Book description
Look We Have Coming to Dover!, the remarkable debut by Daljit
Nagra, marked the arrival of a thrilling new voice in poetry and won
the Forward Prize for Best First Collection along the way. In this,
his second volume, his writing shows every bit the same verve and
excitement that made his first book an unmissable event. Tippoo
Sultan's Incredible White-Man-Eating Tiger Toy-Machine!!! takes its
cue from the eighteenth-century automaton (a tiger savaging a British
soldier) in a series of poems that begin at the throat of the old
British Empire. In these vivid, real and sometimes surreal pieces,
Daljit Nagra creates his own inimitable linguistic bhaji: where
Shakespeare meets the Subcontinent in a range of forms from English
sonnets to spectacular displays of 'bollyverse' or the tender love
songs of the monsoon. The poems take their bearings from cornershops
and classrooms, the strange, part-arcadian, part-hellish streets of
'Londonstan' and the places where the north of England collides with
the Punjab: from Larkin to the ladoos in Raja t'Wonder Dog. Little
escapes Nagra's tigerish gaze: race relations, family feuds, cultural
inheritance, religious bigotry, the British honours system, Rudyard
Kipling, the blurring of Kevin Keegan with Kabbadi. Comic,
hard-hitting, passionate, satirical, Daljit Nagra has written a book
that is as powerfully thought-provoking as it is delightful.
Daljit Nagra was born and raised in West London, then Sheffield,
and currently lives in Willesden where he works in a secondary school.
His first collection, Look We Have Coming to Dover!, won the 2007
Forward Prize for Best First Collection and was shortlisted for the
Costa Poetry Award. In 2008 he won the South Bank Show / Arts Council
Decibel Award.