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  • av Emily (Stockton University) Van Duyne
    239,-

    A nuanced, passionate exploration of the life and work of one of the most misunderstood writers of the twentieth century.

  • av Virgil
    435

    The founding epic of Rome, rendered in a fluid, metrical translation that sings Virgil's stately verse in a vivid, contemporary idiom.

  • av Justin Adam Stoplar
    105,-

    It started with music. I wanted to be a composer with influences ranging from Frank Zappa and Conlon Nancarrow, right through to contemporary and old music for church organ (Messiaen and Bach). I self-released three mini-CDs of my music, although with my ideas being too complex for my limited skills, I drifted into art and then poetry.These poems are contentious to me. Self-indulgent to some, and hopefully insightful to others. Family and friends endorsed my feelings, and now we have a book!Vulnerable to criticism, good or bad, I feel there is enough honesty in the pages within to validate its existence.

  • av Kevin Paul Mellor
    115,-

    Perhaps all lives start as a well-constructed novel. A series of vignettes follow, some comedic, some mired in tragedy. Sometimes we try to shape our destiny, other times it shapes us.Suddenly in the blink of an eye, we enter the final run-in. For me, this late freedom is best served by poetry, life's essence distilled. Holding close to family and friends and showing kindness to strangers and those in need.Observing at leisure the many human aspects of Britain, Europe and latterly India has sparked a rekindling of the freedoms and insights that can come with age. The many experiences we have stored away in our busy lives can come tumbling out.Appealing to all ages, anyone who has marvelled at the depth, complexity commonality and diversity of our fellow humans can accompany me on this journey.Feel free to join me at any time.These poems are the continuation of that journey.

  • av Kristofer Coleman
    115,-

    The adage that life is more about the journey than the destination carries profound significance, especially considering that life's ultimate destination is death. This sentiment, though bordering on cliché, is rich with meaning and potential.I Didn't Used to Be Like This invites readers on an extraordinary journey, one that aims to deepen our appreciation of life's fragility and our inextricable connection to it.This book is a tapestry woven from diverse threads - from stirring poems of protest to poignant personal narratives and reflections on those elements that spark the greatest of human responses: wonder.Each piece is crafted from a highly distinctive perspective, yet resonates with the universal aspects of our shared human experience.Themes of pain, heartache, and loss are intricately interlaced with hope, redemption, and the essence of humanity, painting a vivid portrait of the author's daily thoughts and life's challenges. While our experiences may differ, this book beautifully underscores the undeniable truth that, in the grand tapestry of life and mortality, we have much in common.

  • av E Pillay
    115,-

    E shares a deeply personal account of her experiences with trauma, the reactions to her disclosures, and her diagnosis of Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder. She invites readers on a turbulent yet hopeful journey through her recovery. Her unique writing style, characterized by minimal punctuation, allows readers to interpret and experience each poem in their own way. With a powerful ability to evoke strong emotions, her poems come with a trigger warning.

  • av Jonathan Locke Hart
    2 035,-

    This book is about poetry and the poetic in the cultures and literatures of Britain, Canada and the United States. Close reading is the primary method. The book reads poetry and the poetic in terms of media, aesthetics, drama, criticism, music, interpoetics, diaspora, culture, diversity, African, Asian and Indigenous poets.

  • av Robert Burns
    145,-

    A captivating collection of poetry from nature's bard.

  • av LJ Ireton
    139,-

    A profound collection that explores Nature and the magic of the in-between, Interlude considers how humans connect with their surrounding landscapes and the creatures with whom we share the planet.

  • av Stanley Plumly
    435

    The definitive collection of one of the most celebrated poets of his generation and a master of the lyric poem in its richest, most flexible registers.

  • av Major (Vanderbilt University) Jackson
    239,-

    A preeminent voice in contemporary literature, Major Jackson offers steady miracles of vision and celebrations of language in rapturous, sophisticated poems. Razzle Dazzle traces the evolution of Jackson's transformative imagination and fierce music through five acclaimed volumes: his Cave Canem Poetry Prize-winning debut, Leaving Saturn (2002), which captures the spirit of resilience in the Philadelphia neighborhoods of the poet's youth; Hoops (2006), which finds transcendence in the solemn marvels of ordinary lives; Holding Company (2010), which shifts away from narrative to explore the seductive force of art, literature, and music; Roll Deep (2015), which addresses human intimacy, war, and the spirit of aesthetic travel; and his vulnerable, philosophical latest, The Absurd Man (2020). The volume opens with over three dozen new poems that erupt into full-throated song in the face of indignity and invite us into a passionate experience of the world.Taken together, these two decades of writing offer a sustained portrait of a poet "bound up in the ecstatic," whose buoyant lyricism confronts the social and political forces that would demean humanity. Equally attuned to sensuous connection, metaphysical inquiries, the natural world, and ever-changing urban landscapes, Jackson possesses a sensibility at once global and personal, driven by an enduring conviction in the possibilities of art and language to mark our lives with meaning.Whether addressing racial conflict and the ongoing struggle for human dignity in America, bearing witness to the plight of refugees, or grieving the contradictory nature of humankind, these dexterous poems proclaim the remarkable power of renewal, justice, and accountability.

  •  
    369,-

    From Philadelphia to Erie, and from the shale fields to the coal mines, Keystone Poetry celebrates the varied landscapes and voices of Pennsylvania. This collection brings together the work of 182 poets who, with keen eyes and sharp language, commemorate the hometowns, history, traditions, and culture of the Commonwealth.Organized geographically, the poems traverse county lines, ancestral lineage, and thematic concerns--as well as gender, racial, and socioeconomic barriers. The poems in this collection seek to bring the reader close to home, while simultaneously fostering discovery of new places and a deeper understanding of all those who live in the Keystone state. Keystone Poetry also includes resources for teachers. Drawing from this collection of place-based literature, high school and college educators can use students' hometown experiences to make disciplines such as literature, composition, creative writing, history, geography, sociology, political science, and psychology more engaging and accessible. - To delve more deeply into class discussion, see "Let's Talk About It," a helpful aid for individual or group reflection.- To fuel creativity, access "Let's Write About It," a practical guide to inspire writers of all levels to create their own Pennsylvania journal.

  • av Theo Ellin Ballew
    249

    AN INCH THICK is a future-mythic life story in lullaby, peopled by punkish attempts to bind and measure and hold still (attempts egged on by the memory of their impossibility). These texts were written between ages 19 and 26, after an itinerant Southwestern upbringing. They hold: fleeing from homes, homes that flee, femme sex in all directions, hedonism, cheap snacks, swelling, shrinking, bloating, and endless attempts to grow the good.

  • av Skye Jackson
    169

    A soaring collection of poems that deftly explores the familial, personal, and societal relationships of a young Black woman trying to make her way in a fraught world.

  • av Louisa Siefert
    335 - 1 625,-

  • av Samatar Elmi
    145,-

    The debut collection from an electrifying new talent - a poet of philosophical depth, searching intellect, and lyric grace'A daring, ambitious pleasure to read' ROGER ROBINSON____________________________________Intimate and epic, dark and profound, interweaving hip hop beats with the mythology of the British Isles, Samatar Elmi's A Darker Light is an unforgettable debut collection about the gift and curse of diaspora. With a watchful eye on the minutiae of nature's cycles of life and death, and a profound connection to the land and language that make and unmake our histories, Elmi's poems shine with grace and blaze with defiance.

  • av Elly McCausland
    169

  • av r.h. Sin
    189,-

  • av Anna Blasiak
    169

    A series of poems about growing up queer inPoland in the 1980s. Deliverance has a narrative angle and exploresthemes of gender identity, LGBTQ rights, coming out, homophobia, women's rightsetc, at the same time being mainly based on the author's family/societalhistory/background.

  • av David Fluck
    239 - 299,-

  • av Dafydd John Pritchard
    175,-

    A volume of observant and minimalistic poetry by Dafydd John Pritchard. -- Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru

  • av Bernadette Mayer
    185,-

    This landmark early book (its original printing by Angel Hair Books was 750 copies, and they are now extremely rare) by the late great Bernadette Mayer is finally available again, both as a tribute and a joy to read. Mayer was a marvelous poet in every stage of her long and prolific writing life, but many fans most admire her restless, powerful, sexy, and erudite early work. One of her signal elements is a certain deadpan wit, on full display here with classics such as "Lookin' Like Areas of Kansas" or "What Babies Really Do," or the marvelous "Essay":I guess it's too late to live on the farmI guess it's too late to move to a farmI guess it's too late to start farmingI guess farming is not in the cards now...I guess farming is really out ...I don't want to be a farmer but my mother was rightI should never have tried to rise out of the proletariatUnless I can convince myself as Satan argues with EveThat we are among a proletariat of poets of all the classesEach ill-paid and surviving on nothingOr on as little as one needs to surviveSteadfast as any farmer and fixed as the starsTenants of a vision we rent out endlessly

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