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Poem a Day: Vol. 1 - by Karen McCosker & Nicholas Albery (Paperback)

Poem a Day: Vol. 1 - by  Karen McCosker & Nicholas Albery (Paperback)
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Last Price: 16.29 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Once upon a time, men and women of sense and sensibility knew by heart dozens of poems--Shakespeare's sonnets, stirring patriotic verse, odes to churchyards, and elegies for the departed. Poems are meant to be voiced, and A Poem a Day includes 366 poems old and new--one for each day of the year--worth learning by heart.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Once upon a time men and women of sense and sensibility knew by heart dozens of poems - Shakespeare's sonnets, stirring patriotic verse, odes to churchyards and elegies for the departed, the music of Swinburne or Poe or Yeats. Poems are meant to be voiced and <i>A Poem a Day</i> includes 366 poems old and new - one for each day of the year - worth learning by heart. Only two criteria were demanded of each poem for inclusion in this collection - it had to be short enough to learn in a day, and good enough to stand among the great poetry of the English language, from Chaucer to Sylvia Plath. <p/> <i>A Poem a Day</i> is a book for the bedside. It contains many of the most familiar poems in the language and others that will come as a surprise. Most are complete and most are short, easily contained in a single page. But a few are substantial works, like Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard and Rudyard Kipling's Gunga Din. Some have been read by every high school student (Andrew Marvel, To His Coy Mistress) while others will be new to most readers (Thomas Hardy, The Voice). But all share the compression and charged meaning which are the soul of poetry. <p/> In its British version the book went through seven printings in a year and was a bestseller. Now Karen McCosker has added a new foreword and fifty new poems for an American audience willing to make poetry a part of life.<p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br>In times past, Americans with a love of poetry routinely learned by heart dozens of poems - Shakespeare's sonnets, stirring patriotic verse, odes to churchyards and elegies for the departed, the wit of Dorothy Parker and the music of Swinburne or Poe or Yeats. A Poem a Day includes 366 poems old and new, one for each day of the year, worth learning by heart. All share two things in common - they are short enough to learn in a day, and good enough to stand with the great poetry of the language, from Chaucer to Sylvia Plath. On most pages readers will also find brief, often amusing, always interesting trivia about the poets and their poems.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>This book is a dream, a revivalist campaign, a challenge, a book of days, and an anthology, all in one. -- <i><b>The Guardian</b></i> <p/>A very good and varied collection, with delightful oddities. -- <b><i>The Times </i>(London)</b><i> </i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Karen McCosker is a poet who lives in Maine and teaches at the University of Maine at Presque Isle. <p/>Nicholas Albery (1948-2001) was the founder of the Institute for Social Inventions. He was also a writer, activist, and lover of poetry. He lived in London. Albery's other publications are <i>Alternative Gomera</i> (1994), <i>The Book Of Visions</i> (1993), <i>The Problem Solving Pocketbook</i> (1989), and <i>How To Feel Reborn: The Varieties Of Primal And Rebirthing Experiences</i> (1985).

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