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  • Published: 1 September 2018
  • ISBN: 9780807089033
  • Imprint: Beacon Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 248
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

New and Collected Poems: 1975-2015





A new collection of poems from celebrated poet, novelist, and biographer Jay Parini.

A new book, the first in over a decade, from acclaimed poet Jay Parini

This volume revolves around his deep connection to nature and underlines his concerns about the impacts of pollution and climate change. In these beautiful, haunting poems, Parini writes about the landscapes of mining country, of the railroads of Pennsylvania, of farm country, of worlds lost and families dispersed. He explores faith and how it is tested. He limns the deepest crevices of the human heart and soul. He surprises and moves us.

In addition to a complete volume’s worth of new work, called West Mountain Epilogue, offering more than fifty poems never before published in any form, Parini has collected the very best work from his previous four volumes, the poems, as he tells us, “written in the past forty years that I wish to stand by.’

Lavishly and deservingly praised over the decades for his work as an essayist, critic, biographer, novelist, and, especially, poet, Parini shines as never before in this generous volume.

  • Published: 1 September 2018
  • ISBN: 9780807089033
  • Imprint: Beacon Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 248
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

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Praise for New and Collected Poems: 1975-2015

Praise for the poetry of Jay Parini:

"These poems are fully imagined and highly accomplished" --James Merrill

"His ways and his means come wonderfully together. These are warm, accepting, peacemaking poems, with sudden jumps of articulate delight in them; and, above all,. The book abounds in grace--grace of attitude, grace of language." --Alastair Reid

"Jay Parini's poetry is keen-eyed, thoughtful, artful, yet unaffected. I am struck by his range, by the honesty of the poet's desires and ignorances--his forthright longing for transcendence, his forthright fear that it may not happen." --Richard Wilbur

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