About This Book
A long, free-ranging dramatic monologue in a Scots-inflected voice in which an inebriated speaker alternates between self-reflection and sharp cultural critique. Through digressions on language, song, literary icons, public ritual, and personal memory the speaker interrogates commercialization of tradition, the limits of rationality, artistic sincerity, and the tension between private feeling and public spectacle. The poem mixes colloquial register, ironic satire, lyric meditation, and philosophical speculation, shifting between comic invective and serious moral questioning while experimenting with form and voice to explore how history, identity, and art are remembered, commodified, and transformed.
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