Sleepless (ebook)
The poems in "Sleepless" illuminate the challenges of life in Indian cities and reflect Almond Syiem's intellectual and emotional struggle with issues of justice, fairness and human dignity.
The reality of human suffering has provoked him to voice his frustration and pain but also to question his own motives for doing so.
Almond's poems have been complemented by the photographs of Timothy Wallis. They capture the dignity of the individual and reveal something of their emotional core. The portraits in this book span twenty five years of Tim's photographic interaction with India and Nepal. Each poem is accompanied by images taken during specific years, 1989-1996, 2011 and 2014.
The poems in "Sleepless" illuminate the challenges of life in Indian cities and reflect Almond Syiem's intellectual and emotional struggle with issues of justice, fairness and human dignity.
The reality of human suffering has provoked him to voice his frustration and pain but also to question his own motives for doing so.
Almond's poems have been complemented by the photographs of Timothy Wallis. They capture the dignity of the individual and reveal something of their emotional core. The portraits in this book span twenty five years of Tim's photographic interaction with India and Nepal. Each poem is accompanied by images taken during specific years, 1989-1996, 2011 and 2014.
The poems in "Sleepless" illuminate the challenges of life in Indian cities and reflect Almond Syiem's intellectual and emotional struggle with issues of justice, fairness and human dignity.
The reality of human suffering has provoked him to voice his frustration and pain but also to question his own motives for doing so.
Almond's poems have been complemented by the photographs of Timothy Wallis. They capture the dignity of the individual and reveal something of their emotional core. The portraits in this book span twenty five years of Tim's photographic interaction with India and Nepal. Each poem is accompanied by images taken during specific years, 1989-1996, 2011 and 2014.