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  • - with Hiroshige on the Tokaido
    av James Bell
    281

    This volume reunites James Bell's wry poems with the images that inspired them. It is a book for those who love poetry and also those who love art; those who love both will be doubly rewarded.

  • - Coplas a la muerte de su padre
    av Jorge Manrique
    191

    The Coplas of Manrique is one of the most celebrated poems in Spanish. Written shortly before the poet's death, it is an elegy that speaks not just of a personal loss, that of the poet's father, but of the evanescence of all things.

  • av Alireza Abiz
    197

    Alireza Abiz is a multi-award-winning Iranian poet, literary scholar, and translator. He lives in London where he works as a creative writing teacher, translator and researcher.

  • - Virginia Woolf Found Poems
    av Nazifa Islam
    191

    To write these poems, I select a paragraph from a Woolf novel and only use the words from that paragraph to create a poem. I essentially write poems while doing a word search using Virginia Woolf as source material. (Nazifa Islam)

  • - Partage de midi
    av Paul Claudel
    237

    Break of Noon is a collaborative attempt, edited by Anthony Rudolf, at preparing an English-language edition of Paul Claudel's remarkable and complex play, an unstable text which gave Claudel many problems throughout his life.

  • av Vicente Huidobro
    191

    Adam is a young man's book, but it represents a major advance for Huidobro. Written 1914-1916 and published July 1916, the work was rapidly left behind as he adopted more avant-garde forms, but it still repays one's attention today.

  • av Mark Weiss
    267

    Pulsing with wit, bravado, vulgarity, pathos, whimsy, and replete with that rarest of pleasures in contemporary poetry: the pulse and surge of song, these poems ripple with a music that moves freely through the range of English lyric.

  • av Virgil
    341

    This handsome volume presents David Hadbawnik's radical version of the first half of Virgil's Roman national epic, with atmospheric illustrations from Carrie Kaser. This hardcover edition is released shortly before publication of Volume 2.

  • av Nathan Shepherdson
    197

    A late-life, late 1960s Celan straddles the perception and the hallucination that akin to Abraham he must choose between Poetry and his own son. The test is in the asking rather than what is being asked.

  • av Aaron Kent
    181

    "Every poem is a dizzy word-dazzle, a dance of images, expressing a real life of work, babies, love and loss. [...] Some scatter the page and the mind, stretching poetry to its limits, and leave me wondering." -Gillian Clarke

  • - Mi padre
    av Eduardo Moga
    251

    Like a glazier reconstructing a mirror broken into a hundred shards, Eduardo Moga assembles a portrait of his father, thirty years after his death, from tiny sharp fragments of memory. This is no idealized patriarch...

  • av Luiz Vaz de Camoes
    191

    Jonathan Griffin ably demonstrates in this volume that the shorter works of Camoens, mostly sonnets and redondilhas (roundels), are fine lyrics and ought to be given the same serious attention that the great epic receives as of right.

  • av Luis Vaz de Camoes
    337

    The Lusiads is Camoes' 16th-century masterpiece and to all intents and purposes his attempt at a Portuguese founding narrative along the lines of the Aeneid, dealing with the rise of Portugal as a maritime power.

  • - Essays and Prose-Pieces (1) 1984-2020
    av Richard Berengarten
    361

    Balkan Spaces locates, tracks and celebrates aspects of history, folk tradition, literary culture, educational practice, politics and poetry, while also including affectionate memoirs of many friends, most of them writers.

  • av Ralph Hawkins
    191

    Tell Me No More and Tell Me, first published in 1981 focuses upon the poet's immediate surroundings, the Essex marshes and the small black timber framed cottage he lived in at the time.

  • av Elisabeth Bletsoe
    251

    In this poem-cycle, each bird was observed in its native habitat within the boundaries of the diocese and then linked back to the Sherborne missal through religious iconography, ... methods of illumination as well as bird mythology.

  • - High Pink on Chrome, Striking the Pavilion of Zero, High Zero
    av John James, Andrew Crozier & J H Prynne
    201

    This book brings together three interconnected works from the 1970s, showcasing how three of the most significant figures in radical British poetry of the late 20th century responded to one another's work.

  • av Alexandra Sashe
    191

    Alexandra Sashe is a poet whose work is filled with a kind of religious ecstasy, and whose work is influenced by the poetry of Paul Celan and, spiritually, by the mystical thinkers of the Eastern Church.

  • av Amit Chaudhuri
    197

    In these poems, written after the death of his parents, Amit Chaudhuri gives us both a record of loss and an account of tasting life afresh.

  • - selected prose and conversations
    av Michael Heller
    267

    In these recent writings Heller deepens his exploration of poetry, articulating a sense of poetic language's inscription and trace, often with respect to aspects of Judaic thought and Buddhist influences.

  • av Derek Gromadzki
    197

    Derek Gromadzki's Horology marks a significant advance from his first book, Pilgrimage Suites, which itself, more completely than most debuts, announced a poet already making his own sound.

  • av Linda Black
    191

    Linda Black's sparkling poems charm and beguile ... Under a rubric of 'little involuntary musings', she makes a miscellany of different forms, all assembled into glittering bricolage.

  • av Martin Corless-Smith
    197

    In The Melancholy of Anatomy, his ninth collection of poetry, Martin Corless-Smith turns his attention towards ageing and mortality, and in particular to the death of his father.

  •  
    127

    With this issue, Shearsman magazine marks 40 years of publication. Original poetry from the the UK, Ireland, USA, Australia and India, plus translations from Hungarian, Latin, Spanish and Swedish.

  •  
    237

    In the summer of 2020, we invited 19 UK poets to partner with poets from around the world, to work collaboratively on poems responding to the virus. The poems are as personal as they are communal, and as local as they are international.

  • - With storytellers, hunters and their descendants in a Native Alaskan Community, 1973-1981
    av Tom Lowenstein
    317

    In the 1970s Tom Lowenstein spent a lot of time in an Alaskan Inuit village, studying the history, customs and life of the inhabitants. This book records the events and fascinations of those days.

  • av Anthony Rudolf
    311

    Journey Around My Flat is a memoir that, in the manner of Perec, uses objects to trigger memories. Rudolf takes the reader on a guided tour of each room in the North London flat where he has lived for forty years.

  • av Angela Gardner
    211

    This book tells of the voyage of the Mignonette in 1884, bound from England for Australia. After it foundered in the South Seas, the starving survivors murdered and ate the cabin boy. After being rescued, the survivors were tried in England.

  • av Ruben Dario
    257

    Ruben Dario, the Nicaraguan poet and founder of the literary movement known as Modernismo - somewhat akin to French Symbolisme - died over a century ago, but his influence on Spanish-language poetry remains immense. Jorge Luis Borges declared: 'Dario was an innovator in everything ... We can truly call him the Liberator.'

  • av Peter Larkin
    251

    These poems entwine round such matters as how roots move as they grow or how feet plant themselves, why a forest admits lanes and lines but obstructs them into shelter, how a tree might relate to all it isn't...

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