<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>A new collection from the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet</b> <p/>Though <i>Frolic and Detour</i> is Paul Muldoon's thirteenth collection, it shows all the energy and ambition we might generally associate with a first book. Here, the poet brings his characteristic humor and humanity to the chickadee, the house wren, the deaths of Leonard Cohen and C. K. Williams, the Irish Rising, the Great War, and how "a streak of ragwort / may yet shine / as an off-the-record / remark becomes the party line." <p/><i>Frolic and Detour</i> reminds us that the sidelong glance is the sweetest, the tangential approach the most telling, and shows us why Paul Muldoon was described by Nick Laird, writing in <i>The New York Review of Books</i>, as "the most formally ambitious and technically innovative of modern poets, [who] writes poems like no one else."</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><b>A <i>Financial Times </i>Book of the Year 2019</b> <p/>Celebrated for his dense, imaginative allusions, Muldoon fills his poems with a cast from antiquity to the present. --<b><i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> <p/>One of the world's finest poets at his best. --Raul Nino, <b><i>Booklist</i></b> <p/>Muldoon's extraordinary facility with both familiar and rare closed forms and his acrobatically inventive rhyming and off-rhyming have diminished not a whit in his sixties . . . Like Ashbery in his final collections, or Cohen in his final albums, Muldoon has nothing left to prove, and can take delight simply in doing what he inimitably does. And his delight is ours. --Paul Scott Stanfield, <b><i>Ploughshares</i></b> <p/>Muldoon's 13th collection applies his characteristically nimble rhymes and musical faculty for language to matters of art (Picasso, Braque), history (the Easter Rising, World War I) and mortality. --Jyoti Thottam, <b><i>The New York Times Book Review</i></b> <p/>[Muldoon] has Donne's baroque intellectual conceits, but also Byron's ebullience in word-play... If you buy one book of poetry this year, make it this one. --Stuart Kelly, <b><i>Scotland on Sunday</i></b> <p/>For all his wit, Muldoon can still be deeply moving. --Tristram Fane Saunders, <b><i>Daily Telegraph</i></b></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Paul Muldoon</b> was born in County Armagh in 1951. He now lives in New York. A former radio and television producer for the BBC in Belfast, he has taught at Princeton University for thirty years. He is the author of over a dozen collections of poetry, including <i>Moy Sand</i> <i>and Gravel</i>, for which he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize, and <i>Selected Poems 1968-2014</i>.
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