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This collection includes previously unpublished letters from Jack
to his father, John Quinn 'The Man from New York' and Sarah Purser.
Introduced by Bruce Stewart of the University of Coleraine, the
work is edited by Sligo-man Declan J. Foley, originator and
organizer of three John Butler Yeats seminars in Chestertown (JBY's
burial ground) New York in 2001, 2004 and 2007. The book contains
drawings and illustrations by Jack B. Yeats, and for the first time
shows the six works he exhibited at the Armory Show in New York.
Most vitally, it will introduce Jack and his prodigal father John
Butler Yeats to a new generation of readers.
YEATS 150 is a collection of essays, many of them illustrated,
commemorating the life and work of Irish poet and Nobel Laureate,
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939). The book, dedicated to Seamus
Heaney, is divided into a number of sections: Academic Essays;
Plays; the Yeats family; Scholarly Essays; Yeats Poetry Prizes and,
appropriately, the topographical ‘Sligo’, by Sligo natives and
visitors to the International Yeats Summer School. The book
includes Helen Vendler’s tribute to Seamus Heaney; essays on
Yeats’ poetry and plays; on his wife George, his children Anne
and Michael, his contemporary, AE, and on the Sligo landscape that
so influenced his imagination. It also details his elaborately
crafted book designs. A section, appropriately titled Tír na nÓg,
includes pieces by the late T.R. Henn, Vincent Buckley and Alec
King, connecting to the post-1945 writing on W.B. Yeats. This
remarkably wide-ranging collection honours the poet Yeats and those
who have lectured and tutored across the world on the man and his
work. The US, Canada, UK, Hungary, Japan, New Zealand and Australia
are represented in the essays. The thirty-six contributors include
former Yeats Summer School Directors: Helen Vendler, Denis Donoghue
and James Pethica, Ann Margaret Daniels, as well as Patrick M.
Keane, Harvard professors Deirdre Toomey and Daniel Albright, Yeats
Annual editor Warwick Gould, publisher Colin Smythe, professor and
director of Otago University, New Zealand, Peter Kuch, Tokyo
professor Tomoko Iwatsubo, biographer Ann Saddlemyer, critics Lucy
McDiarmid, Bruce Stewart and Martin Mansergh: in all, a glittering
gathering of writers lend weight to this important commemorative
and historical work.
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