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  • Published: 16 March 2022
  • ISBN: 9780143137016
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 128
  • RRP: $49.99
Categories:

Earthborn



A timely new collection that sounds themes about the fragility of life and our duty to respect the planet in a time of climate change, from the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who work “begins in delight and ends in wisdom” (Carrie Fountain)

A timely new collection that sounds themes about the fragility of life and our duty to respect the planet in a time of climate change, from the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet whose work “begins in delight and ends in wisdom” (Carrie Fountain)

The work of Carl Dennis has won praise for its “integrity, its substance, and its seemingly effortless craft; and for its embodiment of passionate inquiry” (Times Literary Supplement). The title of his new collection, Earthborn, helps to point the way to its two central concerns: how to find meaning, as creatures of the earth, in lives that are short and frail and destined to be forgotten; and how, as stewards of the earth, to address the need to protect our home from ourselves, from the menace to life posed by our own species. The book succeeds in braiding together a recognition of our limits and of our responsibilities in ways that are deeply moving and revealing.

  • Published: 16 March 2022
  • ISBN: 9780143137016
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 128
  • RRP: $49.99
Categories:

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Praise for Earthborn

Praise for Carl Dennis’s most recent collection, Night School:


"Over the course of thirteen books Carl Dennis has forged an utterly distinct and instantly recognizable voice that never lapses into self-imitation or predictability . . . Dennis is clearly doing the work he was meant to do. The poems in Night School reward repeated readings.  There's a generosity here unpolluted by sentimentality or self-regard or false consolation.” —Timothy McBride in Valparaiso Poetry Review
 
"As George Steiner argues, our ability to articulate that which does not exist, 'the counterfactual,' makes us human . . . and grants us extraordinary power.  It is this power that Carl Dennis harnesses in his poems." —Stephen Kampa in Literary Matters