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The poems of the legendary Nobel Laureate, in one volume at last
One of the greatest and grandest advocates of the literary vocation, Joseph Brodsky truly lived his life as a poet, and for it earned eighteen months in an Arctic labor camp, expulsion from his native country, and the Nobel Prize in Literature. Such were one man's wages. Here, collected for the first time, are all the poems he published in English, from his earliest collaborations with Derek Walcott, Richard Wilbur, Howard Moss, and Anthony Hecht to the moving farewell poems he wrote near the end of his life. With nearly two hundred poems, several of them never before published in book form, this will be the essential volume of Brodsky's work.
'Reading Brodsky's essays is like a conversation with an immensely
erudite, hugely entertaining and witty (and often very funny)
interlocutor' Wall Street Journal Watermark is Joseph Brodsky's
witty, intelligent, moving and elegant portrait of Venice. Looking
at every aspect of the city, from its waterways, streets and
architecture to its food, politics and people, Brodsky captures its
magnificence and beauty, and recalls his own memories of the place
he called home for many winters, as he remembers friends, lovers
and enemies he has encountered. Above all, he reflects with great
poetic force on how the rising tide of time affects city and
inhabitants alike. Watermark is an unforgettable piece of writing,
and a wonderful evocation of a remarkable, unique city. Winner of
the Nobel Prize for Literature
'Brodsky charged at the world . . . there is no voice, no vision,
remotely like it' The New York Times Book Review Self-educated,
intense, impulsive and unmoored, Joseph Brodsky emerged in
mid-century Russia as a poetic virtuoso, recognized by such greats
as Anna Akhmatova as their worthy heir. He was expelled from the
Soviet Union in 1972. Together, the poems in this volume unfold the
project that, as Brodsky saw it, the condition of exile presented:
'to set the next man - however theoretical he and his needs may be
- a bit more free.' This edition includes poems translated by Derek
Walcott, Richard Wilbur and Anthony Hecht, and poems written in
English or translated by the author himself. It surveys Brodsky's
tumultuous life and illustrious career, and showcases his most
notable and poignant work as a poet. Winner of the Nobel Prize for
Literature Edited and introduced by Ann Kjellberg
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Watermark (Paperback)
Joseph Brodsky
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R377
R283
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A Part of Speech (Paperback)
Joseph Brodsky; Translated by Anthony Hecht
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R425
R358
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A Part of Speech contains poems from the years 1965-1978, translated by various hands.
In this richly diverse collection of essays, Joseph Brodsky casts a
reflective eye on his experiences of early life in Russia and exile
in America. With dazzling erudition, he explores subjects as varied
as the dynamic of poetry, the nature of history and the plight of
the emigre writer. There is also the humorous tale of a disastrous
trip to Brazil, advice to students, a homage to Marcus Aurelius and
studies of Robert Frost, Thomas Hardy, Horace and others. The
second volume of essays following Less Than One, this collection
includes Brodsky's 1987 Nobel Lecture, 'Uncommon Visage'.
Five years after the death of Joseph Brodsky, the heir of the
generation of Pasternak, Mandelstam, Tsvetaeva and especially
Akhmatova, this "Collected Poems in English" for the first time
gathers all his translated and original poems in English. It
confirms his unique place in our literature. His abiding addiction
to the English language, and particularly to the Metaphysical
poets, was manifest in the industry with which he read and
translated in both directions. His own efforts to translate his
work, and the poems he wrote directly in English, are ambitious:
the poetic "conceit" is for him functional, as it was in the 17th
century, a tool for prising open difficult truths, making
vertiginous connections. Susan Sontag speaks of the poems'
"extraordinary velocity and density of material notation, of
cultural reference, of attitude. He insisted that poetry's 'job' (a
much used word) was to explore the capacity of language to travel
farther, faster. Poetry, he said, is accelerated thinking".
Joseph Brodsky, Seamus Heaney, Derek Walcott--three Nobel laureates
and threeof our generation's greatest poets explore the
misconceptions and mythologiesthat surround one of America's most
famous and beloved deceased poets--RobertFrost.
A Platonic dialogue in the form of a double anachronism--the action takes place two centuries after our era--Joseph Brodsky’s only play, Marbles, is set in a prison cell that alone provides for the three unities of classic drama: those of time, place, and action. A nightmare rather than a utopia, this play proceeds according to the immanent logic of mental aggravation as its two characters, the inmates Publius and Tullius, examine the tautology of their psychological, historical, and purely physical confines. The fusion of its dour, somewhat terrifying vision with the macabre hilarity of its verbal texture allows Marbles to take its audience beyond the farthest reaches of the theatre of the absurd, into territory more suitable for modernist imagination than for human experience.
Representative selections from the great Russian poets of the nineteenth century, chosen by the uniquely qualified Nobel Laureate Joseph Brodsky.
Selected and translated by Lyn Coffin Introduction by Joseph Brodsky
Ever since her death in 1966 Anna Akhmatova has been recognized as the greatest modern Russian poet. A rich and representative selection of Akhmatova's workfrom her poignant, deeply personal love poems to her haunting laments for the martyrs of the Stalinist purgeshas been newly translated by the American poet Lyn Coffin. In her finely crafted translations Coffin has been uniquely successful in reproducing the directness and striking effects characteristic of Akhmatova's poetry, and she is the first to remain true to Akhmatova's rhyme and cadence. The poems are prefaced by a thoughtful introduction by the poet Joseph Brodsky, a friend of Akhmatova in her later years.
Joseph Brodsky's last volume of poems in English, So Forth, represents eight years of masterful self-translation from the Russian, as well as a substantial body of work written directly in English.
Combining two books of verse that were first published in his native Russian, To Urania was Brodsky's third volume to appear in English. Published in 1988, the year after he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, this collection features pieces translated by the poet himself and others, as well as poems written originally in English.
Auden once characterized Brodsky as "a traditionalist . . . interested in what lyric poets of all ages have been interested in . . . encounters with nature . . . reflections upon the human condition, death, and the meaning of existence." Reading the poems in To Urania--by turns cerebral, caustic, comic, and celebratory--we appreciate firsthand a great lyric poet's variety and achievement.
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