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ISBN: PB: 9781857541618

Carcanet

May 1999

320 pp.

21.6x13.6 cm

PB:
£14,95
QTY:

Categories:

Collected Poems

The American poet John Peck's poems draw on both modernist and traditional resources, quarrying in the large gaps among contemporary audiences for poetry. The badge of "difficulty" is routinely pinned to his work. Yet it may be that such poetry makes the incoherence of taste on both sides of the Atlantic more concretely perceptible.

This collection from six previous books provides an opportunity to frame such a question and test claims for the work made by James Powell, Reginald Gibbons, Clive Wilmer and Patrick McGuinness: that "it issues from a poetics determined to give the reader the full weight and texture of experience and judgment, and from a poet who refuses to falsify the presentation of his full engagement with the world"; and then, "rare work, and among the best we have"; and then, "for my money, the best poet of my generation, as indifferent to academic fashions as he is to those of the poetry market"; and finally, "the poems are so consistently and outstandingly beautiful that the desire to 'understand' takes second place to the straightforward need to read
on".

"Collected Shorter Poems" omits many of the translations from Hi-Lo (while including one new one), and excludes the recent long poem "M", but collects for the first time five poems.

About the Author

John Peck was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1941. After living for many years in Zurich, where he trained as an analyst at the C. G. Jung Institute, he is now in private practice in Vermont. He was awarded the Prix de Rome for "The Broken Blockhouse Wall" (Carcanet, 1979). In 1999 Carcanet published his "Collected Shorter Poems 1966-1996".