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An outstanding, finely-crafted debut collection from the recipient of an Eric Gregory Award and the Newdigate Prize.
Scotland's great maverick poet, Glasgow-born Frank Kuppner produces a tenth collection of poems that brings Glasgow to China and willow-pattern to the rougher parts of Glasgow.
A new selection of Anthony Burgess's best reviews and articles.
New poems are added to the eleven previous books of this most popular of Caribbean poets.
The Ted Hughes Award-winning poet here reinvents his poetry, focusing on the fiercely personal.
Milne's formally inventive work engages modern politics, challenges language's tyranny and reshapes modern poetry.
Patrick Worsnip's translations of Propertius rise out of the Latin and brilliantly recreate the poet's voice, his life and loves, and his period when Rome was in full late flower.
Chris Wallace-Crabbe, one of Australia's best-loved poets, writes in Rondo a book that distils his life-long themes of nature, time and love; he is civilised but also relentless in his dedication to 'troubling the stubborn world for meaning'.
American poet Nina Bogin writes from France, its western borders, its landscapes, its tumultuous history.
The new collection from the winner of the 2016 Forward Prize for Best Collection, the 2016 Poetry Book Society Choice and shortlisted for the 2016 T.S. Eliot Prize (Measures of Expatriation)
The first of the monumental, definitive two-volume edition of Williams's Collected Poems for the twenty-first century reader.
The collected works of the the veteran Greek diplomat and scholar who won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1963.
An annotated edition of selected essays by the major Victorian writer and aesthete Walter Pater.
Guyanese-British poet Fred D'Aguiar's poetry has been shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize. His new book wonderfully recreates moments of his and our wider history, making inclusions where exclusions have occurred before.
This volume concludes the corrected text of the almost 1500 pages of Hugh MacDiarmid's "Complete Poems", with a volume including the full texts of "In Memoriam James Joyce" (1955), "Three Hymns to Lenin" (1957), "The Kind of Poetry I Want" (1961) and much else.
Inspired by the Russian futurist Khlebnikov, Wheatley provides a rivetting poetic vision of world culture.
Tara Bergin's second collection of poems of love and hate inspired by the story of Eleanor Marx's translation of Madame Bovary.
Sinead Morrissey's poems consider spectacular feats of human engineering from our radically unstable perspective.
Thomas A Clark continues his investigations into the landscape and culture of the Scottish highlands and islands.
This text collects: all that Helen Thomas wrote about the poet Edward Thomas; the volumes "As It Was" and "World Without End"; her letters to Edward; and separate memoirs of her meetings with W.H. Davies, D.H. Lawrence, Ivor Gurney, Eleanor Farjeon, Robert Frost and W.H. Hudson.
These brief and telling stories of rustic life and love are set in the remote and barren Tras-os-Montes - "over the mountains" - region of North East Portugal. The author speaks of the men and women living there, complex in emotion and thought, and elusive and thrifty with words.
In this collection, Jon Stallworthy and Peter France introduce Blok's poetry into English, retaining as much as possible his distinctive form and tone. His early poetry is inspired by mystical experience, and the Beautiful Lady in his work is less a conceit than a powerful enabler.
Robert Minhinnick is alive to his environment: he has a scientist's regard for facts. The poet in him sees into the facts of landscape and history. He visits various pasts, using images of archaeology, mining, geology and his own layered biography to uncover what might be reclaimed.
This selection of letters (1938-1985) belonging to a major figure on the post-1945 scene allows a glimpse of his often turbulent life. These letters are a testament to the close intellectual and spiritual bonds which nourished his writing over the many years he worked.
Beautifully formal and engaged, this book celebrates individual, collective and European identity.
Caroline Bird pretends to lay down her celebrated satiric weaponry, venturing into the badlands of the human psyche to seek out 'simple truth'.
A funny and clever contemporary retelling of Dante which examines the concept of sin and humanity in the 21st century.
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