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  • av Geraldine Clarkson
    151

    A nexus of rivers and streets, rooms and gardens, family relationships, food, bodies, creepers, dreams, and song, emanating from one house whose psychic resonance dominates the poems in this selection.

  • av John Welch
    197

  • av John Muckle
    181

  • av Amy Evans Bauer
    151

  •  
    251

    John Seed has pioneered a form of documentary poem using found texts and concentrating on historical events. Previous volumes for Shearsman Books have included two volumes based on the reportage of Mayhew, and another based on the London Blitz. Here he uses reports of tragic deaths from nineteenth-century newspapers: melancholy occurrences, indeed.

  • - Unselected Poems 1966-2000
    av Barry MacSweeney
    311

    Desire Lines presents work drawn from across the author's writing life, and brings close to 400 pages of his work back into print. Drawing on archives and extensive bibliographic resources, this volume collects the majority of MacSweeney's poetry not included in Wolf Tongue (2003), together with an introduction and notes by the editor.

  • av Elsa Cross
    251

    Amorgos Notebook is a collection from 2007 that won for Elsa Cross Mexico's most prestigious poetry prize. Elsa Cross' work over the past several decades has demonstrated a fascination with Greece, and this sequence takes its departure from the island of Amorgos, in the Cyclades, home of remarkable ancient sculptures, and spectacular terrain.

  • av Nathaniel Tarn
    281

    The House of Leaves was first published in 1976, and was a significant statement of intent by Nathaniel Tarn - alongside his New Directions volume, Lyrics for the Bride of God - which set the tone for what he wanted to achieve now as an American poet after his emigration from England.

  • av Gig Ryan
    197

    Manners was Gig Ryan's second collection, in 1984, and confirmed the impression she had made with her first book. It has been unavailable for some time. As Martin Johnston said of the first edition: "something new in Australian poetry: a deeply coherent 'discontinuous narrative' in verse of hallucinatory vividness and continual wry wit..."

  • av Guy Birchard
    197

    "Birchard's vivid, offbeat, casually learned and masterly language is refreshingly modest, individual-unfashionable. I'm not sure there's a poet with a better ear, and I'm also unsure if another has a feeling for how intelligence moves within and between lines that is any way superior." -David Miller.

  • av Irene Sola
    197

    Beast is the first collection in English from award-winning Catalan poet Irene Sola, a darkly imaged, startling and lyrically precise exploration of gender, identity, sexuality and multiple forms of desire.

  • av Ramon Lopez Velarde
    251

    `La suave patria' is often regarded as the Mexican national poem, an extraordinary tour-de-force that would change forever the way that poetry would develop in Mexico. It was one of the last works by Ramon Lopez Velarde, who died of pneumonia at the age of only 33 in 1921, and is the work for which he is most remembered today.

  •  
    181

    The second double-issue of Shearsman magazine for 2017 contains poetry from around the English-speaking world and beyond, plus a number of translations.

  • av Gaspar Orozco
    191

    "This remarkable poetry brings the long ago into nowness, if I can put it like that. It lights from far and also near, burning." -Mary Ann Caws

  • av Andrew Duncan
    197

  • - Shelter Partials
    av Peter Larkin
    281

    "Larkin indicates how one can only pay tribute to the rarity and uniqueness of the scarce by not appropriating it in a fraudulent poetic equivalence of pseudo-poverty, but rather by asymptotically approaching it, with genuine humility, from ever new angles." -John Milbank

  • av Marc Atkins
    181

  • - Hearing and Forgetting
    av Pura López-Colomé
    251

    Speaking in Song displays the poet's extraordinary range and musicality, conducting philosophical interrogations of the natural world-and one's story, history, and place in it-in the context of hearing and memory, and in the form of song. Many of the poems have been set to music by composers from Mexico, the United States, and the United Kingdom.

  • - The First Notebook
    av Marina Tsvetaeva
    251

    After Russia is considered to mark the high point in Tsvetaeva's output of shorter poems. She told Pasternak that all that mattered in the book was its anguish. Technical mastery and experimentation are underpinned by suicidal thoughts, a sense of exclusion from human love and companionship, and an increasing alienation from life itself.

  • av Magda Carneci
    171

    A Deafening Silence is the first UK publication by one of Romania's leading contemporary poets. Selecting from over twenty years' output, this bilingual volume offers an ideal introduction to her work.

  • av David Rushmer
    197

  • av Jeremy Reed
    197

    Isthmus was Jeremy Reed's first collection, produced in a finely-printed edition 1980. Overwrought, perhaps even over-written, it shows the author struggling with a gamut of new influences and trying to find his way in a brave new world of poetry.

  • av Carol Watts
    197

  • av Frances Presley
    197

    The Sex of Art was Frances Presley's first collection, from 1985. Although much of it has since reappeared in other guises, the entire book has not been republished and its structure - mixing prose and poetry freely - is unclear if one does not see as it was originally conceived.

  • - Translations of Jean Cassou, Rainer Maria Rilke and Other Poets
     
    181

    Otherlands brings together a compendium of Harry Guest's translations from French, German, Italian and Japanese, although the largest representations are those of Cassou and Rilke, and runs from poets of the 16th century to our contemporaries.

  • av Kelvin Corcoran
    171

    Not Much to Say Really is an account of extended conversations with four elderly patients in hospital. Standing on the edge of their time they look back over their lives - these conversations show the reader that the most personally lived events and experiences are the most powerfully shared in the common lot of mortality.

  • av Lisa Samuels
    197

    This book records a sustained plunge into the imaginative elixir of a dream. The dream starts with a waking vision - 'the door of the train flew open' - and continues as reverberations in the sensorium, the seat of felt thought. With the sonnet as its anchor note, the symphony blends the machine's body and the garden, crash and after-sound.

  • av Alan Halsey
    281

  • av Colin Simms
    281

    These verses are from goshawk observations since 1955; my first experiences of the bird in the wild overseas -- I have used almost entirely only notes made at the time, in now well over 500 notepads, and diaries and letters; memory illumines only a narrow broken trail. (Colin Simms)

  • av Rupert M. Loydell
    197

    In Dear Mary Rupert Loydell writes about art and life and how they intersect. Fascinated by both renaissance and contemporary painting, he re-invents moments of annunciation in today's world, and revels in the colours and sunshine of Italy. This is a world where aliens abduct the Virgin Mary, and rock singers find themselves singing about her...

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