I've read a few poems from Ms. Agbabi's first book R.A.W., and I feel so many of them would be more alive in my head if I could hear them. She's been a touring performance poet in the U.K./Europe since the 1990s. I appreciate how this book is more of a departure from that, but still has such incredible volleys of sound. Patience Agbabi is a great storyteller too, especially in the "Seven Sisters" sestina series (so much sibilance). I particularly like the sestinas "Martina" and "Samantha" and her ability to use the same six words in each of these sestinas in the same sequence with radically different female characters is even more admirable. She also plays with this idea of outer space and immigrant experience, especially for women with a balance of gravity and whimsy. This is particularly evident in "The Wife of Bafa," "Ufo Woman" (pronounced oo-foe) and "The Time Traveller." This idea of displacement and determining place emerges in her scenes of club life and pregnancy. Whether the person is flipping acid tabs to avoid thinking or unwinding from work that is a clear ability to show how these lives intersect in gender issues in poetic form (linking haiku, sonnets, palinodes and sestinas). It's a quick read that transforms into food for thought.