Ghost Milk: Calling Time on the Grand Project

Author(s): Iain Sinclair

Politics

What happens when the games have gone? Iain Sinclair reports on the trouble to come. Beginning in his east London home many years before it will be invaded by the Olympian machinery of global capitalism, Sinclair strikes out near and far in search of the forgotten and erased. Burrowing under the perimeter fence of the grandest of Grand Projects - the giant myth that is 2012's London Olympics - "Ghost Milk" explores a landscape under sentence of death and soon to be scorched by riots. This is a road map to a possible future as well as Iain Sinclair's most powerful statement yet on the throwaway impermanence of the present.

General Information

  • : 9780141039640
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : 0.315
  • : 01 February 2012
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 July 2012
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Iain Sinclair
  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • : 910.4
  • : 432
  • : To be confirmed

More About The Product

Wonderful, sharp, amusing, grippingly atmospheric. One of our most dazzling prose stylists Daily Telegraph Dazzling ... Sinclair's explorations by foot are highly engaging and anything but pedestrian Sunday Telegraph Brilliant, superb. Anger drives the book forwards. Sinclair has gone from cult author to national treasure -- Robert Macfarlane Guardian Ghost Milk reads like a meld of poet Allen Ginsberg, comic books writer Alan Moore and an anarchists' message board ... There is no doubt that Sinclair is original, observant, a wonderful phrase maker Evening Standard A striking visual poetry and tart black comedy are extracted form even the most hopeless of London locations Spectator A scorching 400-page diatribe against this and other "grand projects" ... [Sinclair is] a crazily knowledgeable local historian with a shaman's grasp of strange energies, unseen ley lines, urban esoterica Independent Magazine

Iain Sinclair is the author of Downriver (winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Encore Award); Landor's Tower; White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings; Lights Out for the Territory; Lud Heat; Rodinsky's Room (with Rachel Lichtenstein); Radon Daughters; London Orbital, Dining on Stones and Hackney, that Rose-Red Empire. He is also the editor of London: City of Disappearances.