"Zero amorphous" is a dying man's inner monologue and fragmentary thoughts, laid out in graphic patterns on the pages of the book. Not simply for a reader, admits the poet Johan Jönson himself.

- As a private person, I am a devoted reader of literature, but even I am not a reader of what I have written.

Johan Jönson made a big impact with "After work schedule" in 2008. Among other things, he has been noted for how he handles topics such as language, class, struggle and violence. And not least for the poem about drying one's "herpes-bubbling cock" on the towels of affluent families.

When Babel meets Johan Jönson, he spreads the book pages from his new collection of poems on the floor and after a while he notes that it is strange to see them that way.

"This is what you have wasted several lives of your year on. And it is now portrayed by the fact that it is only dry leaves that will be blown away. Completely meaningless leaves.

The entire report will be broadcast in Babel on March 26 and can be seen here already.