Poetry. British writer Martin Caseley, author of several previous collections of poetry, writes of A SUNDAY MAP OF THE WORLD: The poems...are set in the English landscape, a place incised with scars, boundaries between the metaphysical and the real...These poems attempt to map such spaces, fleshing out ideas from the shape of things. According to Neil Powell, Martin Caseley is at his best when he illuminates ordinary life's teasing intersections with the arts, history and geography: the poems in this substantial collection are carefully observed, quietly detailed, and skillfully patterned with rhyme, assonance, and gentle ruminative rhythms.