This image is the cover for the book Stuntman

Stuntman

Musings on the modern epidemic of narcissism in “deadpan, witty poems that flash with plangent images and macabre moments” (Minneapolis Star Tribune).

“THE EARTH BROKE OPEN CAUSE WE BROKE IT OPEN,” blares the first line of this enrapturing debut collection mapping the myth of Narcissus and Echo and the Iron Range roots of Bob Dylan onto a world growing increasingly self-obsessed. Against the backdrop of the mining town of Hibbing, Minnesota, Brian Laidlaw examines the ways narcissism has flooded culture. Much like a “hawk has a horizontal sweet spot on its retina / for spotting prey on the prairie,” the speaker of these poems “has a narcissus / shaped sweet spot / all the better to spot himself.”

The volume comes combined with a brand new LP from Laidlaw produced by Brett Bullion, co-arranged by Hibbing native Danny Vitali, and featuring members of The Pines and Halloween, Alaska. Expanding on the themes addressed in The Stuntman, the album provides listeners an innovative multimedia experience.

“[A] gorgeous debut.” —Chris Martin

Brian Laidlaw

Brian Laidlaw is a poet and songwriter from San Francisco. His poems have appeared widely in journals such as New American Writing, FIELD, VOLT, and The Iowa Review. He has released several albums as a solo artist and with his group The Family Trade, and has collaborated with The Pines and Halloween, Alaska. Laidlaw is currently a professor of songwriting at McNally Smith College of Music, and resides in the Twin Cities. The Stuntman is his debut collection of poetry.

Milkweed Editions