Finders Keepers Selected Prose 1971-2001

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Finders Keepers Selected Prose 1971-2001 by Heaney, Seamus, 9780374528782
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  • ISBN: 9780374528782 | 0374528780
  • Cover: Paperback
  • Copyright: 4/16/2003

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A selection of the best of three decades of writing about poetry, a celebration of the "tenacious curiosity" (Los Angeles Times) of the Nobel laureate Whether autobiographical, topical, or specifically literary, these writings circle the central preoccupying questions of Seamus Heaney's career: "How should a poet properly live and write? What is his relationship to his own voice, his own place, his literary heritage, and the contemporary world?" Along with a selection from Heaney's three previous collections of prose (Preoccupations, The Government of the Tongue,andThe Redress of Poetry), the present volume includes a rich variety of pieces not previously collected in books, ranging from formal lectures to radio commentaries about the rural Ireland of his childhood to illuminating reviews of his contemporaries. In its soundings of a wide range of poets--Irish and British, American and Eastern European, predecessors, fellows, and successors--Finders Keepersbecomes, as its title heralds, "an announcement of both excitement and possession." Seamus Heaneyreceived the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995. His many books of poetry includeOpened Ground,Electric Light,The Spirit Level,Seeing Things,Station Island,The Haw Lantern, andField Work, as well as translations ofBeowulfandDiary of One Who Vanished. A resident of Dublin, he has taught poetry at Oxford University and Harvard University. In 2004, Heaney was presented with theKenyon ReviewAward for Literary Achievement. Winner of the Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism Finders Keeperscollects Seamus Heaney's best prose of the last three decades. Whether autobiographical, topical, or specifically literary, these writings circle the preoccupying questions of Heaney's long and important career: "How should a poet properly live and write? What is his relationship to be to his own voice, his own place, his literary heritage, and the contemporary world?" Along with a selection from the poet's three previous collections of prose (Preoccupations,The Government of the Tongue, andThe Redress of Poetry), this volume includes Heaney's finest lectures and a rich variety of pieces not previously collected in book form, from short newspaper articles to radio commentaries. In its clear and challenging soundings on a wide range of poets and poetics--Irish and British, American and Eastern European, predecessors and contemporaries--Finders Keepersis, as its title heralds, "an announcement of both excitement and possession." "Heaney is one of the great living poets . . . and as this new selection of his essays and lectures shows, he has written often and beautifully about poets, poems, and poetry in general . . . [Finders Keepers] will delight those who have come to love Heaney's own rich and humane verse."--Adam Kirsch,The Boston Globe "[Heaney's essays exhibit] a brimming metaphoric energy [and] a buoyant vivacity of description . . . reflective humor . . . and imaginative penetration [that are] unequalled in contemporary critical prose."--Helen Vendler,The New Yorker "Heaney gives us appreciations of poets ranging from Robert Burns to Sylvia Plath, as well as autobiographical pieces that suggest the tension between 'Place and Displacement'--to borrow the title of his essay on recent poetry from Northern Ireland--that characterizes Heaney's own poetry . . . To read poems with Heaney, whose critical prose can be as impassioned and musical as the verse he's explicating, is to confront what they can do. 'None of us wants fake consolation in the face of real problems,' he says. 'None of us wants Disney
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