From the Back Cover
“On my way back to our tent that night I diverted down a dark lane to leak mint tea. Turning, I noticed an open door, put one foot in, just in case more music was to be heard, and through a parted curtain I saw her kneeling in a circular tub, washing her hair. The flame of paraffin lit up her body in a triangle of wet bronze, her shoulders tapering down to a slender waitst and flaring out again in haunches of slutty shadow. From ears to her rear, her hair became another triangle of deepest jackdaw black, reaching to a point as it lay thin on the shadowed parting of her buttocks. As I watched, doped and awe-struck, the streaming water turned a milky soap-white and cascaded in dribbling rivulets down her back until disappearing into the crevice between cliffs of shimmering haunch-flesh . . .”
from “A Café in Tangiers” by Tony MacMahon