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Philip Kolin, editor
of the Tennessee Williams Encyclopedia and Hurricane Blues, author of 26 books, as
well as numerous articles and poems
"Like Mark Twain, his
fellow Missourian, Robert Hamblin takes readers on an adventuresome and
imaginative journey of the city of Shakespeare, Dryden, Darwin, Mrs.
Dalloway, Margaret Thatcher, a Falstaff-looking tramp who tries to bed a
lass in a pub, and a whole host of other lively characters his
camera-perfect eye captures for us. His poems are witty and written in
polished American English vernacular. They sparkle with the piquant
sincerity of a man who can exist in and bring into harmonious closure
two different continents. Since we can’t take the Concorde to Heathrow
anymore, I urge anglophiles everywhere to read and rejoice in Mind the
Gap, which can get us to London even quicker and with more delights
than the fabled plane that competed with sound for speed."
Joseph
Stanton, author of Imaginary Museum: Poems and Art and
Cardinal Points: Poems on St. Louis Cardinal Baseball
"Robert Hamblin's poems
in this fine collection discover a London of the heart—a moveable and
moving feast of reflections and observations—from
Holland Park to Hyde Park, from Bloomsbury to Leicester Square, and all
around the town. He builds for us a richly memorable city of words that
deserves repeated visits."
Louis Daniel
Brodsky, author of Shadow War: A Poetic Chronicle of September 11 and
Beyond
"To read these gentle,
beautiful poems in one sitting, from beginning to end, is to submit
yourself to the enchantment of poetic evocation, literature that
transports the spirit and allows the mind to revel in heightened
experiences. Robert Hamblin works such magic in Mind the Gap,
inviting us to travel with him, on his passionate journey through
literary London and England ancient and modern. But this book is no mere
poetic travelogue. Hamblin has fused images and memories from trips he’s
made to England, over a dozen years, into this book, allowing us to
share in the fulfillment of a dream he had as a boy growing up in the
rural South: to visit the 'scepter'd isle,' to come under its spell."
The Midwest Book Review,
The Bookwatch
"Mind the Gap is a
compendium of free-verse poetry that evokes imagination and wonder from
observing the longstanding grandeur of London and the activities of both
the ordinary and the eccentric people who live there. Mind the Gap
is a verbal feast of impressions for the imagination."
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