You shouldn’t need an excuse to join the Undressing Disability Hub, but what better reason than to claim 20% off my poetry book – Dancing on Thin Ice.
See below for full details.
20% off a Book of Poems – politics of disability, sexual frustration; dark humour & insightful!
Dancing on Thin Ice is a powerful, eloquent collection of poems by Nathan Lee Davies. The poems reflect the politics of disability, sexual frustration, the personal impact of a severe, regressive condition, dark humour and intelligent insight. This volume features Tanka, Haiku and List Poems in over 76 pages.
* Member offer 20% off * It can now be bought for just £4 plus £2.99 p&p
If you wish to purchase a copy.
Contact Nathan on Twitter (@nathanleedavies), Instagram (nathan_lee_davies) or through the Contact page on this blog.
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Nathan is proud of the following endorsements that he feels honoured to have adorning the back cover of his latest publication:
“Nathan is a force of nature and an inspiration. To create in the face of great struggle is a noble feat. That Nathan refuses to be silenced by his personal circumstances or by a political system that appears to actively penalise those who need the most support is a testament to his strength, both as an individual and writer. It would be easy for Nathan to fold inward, to focus solely on his own experience, but while these poems do offer deeper, heart-wrenching insights into his world of living with Ataxia, they also artfully illustrate our writer’s wider crusade to campaign for justice and fair treatment for all who are dis-abled by their interactions with our ableist world. These are not poems that sit easily with a reader of any conscience. There is nowhere for any fair-minded person to hide in Nathan’s words, that reflect the rock-hard world of his experience. By firing these sniper gunshots of truth, Nathan refuses to shy away from the casualties created by our unjust world, instead he zooms the lens in closer, daring the reader to blink first”.
Sophie McKeand
“If you don’t want to hear profanities, look away now. Nathan Davies’ collection of tanka is not for the faint-hearted or conflict-avoidant, nor for the reader who finds it easier to feel pity than rage. Davies brings us up close and personal with his articulate anger, which has its roots in an intolerance of social injustice. These are important poems which punch above their 5-line weight, leaving us readers inspired, enraged, motivated to act and defeated before we’ve started. Every line is delivered in the authentic voice of someone who knows only too well what he’s talking about”
Liz Lefroy
Nathan hopes those who buy a copy, get much enjoyment from his poems.