1. Target
  2. Movies, Music & Books
  3. Books
  4. All Book Genres
  5. Fiction
  6. Poetry

Daybreak - by Claire Malroux (Paperback)

Daybreak - by  Claire Malroux (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 16.99 USD

Similar Products

Products of same category from the store

All

Product info

<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"For over four decades Claire Malroux has forged a unique path in contemporary French poetry, informed by the French tradition, poets such as Yves Bonnefoy and Mallarmâe, and more unusually, by the Anglophone tradition, especially Emily Dickinson, Elizabeth Bishop, and Derek Walcott. A preeminent translator of English poetry into French, Malroux claims as a signal event in her literary life her discovery in 1983 of Dickinson's poetry, which she describes as "an encounter with the uncanny" and the awakening of a "personal affinity." Malroux is one of those rare poets whose work is informed by day-to-day intimacy with a second language in its greatest variations and subtleties. Her poems move between an intense but philosophical and abstract interiority and an acute engagement with the material world. In almost every poem there is a characteristic and unsettling amalgam of past and present that collapses distance and incarnates through metaphor. This bilingual selection by the award-winning poet and translator Marilyn Hacker presents Malroux's oeuvre from her early lyric poems, to an excerpt from A Long-Gone Sun--a poem-memoir of life in southern France before and during World War II--to new and uncollected poems from two sequences of elegies written after the death of her life partner, the writer Pierre Sylvain"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>A bilingual collection of poetry, from elegies to poem memoirs, by a revered French master.</b> <p/>For more than four decades Claire Malroux has blazed a unique path in contemporary French poetry. She is influenced by such French poets as Mallarmé and Yves Bonnefoy, but her work also bears the mark, and this is unusual in France, of Anglophone poets like Emily Dickinson, Elizabeth Bishop, and Derek Walcott. A prominent translator of poetry from English into French, Malroux is one of those rare poets whose work is informed by a day-to-day intimacy with a second language in its greatest variations and subtleties. Her poems move between an intense but philosophical and abstract interiority and an acute engagement with the material world. This bilingual selection by the award-winning poet and translator Marilyn Hacker presents Malroux's oeuvre, from her early lyric poems to an excerpt from <i>A Long-Gone Sun</i>--a poem-memoir of life in southern France before and during World War II--to new and uncollected poems, including an elegiac sequence written after the death of her life partner, the writer Pierre Silvain.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Here's one of the finest poets now writing in France in the magnificent new translation of Marilyn Hacker. Claire Malroux is a name every devoted reader of poetry will want to know. She reminds us that lyric poetry can speak of our lives in the way that nothing else can." --Charles Simic <p/>"The personal and universal cataclysms in Claire Malroux's poetry--a maelstrom of love, torment and sweetness--are viewed as though through the calm lens of a dream. All is surging, hushed, violently human. Marilyn Hacker's gifted translation captures the tone flawlessly." --John Ashbery <p/>"Here is the journey of a soul toward its truth. A refusal of despair, a clash with an absence, a trembling before the multiple: these are Claire Malroux's greatnesses. 'You must persevere, ' she says to us, for beyond the disorder and conflict, at the threshold of language, is the meaning of our existence. 'You must persevere.'" --Henri Cole <p/>Like Dickinson, Malroux tends toward fragmented narratives and vivid imagery; often, her poems sound at once melancholy and breathless, as echoes might.... In <i>Daybreak</i>, Hacker offers readers a striking, panoramic view of Malroux's body of work. -- Lily Meyer, <i>Poetry Foundation</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Claire Malroux</b> is the author of a dozen collections of poems, including <i>Edge</i>, <i>A Long-Gone Sun</i>, and <i>Birds and Bison</i>, all of which were translated into English by Marilyn Hacker. She is also a French translator of Anglophone poets, notably Marilyn Hacker, Henri Cole, Derek Walcott, Wallace Stevens, and, in particular, Emily Dickinson. She lives in Paris, France. <p/><b>Marilyn Hacker</b> is the author of fourteen books of poems, including <i>Blazons</i>, <i>A Stranger's Mirror</i>, and <i>Names</i>; and an essay collection, <i>Unauthorized Voices</i>. Her seventeen translations of other French and Francophone poets include Jean-Paul de Dadelsen's <i>That Light, All at Once: Selected Poems</i>, and Samira Negrouche's <i>The Olive Trees' Jazz and Other Poems</i>. She lives in Paris, France.

Price History