Poetry anthologies (various poets)
Billson International Ltd EiM Anthology With Mark Grist 2025 Everyday Superheroes
£38.24
Independent Publishing Network Paper Shadows
£11.07
Everyman Stories of Art & Artists
Book SynopsisStories of Art and Artists gathers two centuries of stories from around the world. From Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “The Artist of the Beautiful” and Albert Camus’s “The Artist at Work” to Bernard Malamud’s “Rembrandt’s Hat” and Aimee Bender’s “The Color Master,” the tales collected here range from haunting fables about the power of art to vivid portraits of those who create. Featured art forms include sculpture, pottery, architecture, miniatures, landscapes, portraits, and abstract painting, illumined in brilliant stories by such great writers as Honoré de Balzac, Hermann Hesse, Franz Kafka, Marguerite Yourcenar, John Berger, William Boyd, Doris Lessing, Valerie Martin, Julian Barnes, Orhan Pamuk, and A. S. Byatt. Writers have long been fascinated by the idea of artistic genius, the relationship between portraits and their subjects, the inspirational role of muses, and the effects on artists of ambition, failure, and success. Their dazzling literary evocations of the visual arts—using one art form to reflect on another—make Stories of Art and Artists an irresistible gift for lovers of art of all kinds.
£13.50
Everyman Japanese Haiku Poems
Book SynopsisOnce confined to a literary elite in Japan, haiku are now written all over the world by poets who find their combination of brevity, technical discipline and expressive content irresistible. This collection brings together hundreds of poems by Japanese writers from the fifteenth century to the twentieth, with modern examples from Europe and America. In addition, there is a selection of poems influenced by haiku, and a section devoted to haiku-like passages from traditional English poets. The book is dominated by four great masters – Basho, Buson, Issa and Shiki – who between them compress the gamut of human experience into the limits of seventeen syllables.
£10.80
Everyman The Great Cat
Book SynopsisThe feline has inspired poetic adoration since the days of the pharaohs, and the poems collected here cover an astonishing range of periods, cultures, and styles. Poets across the continents and centuries have described the feline family-from kittens to old toms, pussycats to panthers-doing what they do best: sleeping, prowling, prancing, purring, sleeping some more, and gazing disdainfully at lesser beings like ourselves. Here are Yeats's Minnaloushe, Christopher Smart's Jeoffry, Lewis Carroll's Cheshire Cat, T. S. Eliot's Rum Tum Tugger, William Blake's tyger and Rilke's panther. Here are tributes from Sufi mystics, medieval Chinese poets, and haiku masters of imperial Japan, from Chaucer, Shelley, Borges, Neruda, Dickinson, and Shakespeare. Here are the cats of Mother Goose, and the one who wore the hat for Dr. Seuss.The Great Cat will delight cat lovers everywhere, celebrating as it does the beauty, the mystery, the gravity, the grace, and, of course, the unassailable superiority of the cat.
£10.80
Everyman Poems of Paris
Book SynopsisPerhaps no other European city has so captured the poetic imagination as Paris. Poems of Paris spans the centuries from the Renaissance to the present, and includes a pantheon of French (and Francophone) poets - Ronsard, Deschamps, Villon, Baudelaire, Mallarmé, Verlaine, Apollinaire, Paul Eluard, Robert Desnos, Jacques Prévert, Aimé Césaire, Hédi Kaddour, to name but a few. Added to this are poems by the many visitors who have been mesmerized by Paris, some of whom made it their home - Rilke, Wilde, Cummings, Pound, Neruda, Beckett, Mandelstam, Nabokov, Rilke, Gertrude Stein, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, James Fenton... All the famous sights of Paris are touched on here, from Notre Dame to the Eiffel Tower, as are such classic Parisian themes as food and drink, art and love, and famous events from the Revolution to the Resistance.
£10.80
Salt Publishing Effigies: An Anthology of New Indigenous Writing, Pacific Rim, 2009
Book SynopsisIt is a rare pleasure to unleash beauty upon the ever-tragic world, an exception to the plagued misfortune of greed, despair, and injury. Though elements of colonization do present certain challenges and malady to a natural world inhabited for tens of thousands of years by peoples steeped in ideologies, practical and philosophic systems, they do not overcome the lingual sensibilities and prowess of the poets representing the areas of the planet present in this text. Instead the poets overcome the intrusion.From baleen row, razor clam edge, rabid willow ptarmigan plume, to white buds of plumeria, gardenia, lei, shaded grave of dried lauhala and graying niu, fertile Pacific essence swells these poems into hummock ice knolls, into layers and layers of white sea laps rolling, into mindfulness, consideration, climate care--belonging.From ulu, to cane knife, where aurora’s green vein bleeds blue and tangles into indigo or green-robed mauna combs t? stalks, palms, kukui, and pines. From Barrow to Waihe’e, tethered and hammered through wild among dark branches and snared by voices, these poems harbor whale and seal oil burning to bring sustenance to a reader’s search for light and with them carry us into a seafaring world of rich embrace. Spectacular, immediate, these beaches and beeches along the shores provide a tactile relationship made immense in their stream-crafted images.Table of Contents Contents Acknowledgements Editor’s Note In the time of Okvik d g nanouk okpik Mask of Dance In the time of Okvik Foist Ninilchik Date: Post Glacial Little Brother and Serpent Sedna Sinnaktuq There and Here Cell Block The Pact with Sedna Utkiavik: a Place for Hunting Owls Oil is a People Corpse Whale Palpate Voices For-the-Spirits-Who-have-Rounded-the-Bend iivaqsaat Spirit World Black Ice Cathy Tagnak Rexford Luis Gonzalez Palma Never Took a Picture Here Baleen Scrimshaw as 16 mm Film Inuit Print Kinetoscope The Negative The Ecology of Subsistence When Ivory Changes Color from the Oils in Your Skin Pre-Gunpowder Here With a Westwind Uncle Foot Baleen Corset A Caribou Skin Mask Scripture According to Sila Migration Bridge Passage What is Not Silence A Wind Drives Over the Waters Black Ice Return to the Kula House Brandy Nalani McDougall Po Huaka’i Haloa Naka Haumea Kumuhonua The History of This Place The Petroglyphs at Olowalu Lei Niho Palaoa Emma, 1993 On Finding My Father’s First Essay, San Joaquin Delta College, 1987 How I Learned to Write My Name Ma’alaea Harbor, Father’s Day The Salt-Wind of Waihe’e The Dream Of Kaha’ula Turns of Light, the Story of Your Birth Dirty Laundry Koa and the Burning of the Kula House Easter Return to the Kula House Cane Spider Back When We Lived with Ghosts Kukui Waiting for the Sunrise at Haleakal? Red Hibiscus in the Rain Synaptic Collisions Ho’ailona Ka ‘Olelo Over and Over the Return, Mo’oku’auhau Papatuanuku Papahanaumoku Ma’healani Perez-Wendt Papahanaumoku Segmented Kalalani Bury Our Hearts at Wal-Mart, etc. Double Decker We Are Not the Crime We Are the Evidence Uprooting Calvary At ‘Anaeho’omalu Nancy Kwan Anna at a Crossroads Huluhulu Bag Kipahulu No Steal Maile Never Miss Oblong Moon Biographical Notes
£9.99
Salt Publishing Effigies II: An Anthology of New Indigenous Writing Mainland North & South United States, 2014
Book SynopsisThese five first books join to represent a freshly emerging 21st Century Indigenous Mainland poetry. This collection releases a reader into parallel spaces of Native culture as diverse as the US-occupied landscapes they embody; the desert Southwest, the Pacific Northwest, Eastern Woodlands, Great Lakes Region, Kansas and Oklahoma, bringing a bit of urban and rural symphony by resisting folds into Americana with courageous unfolding imagery in a serious range of departure. Five debut books present a fistful of furious nature, supple with beauty and brilliance and packing the punch intentional poetry delivers. This is a fearless collection of evocative and challenging verse. Effigies II is a road trip through Indian Country with five American Indian women poets who bring it all back home.“The Tecumseh Motel traces a parallel path of Shawnee culture and personal history. Spanning from the period of Indian Removal to the present, this text lyrically examines identity, generational memory, and the importance of place.” – LAURA DA“This book explores the images of the American West. From the neon light of honky tonk barrooms to the Southwestern landscape to the railroad, dirt roads and grandmothers’ living rooms.” – UNGILBAH DAVILA“A narrative through wrenching spaces in the life of one descendant wrestling with post apocalyptic identity, grounded by persistently supportive ancestors and helpers determined to see their blood survive and resist colonial assimilation through disembodiment” – KRISTI LEORATrade ReviewWednesday, August 27, 2014 – August Book of the Month: “Effigies II”Effigies II is a compilation of works from Native women poets. Editor Allison Hedge Coke says debuting these works in a collection gives these Native writers a chance to enter the literary publishing world as a community. The book is like a road trip through Indian Country through words. The poems allow the reader to experience a multi-regional view on Native life. We invite you join us live as we take in the words of Laura Da’ (Eastern Shawnee), Ungelbah Davila (Diné), Kristi Leora (Kitigan Zibi Anishinaabeg), Laura Mann (Choctaw/Cherokee/Mohawk) and Kateri Menominee (Bay Mills Tribe of Chippewa). * Native America Calling *Table of Contents Acknowledgements Editor’s Note Laura Da’ The Tecumseh Motel Ungelbah Davila Outlaw Neon Kristi Leora Dark Swimming Lara Mann A Song Of Ascents And Descents Kateri Menominee In Tongues Biographical Notes
£10.44
arima publishing A Bracelet of Bright Hair
£13.59
Shearsman Books Mexican Poetry Today: 20/20 Voices
Book SynopsisMexico is one of the major centres of Hispanic poetry-something which is perhaps more visible from the USA than from Britain, but nonetheless something that needs to be realised by anyone who cares about contemporary poetry in Spanish, or indeed, contemporary poetry of any kind. This volume includes work by the following poets: Luis Miguel Aguilar, Maria Baranda, Efrain Bartolome, Marco Antonio Campos, Hector Carreto, Elsa Cross, Jennifer Clement, Antonio Deltoro, Gloria Gervitz, Francisco Hernandez, Elva Macias, Victor Manuel Mendiola, Samuel Noyola, Jose Luis Rivas, Silvia Tomasa Rivera, Pedro Serrano, Natalia Toledo, Manuel Ulacia, Jorge Valdes Diaz-Velez and Veronica Volkow.
£14.95
Shearsman Books The Ground Aslant: An Anthology of Radical Landscape Poetry
Book SynopsisRecent years have seen the arrival of new approaches to writing about landscape. Partly to do with new eco-sensibilities, this is however also due to a realisation that "landscape writing" need not be confined to literary tourism, or the verbal equivalent of chocolate-box imagery, and to the injection of radical poetic styles. The Ground Aslant is the first volume to engage with this new wave of writing, and presents the work of Tony Baker, Elisabeth Bletsoe, Thomas A. Clark, Ian Davidson, Mark Dickinson, Mark Goodwin, Nicholas Johnson, Peter Larkin, Helen Macdonald, Wendy Mulford, Frances Presley, Peter Riley, Colin Simms, Zoe Skoulding, Harriet Tarlo, Carol Watts.
£14.95
Shearsman Books Infinite Difference: Other Poetries by UK Women Poets
Book SynopsisThis is an anthology of radical new women's poetry from the UK, featuring work by: Sascha Akhtar, Isobel Armstrong, Caroline Bergvall, Elisabeth Bletsoe, Anne Blonstein, Andrea Brady, Emily Critchley, Claire Crowther, Carrie Etter, Catherine Hales, Frances Kruk, Rachel Lehrman, Sophie Mayer, Marianne Morris, Wendy Mulford, Redell Olsen, Frances Presley, Anna Reckin, Carlyle Reedy, Sophie Robinson, Lucy Sheerman, Zoe Skoulding, Harriet Tarlo, and Carol Watts.
£16.69
Shearsman Books Cantes Flamencos (Flamenco Songs): The Deep Songs of Spain
Book SynopsisMore than 250 quatrains of love and loss, the texts to those inimitable flamenco performances - these are the songs that are wailed by those keening male voices, as the red-and-black-clad women dancers stamp, pirouette and fire castanet rhythms at machine-gun pace. Not high art certainly, but a part of deeper fabric of the real Spain, and a powerful influence on poets such Lorca.
£12.30
Shearsman Books Sea Pie: A Shearsman Anthology of Oystercatcher Poetry
Book SynopsisOystercatcher Press has published over 50 pamphlets of contemporary poetry in its short existence. It won the inaugural Michael Marks Award 'for outstanding UK publisher of poetry in pamphlet form'. Chair of judges Ian McMillan praised the press for 'taking risks with older and newer writers from outside the perceived centre of British poetry'. This anthology now provides the first opportunity to sample all the poets represented by Oystercatcher Press in one book. It confirms the judgement, made by Ian Brinton in World Literature Today, that Oystercatcher Press offers 'some of the most exciting and vivid poetry available in England today'.
£12.30
Shearsman Books At the End of the World: Contemporary Poetry from Bulgaria
Book SynopsisAt the End of the World: Contemporary Poetry from Bulgaria is an anthology of eighteen Bulgarian poets writing and publishing from the middle of the twentieth century to today. Rather than being a collection of emblematic poems, it is a thematic book which reflects the searching and original, distinctive styles of contemporary Bulgarian poetry, itself reminiscent of the city and landscape.
£14.96
Shearsman Books By the North Sea: An Anthology of Suffolk Poetry
Book Synopsis'Here, where Time brings pasture to the sea' - the eminent Victorian A.C. Swinburne, from whose long work about the lost city of Dunwich this collection takes its title, was not the first or last poet to be struck by the landscape, and history, of Suffolk. Until almost within living memory Suffolk was a farming-fishing place, not all that far from London, yet strangely remote. Perhaps for this reason its coast was already something of a haven for writers and artists before Benjamin Britten made Aldeburgh the base for his annual music festival. The county's climate appeared to make artists and writers, as did its superb medieval architecture and its huge band of sea. This collection of poems past and modern is powerful testimony of that, all of it both contained and released, created in and, to various extents, by Suffolk. This is a collection of poems that will surprise the reader: Suffolk natives, incomers and visitors are all represented. From older times come Algernon Charles Swinburne, Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, Ann Candler, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, George Crabbe, Robert Bloomfield and Bernard Barton. From modern times we have-listed in order of appearance-Andy Brown, Angela Leighton, Tamar Yoseloff, Ronald Blythe, Victor Tapner, Pauline Stainer, John Matthias, Wendy Mulford, Claire Crowther, R.F. Langley, Andrew Brewerton, Rodney Pybus, Charlotte Geater, Zoe Skoulding, Deryn Rees-Jones, Aidan Semmens, Michael Laskey, Herbert Lomas, Anne Beresford, Will Stone, Richard Caddel and Michael Hamburger.
£12.30
Shearsman Books Panic Cure - Poetry from Spain for the 21st Century
Book SynopsisThe poets featured in this volume are Antonio Gamoneda, Olvido Garcia Valdes, Miguel Casado, Marcos Canteli, Sandra Santana, Benito del Pliego, Julia Piera, Ana Gorria, Pilar Fraile Amador, and Esther Ramon. This anthology charts some of my own enthusiasms; it isn't a comprehensive list. It seems more significant to represent ten substantial writers with a generous selection of poems than thirty or forty writers with one or two poems apiece. The ten poets collected here represent one of many possible configurations of an exploratory surge that signals a moment of change in Spain's literature. (Forrest Gander)
£14.95
Shearsman Books The Third Shore: Chinese and English-language Poets in Mutual Translation
Book SynopsisWalter Benjamin called translation "The Third Language", because a translation is neither the same as the original, nor the same as the normal foreign-language of other texts, for it is something unique, something set apart from either, just as bronze forged from copper and tin overcomes the brittleness of copper and the softness of tin to become both hard and pliable, as if it has become a new element. In this volume, Chinese poets and English-language poets come together to translate each other's work. The Chinese poets involved are: Jiang Tao, Leng Shuang, Tang Xiaodu, Wang Xaoni, Xiao Kaiyu, Xi Chuan, Yan Li, Yang Lian, Yang Xiaobin, Yu Jian, Zang Di, Zhai Yongming, Zhang Wei and Zhou Zan, while the Western representatives are: Nicholas Admussen, Tony Barnstone, Polly Clark, Jennifer Crawford, Antony Dunn, W.N. Herbert, Sean O'Brien, Pascale Petit, Fiona Sampson, Arthur Sze, George Szirtes and Joshua Weiner.
£16.69
Shearsman Books My News for You: Irish Poetry 600-1200
Book SynopsisThe poems translated here were, with one or two possible exceptions, written between the 7th and 12th centuries AD, making them the oldest vernacular poetry in Europe. Latin, which arrived with Christianity in the 5th century and brought a script, was the only other language in play, although there are occasional loanwords from Norse and other tongues. Scholars can roughly assign the poems to centuries, on the basis of changes in syntax and word forms, but many that were written earlier exist only in later manuscripts. Dating is thus hazardous, and nor do we usually know the author. It is likely that one was written by a druid, six by women and rather more by professional bards; the remainder are probably by clerics or scribes.
£14.95
Shearsman Books The Opposite of Seduction
£16.10
Batsford Ltd The Poetry of Birds
Book SynopsisA beautifully illustrated collection of famous poems written about birds to read and cherish as a source of comfort and joy. Poets have long looked to birds for inspiration and this anthology of 65 poems is an ode to the myriad of way that these creatures bring us joy and solace. The poets here represented are amongst the greatest who have ever lived, and their joint celebration of a common theme has resulted in an enchanting book. Amongst the poets whose work is included are Blake, Shakespeare and Wordsworth; Tennyson, Keats and Shelley; twentieth-century writers, amongst them Yeats, Laurie Lee and Ted Hughes; and such American poets as Thoreau, Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost and Theodore Roethke. Each poem is illustrated by iconic artworks by JJ Audubon, creating a beautiful book to cherish for years to come.
£14.24
Bloodaxe Books Ltd Dear World & Everyone In It: New Poetry in the UK
Book SynopsisDear World & Everyone In It is a ground-breaking new poetry anthology presenting the work of over 60 of the most talented and interesting young poets currently writing in the UK. Chosen by one of the country's leading young poetry editors, inspired by American precedents, and growing out of The Rialto's recent series of young poets features curated by Nathan Hamilton, it is the first British anthology to attempt to define a generation through a properly representative cross-section of work and a fully collaborative editorial process. By drawing on the poets' own recommendations, this anthology represents more effectively and appropriately a new generational mood - hybrid, playful, collaborative, ambitious, inclusive, cooperative. Less top down, more bottom up, it speaks also of other movements in our world, and even ends up challenging parochial notions of Britishness by including overseas poets who live or work here and who have become engaged and influential in the scene. Avoiding older, oppositional attitudes, Nathan Hamilton introduces his anthology with an essay describing 'this new generation's hybridisation of two aptly ironic and business-sounding "strains" in UK poetics - taxonomised as "product" and "process"'. His lively analysis juxtaposes modernist approaches with those exploring more traditional modes, hoping to bring some of the pleasures of the former to a wider audience. Dear World & Everyone In It is an indispensable summary or starting map for anyone wanting to explore and enjoy more of the current UK poetry landscape or seeking to better understand what's going on out there. The poets included are: Rachael Allen, Andrew Bailey, Emily Berry, Ben Borek, Siddhartha Bose, Elizabeth-Jane Burnett, James Byrne, Stuart Calton, Tom Chivers, Tim Cockburn, Becky Cremin, Emily Critchley, Joe Crot, Patrick Coyle, Amy De'Ath, Laura Elliott, Stephen Emmerson, Amy Evans, Ollie Evans, S.J. Fowler, Miriam Gamble, Jim Goar, Matthew Gregory, Elizabeth Guthrie, Emily Hasler, Oli Hazzard, Colin Herd, Holly Hopkins, Sarah Howe, Tom Ironmonger, Meiron Jordan, Katharine Kilalea, Sarah Kelly, Luke Kennard, Laura Kilbride, Michael Kindellan, Agnes Lehoczky, Frances Leviston, Eireann Lorsung, Chris McCabe, Michael McKimm, Fabian Macpherson, Toby Martinez de las Rivas, mendoza, James Midgley, Marianne Morris, Camilla Nelson, Kei Miller, Tamarin Norwood, Richard Parker, Sandeep Parmar, Holly Pester, Heather Phillipson, Kate Potts, Nat Raha, Sam Riviere, Sophie Robinson, Hannah Silva, Angus Sinclair, Marcus Slease, Andy Spragg, Ben Stainton, Keston Sutherland, Jonty Tiplady, Emily Toder, Simon Turner, Jack Underwood, Ahren Warner, Tom Warner, Rachel Warriner, James Wilkes and Steve Willey.
£14.25
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Homer Odyssey VI and VII
£27.47
Everyman Love Poems
Book SynopsisIt has often been said that love, both sacred and profane, is the only true subject of the lyric poem. Nothing better justifies this claim than the splendid poems in this volume, which range from the writings of ancient China to those of modern-day America and represent, at its most piercing, a universal experience of the human soul.
£10.80
Reality Street The Reality Street Book of Sonnets
£15.00
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp All Blue
£8.49
Arc Publications A Fine Line: New Poetry From Eastern and Central
Book SynopsisA Fine Line: New Poetry from Eastern and Central EuropeArc Publications Translations Series (parallel-text)A bilingual anthology, with a preface by Václav Havel, published by Arc Publications in association with the UK-based international organisation Literature Across Frontiers, presenting the new poetic talent from ten Eastern and Central European countries.The poets included in the anthology are as follows:Georgi Gospodinov and Nadezhda Radulova (Bulgaria)Petr Borkovec and Katerina Rudcenkova (Czech Republic)Kristiina Ehin and Akso Künnap (Estonia)János Térey and Krisztina Tóth (Hungary)Karlis Verdins and Sergeij Timofeyev (Latvia)Daiva Cepauskaite and Rimvydas Stankevicius (Lithuania)Agnieszka Kuciak and Edward Pasewicz (Poland)Emilian Galaicu-Paun and Ioana Nicolaie (Romania)Katarina Kucbelová and Martin Solotruk (Slovakia)Primoz Cucnik and Taja Kramberger (Slovenia)"This is wonderfully sovereign poetry. These writers were mostly students or even at school when their Communist regimes perished; the war and the post-war Stalinist terror happened to their grandparents. Their poise and their self-possession are startling; they seldom lament and have no interest in preaching. The encounter with Western abundance gives them fresh imagery, but also grounds for amusement and irony.""From their part of Europe, they bring a special joy in the natural and physical world, and also glittering metaphysical brilliance. This is a poetry of wit and complexity, never raw but always glowing with human feeling. As for the translators, it's impossible to praise them too highly. Imaginative, sensitive and yet loyal to the texts, it is they who have delivered this treasure intact to new readers."- Neal Ascherson
£11.99
Liverpool University Press Marrano Poets of the Seventeenth Century: An
Book SynopsisThe story of the Marranos (the Jewish converts to Christianity in Spain and Portugal) has long been a source of fascination for Jews interested in their heritage and for all those concerned with the struggle for freedom of conscience against authoritarianism. In this volume are presented the selected works of three Marrano poets, together with translations into English and explanatory notes. Each of the three poets is introduced with a biography and brief critical assessment. In a general introduction the editor explains the historical and literary background of their works and examines the inter-relationship between the Jewish and Christian cultural elements. Drawing on a wide range of published and manuscript sources, he gives a balanced picture of the Marranos and describes the process of Jewish re-education they had to undergo in order to reach their goal of integration with authentic Judaism in the Jewish communities outside the Iberian peninsula. The three poets—João Pinto Delgado, Antonio Enríquez Gómez, and Miguel de Barrios—are presented against this background as exemplifying three different 'paths to Judaism', which nonetheless have in common the dramatic experience of life under the Inquisition and the halfway house of the Marrano communities. Symbols of exile and insecurity abound. Each poet shares a sense of guilt over his past observance of Christianity and endeavours to reach out towards the authentic sources of the Jewish tradition, such as the Talmud and the rabbinic commentaries, to invest his writings with a greater cultural depth. The poems in this volume have been selected with the aim of giving a representative view of each individual poet's experience and particular literary talents. Through the translations and notes the general reader is provided with insight into their significance and purpose. The specialist reader, too, will gain from finding the writings of three little-known poets of similar background brought together for the first time and set in context.Table of ContentsList of illustrationsAcknowledgementsIntroductionThe Origins of the Marranos Crypto-Jews under the Regime of the Inquisition The Communities outside Spain The Tradition of Language The Literary Tradition of Spain The Jewish Inheritance of the Marranos The Marrano Poets NotesThe Texts and Translations1 João Pinto DelgadoTres poemas autobiograficosA la salida de Lisboa A la despedida de un amigo En alabanza del SenorPoema de la Reina EsterEl sueño y las lástimas de Mardochay La triste consolación de Amán La oración de la reina Ester ConclusiónLamentaciones del profeta JeremíasLamentación 1:1 Lamentación 1:12 Lamentación 1:13 Lamentación 2:6 Lamentación 2:7La historia de RutCanción, aplicando misericordias divinas y defetos proprios a la salida de Egipto hasta la Tierra SantaNotes2 Antonio Enríquez GómezCuando contemplo mi pasada gloriaLa culpa del primer peregrinoDiálogo de Adán y Eva La injusticia en el mundoSansón NazarenoSansón encuentra a la tamateaLa oración y muerte de SansónRomance al divín mártir, Judá Creyente, martirizado en Valladolid por la InquisiciónNotes3 Miguel de BarriosA la muerte de RaquelA la segura confianzaReal consideración del hombreLa memoria renueva el dolor (Sonetos dobles fúnebres)Alabanza jocosa a lay Ley santísima en la fábrica de la sinagogaProvidencia particular de Dios sobre Israel Pregón harmónico del Día del JuicioActo sexto de contriciónActo séptimo de contriciónImperio de Dios en el teatro universal Día primeroNotes
£999.99
Lawrence & Wishart Ltd Poems from Spain: British and Irish International Brigaders on the Spanish Civil War
Book SynopsisThis is the first poetry anthology solely devoted to poems written by International Brigade volunteers. Fully illustrated and with extensive notes, the collection conveys the idealism and anguish felt by the men and women who risked their lives to defend democracy against the rise of fascism in Europe.Trade Review'the most moving, inspirational collection of poetry I have read in many years ... What is it about the International Brigaders that makes their memory and the recall of their political humanity so relevant today? Courage, a loyalty to the best within us, a political imagination that thinks with the heart: the list is long. These qualities shine from this collection, which ought to be required reading in every school.' John Pilger 'their story has often been told by historians but the poetry in this volume takes us further, providing a hint of the emotional cost of their commitment to the anti-fascist cause.' Paul Preston 'This moving collection of evocative poetry is a fitting tribute to those who had the bravery and foresight to join the battle against fascism in Spain.' Billy BraggTable of ContentsForword by Jack Jones
£13.30
Shearsman Books Spanish Poets of the Golden Age, in Contemporary English Translations
Book SynopsisIn the 16th and 17th centuries, Spain experienced a literary Renaissance akin to that in England, with great poets, dramatists and novelists establishing new forms and blazing new trails: Garcilaso de la Vega, Gongora, Quevedo amongst the poets, Lope de Vega & Calderon de la Barca amongst the dramatists (although both were also poets), Cervantes - of course - amongst the prose writers. The Renaissance in England was also a time when translations of contemporary European literature became more common, beginning with contemporary Italian works, and the importation of the Petrarchan sonnet, and then Montemayor's Spanish version of arcadian pastoral. While Spanish literature was not the main focus of English translators during this period - no doubt affected by the strained political relations bnetween the two countries - it did attract some particularly fine writers to try their hand. This selection is driven by what is available, but it also manages to cover some of the greatest Spanish writers of the Renaissance and the Siglo de Oro: Juan Boscan, Garcilaso de la Vega, Jorge de Montemayor, Miguel Cervantes (some poems from 'Don Quixote'), Bartolome & his brother Lupercio Leonardo de Argensola, Luis de Gongora, Francsico de Quevedo, Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza and Juan Peerez de Montalban. The translators are Herbert Aston, Philip Ayres, William Drummond of Hawthornden, Sir Richard Fanshawe, Thomas Shelton, Sir Philip Sidney, Thomas Stanley and Bartholomew Yong. The translations are never less than effective and, especially in the case of Fanshawe's Gongora, often show rare genius at work.Table of ContentsBoscan (translated by Thomas Stanley)Garcilaso de la Vega (translated by William Drummond & Philip Ayres)Montemayor (translated by Sir Philip Sidney & Bartholomew Yong)Cervantes (translated by Thomas Shelton)Bartolome Leonardo de Argensola (translated by Sir Richard Fanshawe)Lupercio Leonardo de Argensola (translated by Sir Richard Fanshawe)Gongora (translated by Sir Richard Fanshawe)Quevedo (translated by Philip Ayres)Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza (translated by Sir Richard Fanshawe)Perez de Montalban (translated by Thomas Stanley)plus two unattributed sonnets translated by Fanshawe and a poem by Ayres translated by him into Spanish.
£14.96
Mosaique Press It will happen by chance
£12.63
Salt Publishing The Salt Book of Younger Poets
Book SynopsisThe Salt Book of Younger Poets showcases a new generation of British poets born since the mid-80s. Many of these poets embrace new technologies such as blogs, social networking and webzines to meet, mentor, influence and publish their own work and others’. Some poets here were winners of the Foyle young poet awards when at school. Some have published pamphlets in series such as tall-lighthouse Pilot and Faber New Poets. All of them are working away on first collections. This is a chance to encounter the poets who will dominate UK poetry in years to come.Trade ReviewLumsden hosts a supremely eclectic party for 85 "new" British and Irish poets — more women than men, for once — whose newness turns on book-length debuts within the past 15 years rather than calendar age. -- Boyd Tonkin * The Independent *Identity Parade is an anthology which clearly achieves its objective of introducing its audience to a broad-church of today’s talent. -- Phil Brown * Hand + Star *This ambitious anthology offers a rewarding glimpse into the health of current poetry, bringing together 50 poets aged from 18 to 26 who have yet to publish their first full-length collection. It’s a coup for the editors to have found work of such potential. What is immediately striking is the extraordinary range and variety presented here, from the colloquial energy and playfulness of Ashna Sarkar (‘Trawlerman is the most southerly chippie in North Weezy / to do chips with onion gravy’) to Andrew Jamison’s mock-casual meditation on Northern Irish life (‘touching down to a province of ‘politics’ – / we’d call it something else if there was a word for it’), from Oli Hazzard’s deft Ashbery-influenced manoeuvres to Jay Bernard’s compelling ‘11.16’, which bitterly reworks graffiti in a station toilet to evoke Larkin’s famous opening lines: ‘They fuck you up the government / You may not know it but they see / That you’re a mug and so you’ll spend / Nine grand on what they got for free.’ -- Charles Bainbridge * The Guardian *The 10 Best Valentine’s gifts. Poetry is always a winner. This anthology showcases the new crop of young British poets and runs the gamut from lovey-dovey stuff to verses about technology. -- Samuel Muston * The Independent *What is most lovely to see in the Salt anthology is a wide range of well-written experimental poetry. Rachael Allen produces some stunningly controlled prose poems under that heading. Phil Brown plays with an impressive crossword poem, entitled ‘Diptych’. Amy De’Ath writes tongue-tripping poems reminiscent of free association, setting up meaningful sound echoes that work the brain and are pleasant on the ear. Witness this from ‘Poetry for Boys’. At the other end of the scale, poets such as Emily Tesh, Jack Underwood, James Brooks, Ben Wilkinson and Dai George are writing lavish, well-executed and fairly conventional lyrics that seek to communicate directly with the reader. Jack Belloli, too, wants to speak clearly, to be both accurate and resonant with language (‘Yurt’). Sarah Howe is another original. Her poems surprise and hotwire themselves into your brain as you read. -- Jane Holland * Poetry Society *The Salt Book of Younger Poets is both valuable, as an introduction to future big names and an indication of trends in the most contemporary poetry, and enjoyable, as an anthology of intelligent and energetic writing. -- Tess Somervell * Tower Poetry *The writing is assured, erudite and beautifully crafted. It is effortless to read, by which I mean that it is accessible — the poets are too good not to be clear, they do not need to impress by obfuscation and obscurity, but communicate directly, as good writing should, to the intellect, the emotions and the senses.This collection should be an inspiration to older students considering English at degree levels, and also to those who wish to write. The poets here are a demonstration of what is possible, given ‘wide-ranging, hard work and talent’, and an introduction to the ways in which new voices can be heard, not just via the excellent publication cited here, but also through websites on which writers such as these, their ideas and work in progress will be easily accessible. -- Frank Startup * School Librarian *Table of Contents Rachael Allen Daniel Barrow Jack Belloli Jay Bernard James Brookes Phil Brown Niall Campbell Kayo Chingonyi Miranda Cichy John Clegg Nia Davies Amy De’Ath Inua Ellams Charlotte Geater Tom Gilliver Dai George Emily Hasler Oli Hazzard Dan Hitchens Sarah Howe Andrew Jamison Annie Katchinska Andrew McMillan Siofra McSherry Ben Maier Laura Marsh Annabella Massey James Midgley Helen Mort Charlotte Newman Richard O’Brien Richard Osmond Vidyan Ravinthiran Sophie Robinson Charlotte Runcie Ashna Sarkar William Searle Colette Sensier Warsan Shire Lavinia Singer Adham Smart Martha Sprackland Eloise Stonborough Emily Tesh Jack Underwood Ahren Warner Ben Wilkinson Sophie Yeo
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Grace Note Publications Sangs That Sing Sae Sweit: 50 Years o Lallans Poesie: 2022
Book SynopsisSangs That Sing Sae Sweit - 50 Years o Lallans Poesie Since it first kythit in 1972 The Scots Leid Associe/The Scots Language Society has ettled tae publish a fowth o screivins by the maist byordinair makars and screivers o Scots in the pages o its bi-annual magazine, Lallans. Lallans is a ferlie in itsel, haen survived and fordered tae rax tae its 100th issue in 2022. Sangs That Sing Sae Sweit is an ingaitheran o some o the best wark by the heidmaist authors tae screive poetry in the Scots leid ower this hauf century o mensefou chynge in Scottish life, politics and cultur. It sterts wi the makars at the hinder-end o Scottish Leiterary Renaissance and taks the reader up intil the here and nou and the new generation o screivers, the bairns o the Scottish Parliement. Sangs That Sing Sae Sweit is pruif that Scots is no a deean language. Alang wi Wunds That Blaw Sae Roch (The Scots prose anthology that is published sib wi it) it is steekit wi tentfou, thochtie and brawsome celebrations o our kintrae, our landscape, fowk, sangs, leir and history. While it celebrates the cairrying stream o bonnie screivers, some wha hae passed on, it bides relevant and luiks faurrit tae the hecht and hairst o the future. Sangs That Sing Sae Sweit tells us that the Scots leid is whaur it aye has been - the ongaun and virrfou vyce o the fowk.Table of ContentsContents Foreword vii Acknowledgements viii Lallans Is For Aabody: 100 Issues o the Lallans Magazine xvii Introduction xxvii Lallans 1: Bigamist - Alastair Mackie 1 Lallans 2: Peasants' Revolt - David Angus 3 Lallans 3: Rondel - William J. Tait 4 Last Lauch - Donald Campbell 5 Lallans 6: Wind In The Crescent - Edwin Morgan 6 Lallans 7: The Reminder - Robert Garioch 7 Smeddum - Ellie McDonald 8 Lallans 10: Ochils In Steekit Simmer - Hamish M. Brown 9 Lallans 12: Slander At The Wallie - A.M. Davidson 10 Lallans 14: See Them - Douglas Fraser 11 Lallans 15: My Grandfaither - Moira Catell 12 x Lallans 16: The Tattie Bogle - Jamie A. Smith 13 Lallans 25: Fada Ata Mise An Deidh Chaich - William Neill 14 Lallans 26: Mithermine - Carol Galbraith 15 Lallans 27: Fir Ian Hamilton Finlay - John McDonald 16 Oor Ain Folk - T. S. Law 17 Embro 1986 - James Robertson 18 Lallans 28: Sang o the Midwinter Rose - William Montgomerie 19 Mary - Kate Armstrong 20 Lallans 30: Sangstress - Ken Morrice 22 The Curse o a Deein Tongue - Joy Hendry 23 Poet - Christopher Rush 25 Lallans 31: The Warld Cowps Lichtlie owre intil Bleck Nicht - Tony McManus 26 Lallans 33: Christmas Card - E. M. Buchanan 27 Lallans 34: The Storm - Eilidh Rut NicBhaltair 29 Lallans 36: Snaw Faw - J. K. Annand 30 xi Lallans 37: Wrack an Waith - Jean Massie 31 Lallans 38: Howgate - Athole Cameron 33 The Guitarist - Lillian Anderson 35 Lallans 40: Murlins - G.F. Dutton 36 Anniversary - William Graham 37 Lallans 41: Bible Cless - Neil R. MacCallum 38 The Braw Thocht - Edith MacArthur 39 In Praise O Dee - George Philip 41 Glesga Skunner - W. L. Wilson 43 Lallans 45: The Wickedness o War - David Purves 44 Lallans 47: Foundness - John Manson 45 Mist In Edinburgh - A.D. Mackie 46 Lallans 48: The Yird'll Dwam - Harvey Holton 47 Martyrs - Liz Niven 49 Lallans 50: The Daith Tree - David Purdie 50 We Hae Tint E'en - Kenneth Farrow 52 Lallans 51: The Sea Coal - John Brewster 53 xii Wards - George Hardie 55 Lallans 53: The Image O God - Joe Corrie 56 Museum o Scotland - Derek Ross 57 Lallans 54: Braw Scots - Alix-Marie McDowell 58 Lallans 55: Saumon Rin - Muriel Ferrier 59 Lallans 56: Storm at Byron Bay - Aimee Chalmers 60 Lallans 57: A Hamesang Singan - Tom Wilson 61 Figures Receding - Flora Garry 66 Lallans 58: Not On A Raised Beach - Christine de Luca 68 The Wa-Ganging o the Meinister - Aitken Fyall 70 Lallans 59: Frae Eleiven Quad Bike Poems - Brent Hodgson 72 Butterie - Lillias Scott Forbes 75 Lallans 60: Hospital Kitchen - Maureen Sangster 76 Jist a Domestic - Betty Tindal 78 Lallans 61: Munehairst - Elaine Morton 79 Lallans 63: Tinker Wife - Mary Johnston 81 xiii Lallans 64: Cauld Licht - Raymond Vettese 84 Lallans 65: The Smoky Smirr o Rain - George Campbell Hay 86 Lallans 67: The Dark Whirling Dun - Hugh MacDiarmid 88 Leddy o the Xiang Watter - Brian Holton 91 Lallans 68: Tae Ma Bairn - Donald MacKay 93 Hundersoles - Peter Cameron 94 Sparrahawk - Robert R. Calder 95 Asylum Seeker - Mary Smith 98 Lallans 69: Bane-Blether - Colin Donati 99 The Biggin o the Great Nor Road - John McPartlin 100 Lallans 74: The Lion Laid Low by the Man - Walter Perrie 102 Salome's Last Trophy - Frances Robson 103 Coronach fir a Makar - Rab Wilson 105 Lallans 76: Unco - Hamish Scott 106 Lallans 77: Hurdy-gurdy Man, Ainster - Gordon Jarvie 108 Lallans 78: The Lichts o Paris - Ann Mackinnon 109 xiv Lallans 80: Here be Sangs - Stuart McHardy 111 Lallans 82: Simmer Strand - Rowena M. Love 112 Lallans 83: A Gift it Yuletid - Ian Nimmo White 113 Liquide Assets - Penny Cole 114 Lallans 86: Jaws - Stuart A. Paterson 115 Lallans 87: Lines written in appreciation of Lord David Anthony Freud, Baron of Eastry - Lindsay Oliver 116 Lallans 88: Immigrants Abuse Scottish Adoption System - Char March 118 Lallans 89: Mowdiewarp - Catherine MacDonald 119 Lallans 90: Cathedral - Fran Ballie 120 The Trump - Douglas Kynoch 121 Lallans 91: Ma Haun Is Wabbit Wi Screivin - Duncan Sneddon 123 Dae Puddocks Byde There Tae? - Tom Hubbard 124 Lallans 92: Pittenweem Jo - John Watt 127 Nae Information' s Ever Tint - William Hershaw 128 Lallans 94: Wrannie - Irene Howat 130 Sib Tae A Man - Donald Adamson 132 xv Dear Wife - Sheila Templeton 134 For Hugh MacDiarmid - Sam Gilliland 136 The Waal - J. Derrick McClure 137 Lallans 96: The Trebbler's Tale - David Bleiman 139 There's Aye Water Far The Stirkie Droons - Fiona-Jane Brown 142 Ma Language - Tracy Anne Harvey 144 Choir Practice - J. Barrie Shepherd 146 Oor Neu Colossus - Ann Shivas 148 Lallans 97: In The Gairden - Sheena Blackhall 149 Lallans 98: If There Wis a Scottish Enlightenment Nicht Oot - Hugh McMillan 150 Wee Weaver Birdie - Alan Millar 151 A'm No Having Children - Ellen Pennie 153 Lallans 99: Screivit After The Storming o Capitol Hill, Washington - George T Watt 154 Violet's Song - Lisa Ross 155 Eva's Balaloo - Rosa Alba MacDonald 157 ' Index of Authors and Titles of Poems 159
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Hedgehog Poetry Press The Tree Poets
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Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp The Art of Poetry volume 21
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Carnelian Heart Publishing Ltd Tesserae: A mosaic of poems by Zimbabwean women
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