - from dog tracks to boxing rings to Doris Lessing at the Harper Collins party, to a lyrical remembering of old friends...He manages to convey, not nostalgia, nor regret, but a wonderment at his making past, and that he should have ended where he has felt the need to pen a poem on it. Skipping with ease between minimalist free verse and driving-on beat, he provides many sympathetic chuckles. He also punches his weight. His If also makes more sense than Kipling's. Throughout the collection what struck me most was the way the spoken word has captured Bob Mee's ear; and it is that spoken word which he has reshaped into poems to be spoken in the mind's ear...Here are stories that replay in the mind long after the telling, atmospheres that stick and images that one recalls almost as if one's own experience.
The Journal

A collection of 70-odd poems, exhibiting a wide range of style and content. A good many witty, cheeky poems are rooted in a gritty acceptance of life's bare necessities in a world of poets, boxers and pubs. He creates effective lines that read like refrains, achieving through a surface simple accessibility incisive images and evocative sentiments...These are powerful elegiac pieces, varied in tone and emotion, drawn to look back into the past and thereby colour the present with its hue, always striving for and achieving an originality of voice.
New Hope International Review

Readings:

July 6th,2008
3.30pm
Guest poet and speaker, Oyster Poets' open event, Lang Court, Marine Crescent, Whitstable, Kent CT5 2QH. Details: Hilary Bussey 01227 273375 or email: patriciagriffin@tiscali.co.uk

For further details please email Bob - mailto:raggedravenpress@aol.com

 

Non-fiction books by Bob:

Bare Fists
(Ragged Raven Press, 1998)
(revised edition, HarperCollins 2000)
(American edition, The Overlook Press 2001)

The Heavyweights
(Tempus, 2006)

Twenty and Out
autobiography of boxing promoter Mickey Duff
(HarperCollins, 1999)

Lords of the Ring (with Peter Arnold)
(Hamlyn, 1998)

Boxing Heroes and Champions
(Apple Press, 1997)