72
Anonym
Verlag: Author Unknown
Beschreibung
A wonderful collection of poems written by an unknown author for some very special beings.
Verlag: Author Unknown
A wonderful collection of poems written by an unknown author for some very special beings.
W.B. Yeats: Selected Poems offers some of the most loved and profound pieces from the Irish literary giant. This audiobook edition is beautifully brought to life by Adrian Kelly.Known for his romantic and lyrical style of poetry, Yeats's work was often inspired by Irish myths, spiritualism, love, longing and loss. His later work became more modernist in style, challenging poetic conventions and shifting to a political focus. In this definitive collection, you will find some of Yeats's most noteworthy poems, written from the late nineteenth century right up until his death in 1939.Zum Buch
This book is merely a record of dark events, the kind that you can sometimes move on from, yet can’t help but see in every old house, high school, or crumbling bridge. In the county, eerie stillness can be mistaken for stagnation. In the county, rumination on pain and guilt can be confused with omens and curses. In the county, feelings of claustrophobia stem from understanding what the encroaching darkness brings with it. You’ve heard of country girls, and city girls, but what of the forgotten girls from the in-between space of the county? Confronting the things too wild for urban areas, and too methodically malevolent for the countryside, girls from the county are often dismissed by popular narratives, left to solve riddles of grief and rage for themselves. Known for weaving folk horror with confessional poetry, unflinching true crime approaches with myth and fable, contemporary appetites with gothic literature, award-winning author Donna Lynch has composed a lyrical reconstruction for readers to navigate the lives—and deaths—of girls from the county.Zum Buch
Songs of Innocence and Experience is a poetry collection by Blake. It contrasts childhood innocence (joy, wonder) with the harsher realities of adulthood (injustice, disillusionment). Imagine two sides of the same coin: one bright, one shadowed.Zum Buch
Palace of Waning explores longing for a sense of home. Through themes of place, loss, and self, images wander into uneasy complexities of truth where the search for home distorts the view of its presence everywhere. Readers are invited as far as space and as near as the sound of moving fabric. Review: In A Palace of Waning, Pamela Nocerino’s luminous new chapbook, the poet traces the shifting landscapes of home, self, loss, and place. Here, “Red neon blinks / like it celebrates the danger” of icy roads, even as we are reminded that “The sun doesn’t rise / We rotate to see it.” Nocerino invites us into a world where beauty and peril intertwine, and where perception itself becomes a kind of illumination. –Leah Huete de Maines, Poet-in-Residence Emerita at Northern Kentucky UniversityZum Buch
Immerse your Spirit in a world of darkened narrative poetry, blended with insightful and twisted humor. An hourglass is tilted; but, but, death is nothing, compared to possessing of a hunted soul...Zum Buch
Christchurch lies on the edge of the Canterbury Plains bounded by the Cashmere Hills the home of Kahukura - Red Cloak of the Sky - to the east and the Southern Alps to the west. Even in the heart of winter, hot winds come and Kahukura rises from the Cashmere Hills and fans out, red hued across the sky, forming the Nor'West Arc. This collection of poetry tells the tale of growing up, living and dreaming here in this place - where twilight burns the sky. "This is New Zealand poetry at its finest. The imagery is strong and violent yet suprisingly beautiful. These poems sound good. They strike a raw nerve." Naomi Edwards, Canta "Kathleen weaves together te ao mauri and her experiences of te ao wairua - giving resonance to the multiple feathers worn by manu kaitiaki kōtuku. Whether you wade in the foreshore or seek the heights of fligth Kathleen's poetic kōtrto will find you whispering āe tika - I understand." Te Awhina ArahangaZum Buch