Description

Book Synopsis
From the award-winning poet: a powerful collection that explores the biblical past and the terrifying politics of the present, the legacy of fathers and the flawed kingdoms they leave their sons. Now in paperback.

In Ben Adan, a stunning poem in the opening sequence of the collection, we witness the drama between a captor and the prisoner commanded to dig his own grave (perhaps in a moment / he will lift me up / and hold me trembling, / more scared than I / and more relieved). After a Bombing examines children's drawings as deep symbolic reactions to 9/11. The subtly majestic Lament for the Makers of Brooklyn builds the poignant case for a lost world: Where is Policastro the locksmith now? the poet asks. Half-blind, he wore two pairs of glasses / held together by duct tape, / . . . / afterward the key turned / for you but not for me. In exploring the small empires of human conflict, which expand in all directions, Nurkse is attuned to the scraps of beauty or insight that margina

The Border Kingdom Poems

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    £13.29

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    RRP £13.99 – you save £0.70 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 1 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by D. Nurkse

    10 in stock


      View other formats and editions of The Border Kingdom Poems by D. Nurkse

      Publisher: Random House USA Inc
      Publication Date: 05/06/2018
      ISBN13: 9780375711633, 978-0375711633
      ISBN10: 0375711635

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      From the award-winning poet: a powerful collection that explores the biblical past and the terrifying politics of the present, the legacy of fathers and the flawed kingdoms they leave their sons. Now in paperback.

      In Ben Adan, a stunning poem in the opening sequence of the collection, we witness the drama between a captor and the prisoner commanded to dig his own grave (perhaps in a moment / he will lift me up / and hold me trembling, / more scared than I / and more relieved). After a Bombing examines children's drawings as deep symbolic reactions to 9/11. The subtly majestic Lament for the Makers of Brooklyn builds the poignant case for a lost world: Where is Policastro the locksmith now? the poet asks. Half-blind, he wore two pairs of glasses / held together by duct tape, / . . . / afterward the key turned / for you but not for me. In exploring the small empires of human conflict, which expand in all directions, Nurkse is attuned to the scraps of beauty or insight that margina

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