|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jorie GrahamPublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: HarperCollins Dimensions: Width: 18.70cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.635kg ISBN: 9780062315441ISBN 10: 0062315447 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 16 February 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsA well-curated representation...a long view of the aesthetic development and ethical awakening of one of America's most important and critically lauded poets...The scale of thought and perception...is a testament to Graham's work and her willingness to push herself into new territory with each new book. --Publishers Weekly (starred and boxed review) I firmly believe that Graham's is the best poetry written in English in the last 40 years. The achievement of her verse is not only to make something happen: Graham's poetry is something happening. --Los Angeles Review of Books I know of no living poet whose work so aligns with their reason for writing; I know of no living poet with a better reason for writing poetry. --Flavorwire In 1995, Graham won the Pulitzer Prize for her first book of selected poetry... her latest effort exceeds that one. . . . These poems detach us from comfortable moorings, leaving us pleasantly adrift. Here is exceptional proof that contemporary poetry retains access to the sublime. --Richmond Times-Dispatch Like the greatest filmmakers, Graham is miraculously gifted at tracing those inexplicable moments that carry a thing -- a crow, the sun, a snowflake -- from stillness to motion, from wholeness to disintegration and back again. --Flavorwire Ms. Graham is a central figure in the last four decades of American poetry. Her poems, with their long verse lines and Emily Dickinson-like dashes, are as instantly recognizable as Joni Mitchell's voice on a turntable. --New York Times, Dwight Garner One of our most important purveyors of the form traces her artistic evolution in this collected work, demonstrating herself to be an eloquent observer of nature and guardian of myth. --O, the Oprah Magazine We will always need to read Jorie Graham, and to read her closely, if we want to understand the last 40 years of poetry in America (as well as abroad, where her reputation is only growing)...From the New World is now the place to start.--Los Angeles Review of Books Graham is to post-1980 poetry what Bob Dylan is to post-1960 rock: She changed her art form, moved it forward, made it able to absorb and express more than it could before. It permanently bears her mark. --New York Times Book Review Graham is one of our great poets. Her words will long outlast all this chatter. --New York Times Book Review Legions of poets have been influenced by Pulitzer Prize-winner Graham over the course of her four-decade career... [These poems] display a continued willingness to experiment and push her art in new directions.--Publishers Weekly Graham's poetry over the decades hasn't followed a single line of inquiry; rather, like a universe unto itself, it has expanded, broadened, and deepened its questioning, as though total inclusion were the only way to attempt to apprehend the unfathomable. --Boston Globe Graham is a wizard at representing spatial environments, no easy task in a verbal art that largely avoids narrative. . . . There are four new poems here, among the finest that Graham has written. --The New Yorker From the New World is an indispensable addition to any literary library, a tour de force selection of Jorie Graham's critically important poems to date. --New York Journal of Books We will always need to read Jorie Graham, and to read her closely, if we want to understand the last 40 years of poetry in America (as well as abroad, where her reputation is only growing) From the New World is now the place to start.--Los Angeles Review of Books Author InformationJorie Graham is the author of eleven collections of poems. Her poetry, widely translated, has been the recipient of numerous awards, among them the Pulitzer Prize, the Forward Prize (UK), and the International Nonino Prize. She lives in Massachusetts and teaches at Harvard University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |