Obsolete Spells
Poems & Prose from Victor Neuburg & The Vine Press
Justin Hopper
304pp / 148mm x 210mm
Numerous illustrations in black & white
Limited hardback edition of 300
Paperback / Hardback
£16.99 / £45.00
With a foreword by Richard McNeff and afterword by Margaret Jennings-White.
————————
Hardback special edition package
This comprises one of 300 copies of the hardback edition of the book; an 88pp chapbook of Runia Mcleod’s 1947 feminist SF drama Wax, and an eight-track CD album of Neuburg’s poems, Swift Wings, set to music by psychedelic folk musician Sharron Kraus and Obsolete Spells editor Justin Hopper.
————————
Victor Neuburg had two claims to fame: he discovered Dylan Thomas, and Aleister Crowley once turned him into a camel.
Obsolete Spells presents another side of Neuburg, through his own earthy-yet-diaphanous poems and the strange books of the Vine Press, a hand-operated imprint he ran from his West Sussex cottage between 1920 and 1930.
As a printer and publisher, Neuburg acted as a conduit for bohemian writers and arts luminaries, and those dedicated to experimental living: Peter Warlock set his words to music, singer Marian Anderson lived in his spare room, and he was a fixture at his local utopian free-love community, the Sanctuary. Through it all, he turned the handle on the Vine Press, publishing books of nature writing and folksong; neo-pagan poems and utopian philosophy; hymns to Old Gods and paeans to love and wonder.
Obsolete Spells offers selections from every Vine Press book, including texts by Neuburg and many others, most of which have been out of print for a century. Introductory essays by editor Justin Hopper, a foreword by Richard McNeff and an afterword by Margaret Jennings-White (daughter of author Rold White) round out this unique glimpse into a lost literary idyll.
————————
About the editor
Justin Hopper is an American writer based in Britain. His 2019 spoken-word and music album Chanctonbury Rings from Ghost Box Records, was called "an album of sensual spellcraft" by Caught by the River.