Poetry anthologies (various poets)
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Poetry 2000
£9.79
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Beating the Rush
£9.79
Independently Published Random Rhyme
£9.79
Independently Published The Melt
£9.79
Independently Published The Rhythm of Life
£9.79
Independently Published Lunar March
£9.79
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp TheFreeMans Poetry Book
£12.71
Independently Published TheFreeMans Poetry Book 2
£12.73
Andrews McMeel Publishing 100 Poems That Matter
Book Synopsis
£13.78
Breakwater Books,Canada The March Hare Anthology
£18.95
Wilfrid Laurier University Press Open Wide a Wilderness: Canadian Nature Poems
Book Synopsis The first anthology to focus on the rich tradition of Canadian nature poetry in English, Open Wide a Wilderness is a survey of Canada's regions, poetries, histories, and peoples as these relate to the natural world. The poetic responses included here range from the heights of the sublime to detailed naturalist observation, from the perspectives of pioneers and those who work in the woods and on the sea to the dismayed witnesses of ecological destruction, from a sense of terror in confrontation with the natural world to expressions of amazement and delight at the beauty and strangeness of nature, our home. Arranged chronologically, the poems include excerpts from late-eighteenth-century colonial pioneer epics and selections from both well-known and more obscure nineteenth- and twentieth-century writers. A substantial section is devoted to contemporary writers who are working within and creating a new ecopoetic aesthetic in the early twenty-first century. Don McKay's introductory essay, ""Great Flint Singing,"" explores in McKay's inimitable way the thorny issues of Canadian poets' representations of nature over the past 150 years. Focusing on key texts by Duncan Campbell Scott, Charles G.D. Roberts, Earle Birney, Dennis Lee, and others, the essay traces Wordsworthian influences in a New World context, celebrates Canadian poets' love of natural history observation, and finds a way through a rich and contradictory tradition to current trends in ecopoetics. Trade Review"Two of the best-known ideas of what is distinctive, what is Canadian, about Canadian literature involve 'our' relationship to nature, or more specifically, to 'wilderness.' Margaret Atwood said CanLit was about survival, that the Canadian identity which seeks to survive in the shadow of American cultural dominance has its roots in the struggle of early settlers to stay alive in a harsh, unfamiliar landscape. Northrop Frye projected his own terror of the wilderness onto all he read, and decided that we Canadians were all about hunkering down and fending off cruel nature: the garrison mentality. So it is surprising that, until now, no one has ever put together a collection of Canadian nature poetry. An important new anthology, Open Wide a Wilderness, is the first such collection." - Sonnet L'Abbé, The Globe & Mail, July 2009``Nancy Holmes...is to be congratulated.... This beautiful anthology begins hugging you very quickly. Read Open Wide a Wilderness for refreshment and discovery, for epic journeys into the minds of insects and the lives of flowers, to rejoin your totems and familiars, and to rekindle your resolve to continue the good fight. Keep it close at hand in case you wake up lonely at night--and when you crave solitude. Read the poems aloud to your friends and sing them to the river.'' -- Greg Michalenko, University of Waterloo -- Alternatives, Vol. 36 no. 4, 201007``Nancy Holmes, the editor of this, the first anthology of Canadian nature poetry...has risen marvellously to the challenge of sifting through over 200 years of Canadian poetry to produce a collection that proves both fresh and familiar, revisiting the poems of early settlement and introducing the eco-poetry of the present generation.'' -- Linda Knowles -- British Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 24, #1, 2011, 201110``With 192 poets and almost 300 poems, this `first-ever survey of Canadian nature poetry' is a welcome resource for exploring a feature of the Canadian literary imagination that was once considered central to Canadian national identity. Demographic developments in the country since WWII have `heterogenized' any such identity, and many of the works Holmes (Univ. of British Columbia, Okanagan) selected specifically reflect changes in `the rural-urban interface' that have transformed Canadian society and culture.... McKay's introductory essay, `Great Flint Singing'...is sure to be much analyzed and debated by critics.... Highly recommended.'' -- D.R. McCarthy, Huron University College -- CHOICE, March 2010, 201004``If Canadians have a cultural inferiority complex, it is not on display in Nancy Holmes's anthology. This 'first-ever survey of Canadian nature poetry' surprises with its belatedness and impresses with its ambition: two hundred poets appear, spanning the years 1789-2008.... This anthology deservces a place on every ecocritic's booksheld.... Holmes arranges her selections chronologically by author's date of birth, tracing a historical trajectory while placing poets amongst their (often lesser-known) contemporaries. So Margaret Atwood and Michael Ondaatje, for example, take their place among a generation of influentical poets little-known beyond Canada's borders, including Daphne Marlatt, Don McKay, Gwendolyn MacEwen, Dennis Lee, John Newlove, John Thompson, and Pat Lowther. Holmes does a wonderful job surrounding these poets, whose work encompasses the collection's core, with colonial, Confederation-era, and Modernist predecessors, and with post-Nationalist, postmodern, postcolonial, and other recent poets, both obscure and celebrated. Though formally avant-garde work is largely absent, challenging ideas about `nature' and `wilderness' are not. The paratext assembled by Holmes establishes her anthology's value as a critical and teaching resource. In addition to brief author bios, she provides a subject index enabling searches for poems about diverse topics such as pioneers, roadkill, birdwatching, canoes, language, mining, rivers, science, individual flora and fauna, and wilderness. Holmes's editorial work is introduced by fellow poet Don McKay's essay, `Great Flint Singing.' Avuncular, witty, and erudite, McKay (easily Canada's most respected living eco-poet) provides an overview of Canadian nature poetry while at the same time arguing for its national, global, and environmental relevance.... The beauty of this anthology is that readers can test McKay's claims for themselves by dipping into the rich tradition of nature poetry that Holmes has carefully gathered from a wilderness of options.'' -- Travis V. Mason, Dalhousie University -- Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, February 2011, 201101
£35.95
Graywolf Press New Poets of Native Nations
Book Synopsis
£999.99
Rootstock Publishing PoemCity Anthology 2025
£18.00
Rootstock Publishing The Mountain Troubadour
£16.24
Fredonia Books (NL) John Burroughs' Book of Songs of Nature: Two Hundred and Twenty-Three Poems Collected by America's Beloved Naturalist
£19.95
Cosimo Classics Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral
£14.61
Italica Press Contemporary Italian Women Poets: A Bilingual Anthology
£29.44
£25.64
Italica Press Contemporary Sicilian Poetry: A Multilingual Anthology
£22.80
Yesterday's Classics Poems Every Child Should Know (Yesterday's Classics)
£17.58
Yesterday's Classics The Oxford Book of English Verse, Part 1: Medievals to Marlowe (Yesterday's Classics)
£15.84
Libertas Press Amber Eyes
£17.00
University of Alaska Press Building Fires in the Snow: A Collection of Alaska LGBTQ Short Fiction and Poetry
£30.49
Merchant Books Pipe And Pouch: The Smokers Own Book Of Poetry
£13.61
Kent State University Press Dear Vaccine: Global Voices Speak to the Pandemic
Book SynopsisPeople from around the world reflect on the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine through poetryWhen so much in our lives ground to a halt in the spring of 2020, no one knew how long the COVID-19 pandemic would last. After long months of shutdowns, social distancing, and worry, the first coronavirus vaccines were released in December 2020. In March 2021, the Wick Poetry Center at Kent State University and the University of Arizona Poetry Center launched the website for the Global Vaccine Poem project, inviting anyone to share experiences of the pandemic and vaccination through poetry. Dear Vaccine features selections from over 2,000 poetry submissions to the project, which come from all 50 states and 118 different countries. Internationally acclaimed author Naomi Shihab Nye, in her introduction, highlights the human dimensions found across the responses. Richard Carmona, the 17th Surgeon General of the United States, provides a foreword that contextualizes the global scope of the problem, as well as the political and public health dimensions. Making use of poetry's powerful tools to connect us across division, Dear Vaccine reminds us that medical advances alone are not enough to solve the vexing challenges of the pandemic; the arts—and poetry—have a profound and critical role to play.Trade Review"In the midst of all this division around the world, something to bring us together." —PBS NewsHour "Dear Vaccine offers a snapshot in time so that readers of the future can glimpse what it was like to anticipate and receive protection from a killer virus during a global pandemic." —Mike DeWine, governor of Ohio "What would you say to the vaccine if it could hear you? Dear Vaccine is an absolute treasure trove of personal, poetic responses. We are living through history, I've said to my children. People in the future will read about this time in books. Lucky for us, and lucky for them, one of those books will be this one. May the hope inside these pages be contagious." —Maggie Smith, author of Goldenrod and Keep Moving "Dear Vaccine, the genius of David Hassler, Tyler Meier, and Naomi Shihab Nye, gave us permission to put into words that which weighed on our hearts during the global pandemic. The messages of grief, endurance, and hope from all around the world can be found in this timely book of poetry written by the people who lived it and have poems to tell." —Donna S. Collins, executive director, Ohio Arts Council "Dear Vaccine is both address and adoration for the medical breakthrough that has liberated much of the world from unending lockdowns. Its bittersweet and sincere letter-poems personalize the notion that, regardless of age, condition, or location, that which makes us human also makes us vulnerable. It is as if the virus knows where to find us: classrooms, coffee shops, theaters, even our own living rooms. Even the briefest of lines reflects how far many had drifted from life's small pleasures only to pine for them once they were taken away. The frustration of airport security. The silence of museums. Broken into six sections—based on isolation, gratitude, grief, vaccine clinic, nostalgia, and possibility—this anthology encompasses the range of emotions we all experienced as the pandemic swept across the planet in waves. In Dear Vaccine, we are unified by loss yet comforted by both science and art." —Arlan Hess, City Books, Pittsburgh
£20.21
Rebel Satori Press SaintsSinners Literary Festival
£12.99
Hippocampus Press Spectral Realms No. 22
£11.92
Hippocampus Press Spectral Realms No. 23
£12.26
SMK Books Spoon River Anthology
£12.63
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume I): Eastern Culture
Book SynopsisReginald Horace Blyth (1898-1964) was a prime mover in the popularization of haiku and Zen philosophy in western culture. Born in England, Blyth spent most of his working life in Japan, where he acted as a professor of English and foreign liaison, and became a great admirer of Japanese poetry. Long considered by haiku enthusiasts an essential resource for English-speaking readers, Blyth''s four-volume haiku anthology is a testament to his love and deep understanding of this singular art form. Presenting the best work of Japan''s haiku masters alongside his own lucid commentary, Blyth''s volumes communicate the true meaning and spirit of haiku in a way rarely accessible to western readers.In Haiku Vol. I (Eastern Culture), Blyth introduces the reader to the many aspects of Japanese culture that contributed to the formation of haiku, among them religion, Zen, selflessness, loneliness, humor, and puns, with examples taken from the poetry of Basho, Issa, Buson, and others.
£20.00
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume I): Eastern Culture
£27.50
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume II): Spring
Book SynopsisReginald Horace Blyth (1898-1964) was a prime mover in the popularization of haiku and Zen philosophy in western culture. Born in England, Blyth spent most of his working life in Japan, where he acted as a professor of English and foreign liaison, and became a great admirer of Japanese poetry. Long considered by haiku enthusiasts an essential resource for English-speaking readers, Blyth''s four-volume haiku anthology is a testament to his love and deep understanding of this singular art form. Presenting the best work of Japan''s haiku masters alongside his own lucid commentary, Blyth''s volumes communicate the true meaning and spirit of haiku in a way rarely accessible to western readers.The first of the seasonal volumes, Haiku Vol. II (Spring) contains some of the most iconic and beautiful haiku ever written, organized by such classic topics as life and birth, the new year, landscapes, elements, flowers, and nature gods.
£20.00
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume II): Spring
£27.50
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume III): Summer / Autumn
Book SynopsisReginald Horace Blyth (1898-1964) was a prime mover in the popularization of haiku and Zen philosophy in western culture. Born in England, Blyth spent most of his working life in Japan, where he acted as a professor of English and foreign liaison, and became a great admirer of Japanese poetry. Long considered by haiku enthusiasts an essential resource for English-speaking readers, Blyth''s four-volume haiku anthology is a testament to his love and deep understanding of this singular art form. Presenting the best work of Japan''s haiku masters alongside his own lucid commentary, Blyth''s volumes communicate the true meaning and spirit of haiku in a way rarely accessible to western readers. Haiku Vol III (Summer and Autumn) continues Blyth''s seasonal exploration of haiku. It seems that something about the hot and uncomfortable months of summer in particular brought out the humor and sarcasm of the great haiku poets, making this one of the most enjoyable of Blyth''s volumes.
£20.00
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume III): Summer / Autumn
£27.50
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume IV): Autumn / Winter
£20.00
Angelico Press Haiku (Volume IV): Autumn / Winter
£27.50
Wilder Publications Artemis
£21.53
£16.10
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Tierra de noches inmensas
£12.58
HarperCollins Publishers An Invisible October
£12.76
Notion Press Media Pvt. Ltd Kettle of Poetry
£13.99
Notion Press, Inc. Mudita
£11.07
Red Penguin Books Dear You
£12.24
Notion Press Replenishing Souls
£11.99
Notion Press Ingenious Beliefs
£11.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp The Orchards Poetry Journal
£13.34
Paraclete Press (MA) CONTEMPORARY CATHOLIC POETRY
Book Synopsis
£17.58