About This Book
The collection gathers early poems that meditate on modern urban experience through fragmented imagery and shifting voices. Dramatic monologues and lyrical sketches probe alienation, memory, sexual longing, spiritual uncertainty, and the erosion of tradition, often by placing intimate consciousness against dusky streets, shabby rooms, and ritual fragments. Dense allusions to mythology, religion, and art compress history into personal consciousness, while recurring motifs of lamps, clocks, and wasted days emphasize time's pressure. Tone alternates between irony, bleak humor, and elegiac lyricism, and formal variety ranges from tight epigrams to long, associative sequences that foreground impression over narrative.
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