GRENADE GENIE (Signed copy)

£7.00

Grenade Genie is an 82-page collection of poetry, and the book - separated into four sections (Cursed, Coerced, Combative and Corrupted) - contains witty, accessible and, above all, poignant poems that pack a political punch.

"McColl’s quirky brand of poetry is often political, but with a smile on its face. That’s a rare and welcome combination." - Greg Freeman, Write Out Loud

"Grenade Genie is a collection that is well-needed in these uncertain times, where political and social issues fill our pages. This is a must read where political poetry should be read and heard. I do highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the current contemporary poetry scene; the book comes as twenty- five brief studies of the cursed, coerced, combative, and corrupted and the urgency in these pages needs to be heard today." - Matt Duggan, poet

"It could be London, or any major city. Thomas McColl writes about a wasteland more frightening than Eliot's, but one where you still have to laugh at the craziness. A world of Instagram, security passes and decaying nuclear bunkers, where millions are spewed in and out of the Underground while being bombarded by invitations to go shopping. Where it isn't even safe to cross the road, and what happened to the trees? This is very definitely a book of poems for our times." - Merryn Williams, poet

"In Grenade Genie Tom McColl goes urban exploring on our behalf. In the half-light he roams the plains of London and goes shopping with Greek heroes, mining the underground and bringing up the bodies to the surface so we can identify them. Absurd flights of fantasy and too real memories are observed via the relentless gaze of the digital. These poems are not snapshots. They are long exposures of life, he sees us, and he sees himself, with a brilliant clarity." - Barry Fentiman Hall, poet

"In these poems McColl shows he is a real poet writing honestly and perceptively, exploring what it means to be alive in these unsettling times. He takes poetry seriously but never himself in poems that often make you explode with laughter." - Rodney Wood, The High Window