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Fantastic Voyage
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06 August 2024

In this tender and wryly humorous poetry collection, a child travels down her own oesophagus, a woman joins a search party to look for herself, one grief-stricken soul descends into a watery underworld whilst another experiences love as demonic possession….
In Fantastic Voyage, Amanda Dalton takes us on journeys into our hidden and ghostly selves, our insides and our ‘other’, exploring the myriad ways in which the human body gives voice to unspeakable truths. These poems put us in and alongside bodies that are ill, out of control and inhabited - our dark innards as harbingers of secrets and fears, the gut as fortune-teller and home to ghosts.
Taking inspiration from sources as disparate as human anatomy and classic 1960s science fiction, this collection charts a deeply personal voyage through grief and loss.
'Here is a magnificent poem of poems: a surging, truth-bound voyage that offers no easy purpose, acceptance, or ending.’ – David Morley on the pamphlet of Notes on Water, in The Poetry Review (Autumn 2022)
'Dark, funny, wise, terrifying. She is searingly matter-of-fact about the most painful recesses of the human heart… She dances round every corner with a grace that many more seasoned writers would die for’ – Jo Shapcott
‘Dalton looks in the face of despair and tells its story with unnerving calm’ – Siân Hughes, TES
‘She seeks out the fractured minds and lives that live in darkness and reconstructs them with tenderness and skill’ – Tracey Herd, Stand
‘In contemplative ebb, Dalton’s formal composure breaks as surely as the Matthew Arnold of ‘Dover Beach’; her words fragment, unequal to the task of transfiguring bereavement. Towards the end of this, by turns harrowing, by turns cathartic, long poem, the one half of ‘Notes on Water’ that deals with the loss of her partner is subsumed beneath the deluge of water whose terrible effects were felt in real time in the Calder Valley floods. And if resolution cannot be proffered, a window is opened on the nature of mental suffering and the dissolution of self in the catacombs of grief.’ – Steve Whitaker, Yorkshire Times, on Fantastic Voyage
'As an exploration of different aspects of the self, Amanda Dalton’s Fantastic Voyage journeys through time and space, inner and outer worlds. [...] This collection is a voyage of discovery, of loss and the tentative beginnings of recovery, with the body as a vehicle of travel. It is rich and full of life.' – Sally Baker, The North
9 Fantastic Voyage
10 Belly
10 Takotsubo
10 Gut
10 A Ghost Story
11 Look Inside!
12 When Andrea was 7
13 Auntie Irene says
14 One day I watch
15 Andrea’s father
16 One day I ask
17 Mum says Nancy Gardiner
18 Janet Bradley says
19 One day I go for a colonoscopy
20 Peter B says
21 Aged 9, Andrea doesn’t know
22 One day, I was sawn in half
23 Notes on Water
39 Haunts and Apparitions
41 Nights I Squat
42 Magic
44 December 1979
45 Three Hauntings
45 1 Pelican
46 2 Girl in White with Trees
47 3 Man Dressed as Bat
48 Missing
49 The Vegetable Lamb of Tartary
51 like a tree
53 The Possibility of Fog
54 Ten Signs of Possession
54 1 Superhuman Strength
55 2 Knowledge of Previously Unknown Languages or Speaking in Tongues (glossolalia).
56 3 Unnatural Body Movements
57 4 Appearance of Wounds that Vanish as Quickly as They Appear
58 5 Paranormal Capabilities
59 6 Living Outside the Rules of Society
60 7 Being Persistently Ill, Falling into Heavy Sleep and Vomiting Strange Objects
61 8 Being Troubled by Spirits
62 9 Being Uncomfortable, Ugly and Violent
63 10 Making Sounds and Movements Like an Animal
64 Aftermath
67 Untitled
68 Fantastic Voyage
70 Notes
71 Acknowledgements