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Bøker utgitt av Shearsman Books

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  •  
    248,-

    This volume is a long-awaited collection of essays which gives a chance for Allen Fisher's many admirers to study his work in depth with a group of experts.

  •  
    154,-

    The first double-issue of Shearsman magazine for 2020 contains poetry from the UK, the USA, Australia, New Zealand, India, Lithuania, Galicia / Spain, Italy and Chile.

  • - Ordinary Autumn & All of a Sudden; Automne regulier & Tout a coup
    av Vicente Huidobro
    193,-

    Before attaining his poetic maturity - and this would be through poems written mostly in Spanish - Huidobro wrote these two collections in French and published them in Paris in 1925, the same year that a volume of his manifestos appeared (see below). The two books have never been republished in France, and only in collected editions in Chile.

  • av Molly Vogel
    193,-

    Molly Vogel's first collection of poems, Florilegium is an exploration of life written in 'the language of flowers'. The poems regard flowers as both symbols and means of communication; in a broader sense, they deem the natural world essential to our understanding of words, ourselves, and the divine.

  • - Arbol de Diana
    av Alejandra Pizarnik
    167,-

    Diana's Tree is an important book - written in Paris, where she lived for four years - and the first really mature work (1963) by Alejandra Pizarnik (1936-1972), increasingly recognised as one of the major poetic voices of the second half of the 20th century in Latin America.

  • av Kent Johnson
    166,-

    "Johnson's poems are like unchained pit bulls tossed into a school yard - somebody is going to get bit." - Ron SillimanOffensive to many, perhaps amusing to more, Kent Johnson's singular position in American poetry as its conscience, and its court jester, is unequalled. Perhaps deliberately. A sequel to Homage to the Last Avant-Garde.

  • - North Sea Poems
    av Lesley Harrison
    216,-

    Disappearance is Lesley Harrison's first full-length collection, bringing together new work which examines the coastline and our uneasy, unresolved relationship with the waters that surround us. Drawing from archives, folk myth and cultural memory, these poems make real our sense of living at the edge of an older, sub-polar world.

  • av Claire Crowther
    169,-

    Solar Cruise is Claire Crowther's fourth collection. Her first collection, Stretch of Closures, was shortlisted for the Aldeburgh Best First Collection prize. Solar Cruise is a love story of a poet and a physicist who is devoted to halting climate change through solar energy. It is a passionately personal but also political work.

  • av Keith Payne & Yolanda Castaño
    166,-

  • av Mario Martín Gijón
    214,-

    Mario Martin Gijon's (Sur)rendering is a sequence of short passionate lyrics describing a love lost and found. This might sound like nothing new in the history of poetry, but the poet immerses us in his story by a complex process of linguistic recreation: recreation in the sense of re-invention and recreation also as play, or playfulness.

  • av Gëzim Hajdari
    167,-

    Bitter Grass was written in 1976 in my last year of high school in Albania. It was refused by the government publisher in Tirana, where the censor said, 'the texts in this collection do not deal with the theme of our socialist village, the transformations that socialism has brought under the guidance of the Party are entirely absent...'

  • av Michael Haslam
    214,-

    Ickerbrow Trig, the book, is simply a collection of poems written since A Cure for Woodness. As for the book's title, it's simply the remnant of a bonnet-bee and an exhausted pun. As a topographical feature, it exists, un-named as such on any map....

  • av Daragh Breen
    167,-

    Like the eponymous fungus that appears to be regurgitated by the Earth herself after rain, fragments of invented folklore and mongrel histories have stained through from Breen's subconscious and come to bloom in a trio of poetic sequences.

  •  
    173,-

    The second issue of Shearsman for 2019 features poetry by, among others, Annemarie Austin, Alison Brackenbury, Andrew Duncan, Chris Emery, Gerrie Fellows, Lucy Hamilton, Alasdair Paterson, John Phillips, John Seed, Robert Sheppard, Andrew Taylor and Tamar Yoseloff & translations from Lithuanian and Dutch.

  • av Aleksandrs Caks
    203,-

    Caks (1901-50) is Latvia's leading mid-20th-century poet, an early adopter of modern literary tendencies from wider Europe, and one of the first really urban poets in the Latvian language - until his eruption onto the scene, Latvian poetry had been grounded in rural life, reflecting the preponderance of Latvian speakers in the countryside.

  • av Harriet Tarlo
    294,-

  • av Gavin Selerie
    262,-

    Collected Sonnets gathers nine main sequences from a 50-year span. It includes takes on poems from other languages and a large number of previously unpublished texts. Praised by Peter Porter for richly re-working Elizabethan elements, Selerie's sonnets have appealed equally to readers with a modernist bent.

  • - Poems
    av Alfonso Reyes
    222,-

    Alfonso Reyes Ochoa (1889-1959) was a Mexican writer, philosopher and diplomat. This is the first major collection of his poetry in English. "A man for whom language has been all that language can be: sound and sign, inert trace and wizardry, a clockwork mechanism and a living thing." (Octavio Paz)

  • - Gezaehlte Tage
    av Peter Huchel
    203,-

    With Brecht, Benn, Bobrowski and Celan, Peter Huchel is one of a handful of essential post-war poets in the German language. A precise observer of natural phenomena, Huchel is above all a realist whose metaphors take us deep into the social and historical landscape, into zones of devastation and despair, the zero-hour of isolation.

  • av Jordi Doce
    193,-

    "Unforgettable poems that, on the verge of tales and fables, drag the reader toward a universe of screened images, like 'pollen clouds in the slant evening light'." -Antonio Ortega, El Pais

  • - Spanish Poets in London 1811-2018
     
    219,-

    I bring together in Streets Where to Walk Is to Embark a wide selection of poems written about London over the past two centuries by Spanish poets. Sometimes London is the protagonist, sometimes the setting, and sometimes it represents an outside space which the poet interiorises, but it always remains a real place...

  • av Peter Larkin
    214,-

    Trees become myriad versions (instalments) of themselves without verging onto an unsensing multiplicity as they traverse partially resistant or patient terrains: so these poems explore contrasting tree-states, as sticks or joints, filters of directional light or self-submerged hedges, which are all manners of contraction, extension, mediation, shareable expression."Larkin's 'theological poetics' assumes a world in which we could be said to be 'short of nothing', however 'scarcely' this is apprehended." -Simon Collings "With relation to the holy as subtext, Trees Before Abstinent Ground continues Peter Larkin's dense and enticing meditations with trees. Larkin's poems lure the reader to attend to the incarnational alterity of trees. Through saturated language, the reader encounters trees' vertical customs and feral horizons, as they engage with the habit and culture of light." -Anne Elvey

  • av Tsvetanka Elenkova
    154,-

    This mystical verse dives repeatedly into the given, and discovers there a world of symbol and - perhaps above all - movement. It is not Gerard Manley Hopkins's search for 'inscape', but instead an apprehension that from moment to moment forms itself into symbolic codes - and then releases those codes into the material, sensual world.

  • av Laressa Dickey
    186,-

    Laressa Dickey's Syncopations continues the thematic explorations of her earlier work-family, memory, the American South-but displays a depth and richness all its own. [...] Readers are treated to a poet in full command of her art who is willing to share the benefits of her hard-won knowledge, making this a truly essential collection.

  • av Em Strang
    186,-

    Horse-Man inhabits at times surreal, at times mystical territory, where the human and nonhuman merge and blend. Part keening, part celebration, Horse-Man immerses the reader in a powerful advocacy of sacred meaning and - fiercely, bravely - asks what it means to be whole, a fully embodied human being.

  • - Selected Poems 1983-2005
    av Thomas Kling
    221,-

    Thomas Kling (1957-2005) died at the age of 47, already recognised as one of the most important German-language poets of his time. He had come to wide recognition in the 1980s, gaining renown for performances of his work and was one of the main forces behind the renovation of contemporary German poetry that occurred at that time.

  • av Harry Guest
    126,-

    Throughout his career, Harry has written occasional poems, haiku, squibs and jests, and this little collection brings together a range of them that will delight his readers.

  • av Yang Lian
    219,-

    "This is large poetry, deep poetry, poetry that concerns itself with the great human themes. This is poetry that can change your life." -Brian Holton

  • av Jeremy Hooker
    186,-

    Word and Stone is questioning poetry, which explores the ground between language that seeks meaning, and the obduracy of matter, and between life and what seems dead. Its concern is with a sense of the sacred, and the possibility of renewing words such as 'spirit' and 'soul' in a materialist culture.

  • - A Version
     
    139,-

    Maldon is a version of the Anglo-Saxon epic fragment usually known as The Battle of Maldon, which tells the tale of a battle between the Anglo-Saxons and the invading Vikings which took place ca. 991 AD on the shores of the River Blackwater, almost certainly opposite Northey Island.

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