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  • av Angie Estes
    185

    "Angie Estes takes very alert art and wakes it up all over again. Out of wonderful sliding sound relationships and torqued-up rhythms, out of histories as vivid as they are diverse, she creates a present moment in which we realize that Giotto and Le Corbusier are, and have always been, contemporaries--our contemporaries--for great art always happens in the present, and Estes' work is no exception. It's now."

  • av Jon Loomis
    189

  • av Venus Khoury-Ghata
    195,-

    "A searing translation of the poems of a prolific Lebanese writer who has always straddled two cultures, the Arabic and the French. Hacker luminously brings to life Khoury-Ghata's intimate, mysterious, and unique voice."

  • av Ralph Burns
    185

    In this deeply innovative and beautifully human book, Ralph Burns explores the vivid relation between American jazz and American poetry. In the long title poem he plays wide open, without a mute, as Red Allen advises. The result is inclusive and exhilarating, a structure that keeps on opening and opening.

  • av Timothy Kelly
    189

  • av Marianne Boruch
    159,-

  • - Revised Edition
     
    299

    An anthology of essays by a scintillating company of poets, exploring the terrain of contemporary poetics, the writing process, and the necessity of poetry in the modern world.

  • av Miroslav Holub
    265,-

    "Among the works by which the times we live in will be remembered and known."

  • av Yannis Ritsos & Martin Mckinsey
    185

    The last poems of this major Greek poet are tinged with sadness and loss, but they also hum with vitality and an odd note of hope.

  • av Dennis Schmitz
    185 - 355

  • av Bern Mulvey
    195

    Poems of striking grace and subtlety map an intricate, shifting landscape

  • - Selected Poems
    av Pierre Peuchmaurd
    195

    The first English collection of this irresistible French poet's work

  • av Timothy O’Keefe
    185

    Timothy O'Keefe was awarded the 2010 FIELD Poetry Prize for THE GOODBYE TOWN, described by Editor David Walker as a complex and multilayered collection, deeply intelligent and humane, beautifully balanced in its sly wit and elegant lyricism.... He has a fresh and distinctive voice. This is O'Keefe's first book.

  • av Amy Newlove Schroeder
    195

  • av Beckian Fritz Goldberg
    195

    These poems, by privileging the lyric in their intention, open up a new direction in the American prose poem

  • av Emmanuel Moses
    195

    "Marilyn Hacker is truly one of this country's greatest translators...Her translation of Emmanuel Moses' He and I introduces a vital, ambitious new poet to American readers. By turns violent and witty, melancholy and thoughtful, He and I deserves a wide readership and high praise."--Kevin Prufer

  • av Angie Estes
    199

  • av Dennis Hinrichsen
    185

  • av Timothy Kelly
    195

  • av J. W. Marshall
    199

    Winner of the 2007 FIELD Poetry prize, poems on recovery from injury, materialism, aging, love, and death

  • av Mary Cornish
    195,-

    Winner of the 2006 FIELD Poetry Prize, Red Studio is a collection of startling lyricism, vivid sensuality, and keen precision. Cornish's poems tell about life and art and their interdependence. They are fierce, funny, and filled with a love of the world that acknowledges candidly how precarious it is--or rather, how brief our time in it must be.

  • av Herman de Coninck
    185

    Herman de Coninck, Belgium's leading poet for many decades, appears in English in a single volume for the first time. Witty, tender, trenchant, wise, de Coninck's poems range from playful, terse love lyrics to darkly ironic, somberly truthful observations about human experience.

  • av Jean Gallagher
    185

    Jean Gallagher's first book of poems, This Minute, received the Poets Out Loud Prize and was published by Fordham University Press. Her second book, Stubborn, was selected from over 450 entries as the ninth winner of the annual FIELD Poetry Prize. David Young, one of the judges, had this to say about it: "In Stubborn Jean Gallagher teaches us new ways of seeing--medieval paintings, for instance--and new ways of thinking: about the infinite, about holiness and terror and vision and loss. She does this with a kind of casual precision, a musical and imaginative daring that is both breathtaking and yet somehow matter-of-fact. As if taking the tops of our heads off or throwing open sudden doorways to timelessness were the most natural activity in the world. Her command of her art is remarkable, and readers will not want to put down this book once they have started to encounter it. It shines with power and crackles with excitement."

  • av Beckian Fritz Goldberg
    185

    Already one of America's most admired poets, Beckian Fritz Goldberg joins the FIELD Poetry Series as the winner of our annual poetry prize with her brilliant new collection.

  • av Dino Campana
    195

    "Wright's sensitive translation of Campana's

  • av Jeffrey Skinner
    209

    Winner of the 2016 FIELD Poetry Prize Chance Divine explores the broadest territory possible, from the origins of the universe to the speculative, precarious future. Bookended by the dazzling prose poem sequences called "Genesis" and "Revelation," Jeffrey Skinner's new collection is equally grounded in the contemporary science of photons, black holes, and climate change and the uncanny mythology of celestial talk shows, shifting identities, angels, and politicians. Visionary, wildly unpredictable, and often unsettlingly funny, this is a book that matters.

  • av Jon Loomis
    205

    Rueful, tender visions of the Apocalypse as seen from the Midwest

  • av Emmanuel Moses
    195,-

    Stunning new work by this inimitable French master

  • av Kenny Williams
    195

    It's rare for a first book to demonstrate the confidence and distinctive voice of Blood Hyphen. Through the publication of individual poems in journals over several years, readers have become aware of Kenny Williams as a strikingly original writer, but the range and depth of his achievement in this collection are remarkable. Williams handles big concerns--faith, hurricanes, history, the conundrum of the body--with sly humor, assurance, and poise, instantly establishing himself as a mature and memorable presence.

  • av Mark Neely
    199

    Winner of the 2011 FIELD Poetry Prize. "Like the seventeenth-century Dutch painters who divided the space of their framed canvases into repeated geometries of rectangles and squares and light, Mark Neely writes poems that play four-square with poetry and with the heart. And like those Dutch interiors, his poems are at once intimate and timeless." Angie Estes

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