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  • - Poetry by Women of Latin America
    av James Byrne
    189,-

    Latin America is known to be producing some of the most exciting literature in the world today. With the region's rich intersecting traditions, history of migrations, political movements, and commitment to poetic innovation, the women poets who are currently working there are some of the fiercest and most creative voices in the 21st century.

  • av Anna T Szabo
    219,-

    ''Write only what pierces and surprises,' says Anna Szabo in this riveting collection that lives up to its own advice. Szabo deserves a wide audience in the UK: Trust is a book to bring it to her.'

  • av Ashur Etwebi
    165,-

    The poems in this collection move from memories of Libya before the revolution, to Libya engulfed in violent turmoil, to life in exile in the brooding landscape of Norway.

  • av Mara Bergman
    199,-

    Mara Bergman's poetic voice is a subtle one, based on the rhythms of ordinary speech, and has an admirably natural or even casual feel that can be deceptive.

  • av Jacek Gutorow
    175,-

    "Invisible is a teasing title for a collection of poetry. [Wallace] Stevens, with whose work Jacek Gutorow has a deep and sustained engagement, suggested in ¿The Creations of Sound¿, that poems should ¿make the visible a little hard / To see¿ [¿] Both Gutorow and Stevens develop a poetic medium that maintains an oscillating dialectic between the seen and the unseen. The invisible operates not as an occlusion of reality, but as an aura saturating what is described; images are gently prised from the contexts of time and place and invested with a mysterious in-between life..."- Mark Ford, from the Introduction to Invisible.

  • - Poets in Purgatory
     
    209,-

    Marking the 700th centenary of Dante's death in 1321.

  • av Kevin Crossley-Holland
    155,-

    Kevin Crossley-Holland's name will be familiar to readers of all ages for his historical novels, his re-telling of the Norse myths and his many volumes of poetry. Previously published by the late Enitharmon Press, he is a very welcome newcomer to Arc with his twelfth collection - his first for six years - inspired by the "heavenly squelch" of his own north Norfolk where "the word on the tip of your tongue may be sacramental". As Ronald Blythe puts it: "His language has been honed by the Norfolk and Suffolk climate itself, and has the polish of split flint."

  • av Jamie McKendrick
    125,-

    With a number of highly-acclaimed poetry collections to his name, this well-known poet has produced a chapbook of enigmatic and beautifully-crafted poems, each of which is accompanied by an illustration by the poet who reveals himself as an accomplished artist. This will undoubtedly be a collector's piece.

  • av S. D. Curtis
    109,-

    An unsentimental, forensic account of the breakup of a marriage, told without rancour and with a humanitarian resolution. An exceptional first book.

  • av Kathrin Schmidt
    105,-

    This bilingual (German / English) chapbook of 20 poems makes for an exciting introduction to Kathrin Schmidt's work. Thanks to Sue Vickerman's daring translations, we are able to appreciate Schmidt's irrepressible poetic style as she ranges across the themes of gender, identity, the body, eroticism, her own personal history and language itself.

  • av Volha Hapeyeva
    119,-

    A bilingual introduction to the work of one of the leading poets on the Belarusian scene today - lyrical, surreal, political poetry, written in Belarusian (classified by UNESCO as a vulnerable language) and superbly translated by Annie Rutherford.

  • av Paul Celan
    119,-

  • av Michelene Wandor
    119,-

    Lyrical and narrative, startlingly evocative, elisions and connections, thrilling, satisfying and demanding, the words and poetic shapes travel down and across pages and spaces. The travel metaphor is only a beginning. Original and exciting, this collection resonates in mind and memory.

  • av Kim Seung-Hee
    175,-

  • av Emma Lucretius
    169,-

    TBC

  • - The Versopolis Anthology
     
    159,-

    This anthology showcases sixty poets writing in twenty-five languages from countries across Europe. A feat of European intercultural exchange, it is also a fitting celebration of the Versopolis ethos: an extraordinary variety of themes, styles, and subjects finding common ground in a shared idea of what poetry - and a poetry community - can be.

  • av Gerdur Kristny
    175,-

  • av Miklos Radnoti
    155,-

    Camp Notebook is a masterpiece in its own right, a crucial work of European verse. It is one of the greatest pieces of literature to emerge from the Holocaust, and probably the finest volume of poetry born from the horror of the Second World War.

  • av Brian Johnstone
    149,-

  • av Jan Baeke
    159,-

  • av Larissa Miller
    109,-

    Fate's Little Pictures is a bilingual poetry pamphlet by Larissa Miller, published by Arc Publications.

  • - Sword & Sea-Cloud
    av Ian Crockatt
    109,-

    The poet Ian Crockatt uses the same highly-wrought form here developed by the Skalds (the professional poets employed by the kings and earls of the Viking courts of the 9th to 13th centuries) to tell a quasi-Viking tale set in the landscapes and seascapes once under Viking control.

  • av John Kinsella
    159,-

  • av Manuel Forcano
    179 - 199,-

  • av Baiba Bicole
    155,-

  •  
    155,-

    ¿The Rohingya poets gathered here for the first time in English hold a mirror to the light for the rest of humanity, flashing their poems of misery and warning from the genocidal zone and refugee camp of Cox¿s Bazaar. Their songs are more accurate than news reports for word of the plight of the most oppressed. These are poems that begin with the fragrance on the bird¿s handkerchief and end by walking among the mass graves. They write from a dire present to a possible future, wondering in their peril if the world outside was too quiet to hear them. Let the world not be quiet, let the world listen to these poems.¿ Carolyn Forché¿I Am a Rohingya implores the world to listen to the spirit of a people who have experienced some of the worst human rights abuses on the planet. These poems have no alternative but to speak out, they are from a crisis that must be addressed. There is brilliance in here!¿John Kinsella

  • av Esther Dischereit
    155,-

  • av Mila Haugova
    159 - 189,-

  • av Antony Rowland
    155,-

    M is the third collection from Antony Rowland, Prof. of Literary Studies at Salford. Jeffrey Wainwright describes his work as "significant and powerful", and nowhere is this more apparent than in M, an ode to Manchester in the present moment and to the world it finds itself in, awash with the movement of peoples, cultures, politics and words.

  • av Richard Lambert
    155,-

    A hotel with mysterious guests, a city where the moon wanders, an abandoned seaside pavilion, are some of the places visited in this, Richard Lambert's second collection. Structured around a movement from city to sea and always alert to the emotional resonance of landscape, The Nameless Places dwells on those spaces that lie at the edge of our lives and vision, and that seem somewhere between reality and dream. The collection culminates in a sequence that follows a journey made along the course of a river from its source to its mouth. Here, an English landscape's margins are investigated suburb, waste ground, marsh, and estuary beach. In poems that are formally various (rondeau, villanelle and sonnet) and conjuring an atmosphere of melancholy, The Nameless Places explores forgotten and neglected spaces both of the mind and of our physical world.

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