Collected Works Joan Goldin, text by Christopher Ricks, forthcoming from Un-Gyve Press.
Read MoreFinal Days: Forms of Nature, Flinn Gallery, Greenwich Library
Final Days: Forms of Nature: Joan Goldin and Leigh Taylor Mickelson
Flinn Gallery, Greenwich Library, October 27 – December 7, 2022
Read MoreHAIKU Harry Thomas
Sixty-three original poems by Harry Thomas.
Harry Thomas is the translator of Joseph Brodsky’s masterpiece, “Gorbunov and Gorchakov” (To Urania, 1987). He is the editor of Selected Poems of Thomas Hardy (Penguin, 1993), Montale in English (Penguin, 2002) and Poems about Trees (Knopf, 2019). His poems, translations, essays, and reviews have appeared in dozens of magazines. From 2001 to 2010 he was Editor-in-Chief of Handsel Books, an imprint of Other Press.
From Harry Thomas and Un-Gyve Press: Some Complicity: Poems and Translations (2013), The Truth of Two Selected Translations (2017) and HAIKU (2020).
Un-Gyve Press is pleased to offer HAIKU also in a limited, signed edition with a number of the poems translated into Japanese by TAMURA Nanae.
Harry Thomas
Sixty-three original poems by Harry Thomas.
Un-Gyve Press is pleased to offer HAIKU also in a limited, signed edition with a number of the poems translated into Japanese by TAMURA Nanae.
HAIKU (Un-Gyve Press) is a 76 page softcover. ISBN: 978-0-9993632-3-2.
Un-Gyve Press is pleased to offer Harry Thomas’s HAIKU in this limited, signed edition of fifty with several of the poems translated into Japanese by TAMURA Nanae. Hand finished, inspired by the Japanese stab binding tradition, incorporating fine Japanese cloths and U.S. cotton paper, placed in a beautiful lined box.
“Will you walk into my parlour?” — Views of the Haunts and Homes of the British Poets, Oct. 19 1850.
The Rolling Stones released “The Spider and the Fly” fifty years ago July like “Like a Rolling Stone” but ten days later and with less of a bang but for being the B-side of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” in Britain tho tied by a thread — “Sittin’ thinkin’ sinkin’ drinkin’” — “drinkin’, thinkin’ that they got it made” — the ancient form of weaving, a bawdy parlour song, “’Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy,” that superficially strings-in, title and plot, from a previous more virtuous verse.
Read More“Will you walk into my parlour?”
The Rolling Stones released “The Spider and the Fly” fifty years ago July like “Like a Rolling Stone” but ten days later and with less of a bang but for being the B-side of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” in Britain tho tied by a thread — “Sittin’ thinkin’ sinkin’ drinkin’” — “drinkin’, thinkin’ that they got it made” — the ancient form of weaving, a bawdy parlour song, “’Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy,” that superficially strings-in, title and plot, from a previous more virtuous verse.
Read More