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General Catalog
2007 368 pages clothbound Limited, signed, and numbered First edition with plain vellum wrapper “I can’t think of a living poet who writes such incredible sonnets. ... He travels with ease from the Iliad to his local fields. ... It’s hard to tell if he’s a poet of regular life who is good at stumbling upon depth, or a deep poet who knows that the quotidian is precious. And it’s not clear that it matters.” Laurel Maury, The Los Angeles Times
$ 50.00
2007 368 pages paperback “...a contemporary who should endure over the life of our language.” Donald Hall “War--what it does to combatants and to their children--becomes a preoccupation throughout Longley’s work. ... Yet marital love and tenderness, domestic calm and pastoral counterpoise also stand among Longley’s signature subjects. ... Longley’s genius is pastoral and commemorative. ...” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
$ 18.95
2004 64 pages clothbound Limited, signed, and numbered First edition with plain vellum wrapper "Snow Water marks a decisive moment in Longley's poetic development — as decisive, perhaps as that signalled by Gorse Fires.… Longley's war poetry can stand comparison with the best of its century; and Snow Water adds to the distinguished total, while also doing something radically new." The Guardian
$ 50.00
2004 64 pages paperback
"Whatever Longley attends to — whether war poetry revivified, the minutiae of the landscape he lives in, its flora and ornithology, or Homeric retellings — he describes with the same honoring accuracy. As for much of Irish poetry, the political is always part of the evocation. … [T]he poems are sometimes bird's-eye views of the garden or the 'fallen branches' upon which the birds come to rest. The suggestion of sturdiness and growth, rootedness and flourish, provides a fitting metaphor for these verses, which reveal a poet both prolific and wise, a heartening combination." Meg Tyler, Harvard Review
$ 10.95
2000 80 pages clothbound Winner of the Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry, 2001 Winner of the T.S. Eliot Poetry Prize, 2001 Winner of the Hawthornden Prize, 2000
"Michael Longley's The Weather in Japan is the best book I have read this year and, although I have admired him for some time, I did not expect him to surpass himself.... Brilliant, and taking me back to earlier brilliance, [it] shocked me into understanding that the poet I had admired had quietly become — along with Seamus Heaney, say, and Geoffrey Hill — a contemporary who should endure over the life of our language." Donald Hall, Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review
$ 18.95
2000 80 pages paperback Winner of the Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry, 2001 Winner of the T.S. Eliot Poetry Prize, 2001 Winner of the Hawthornden Prize, 2000
"Michael Longley's The Weather in Japan is the best book I have read this year and, although I have admired him for some time, I did not expect him to surpass himself.... Brilliant, and taking me back to earlier brilliance, [it] shocked me into understanding that the poet I had admired had quietly become — along with Seamus Heaney, say, and Geoffrey Hill — a contemporary who should endure over the life of our language." Donald Hall, Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review
$ 9.95
1999 132 pages clothbound This is Michael Longley’s own selection from thirty years of writing. It reveals the strength and coherence of an extraordinary body of work, which has been celebrated– in Britain and Ireland but also in the U.S. – for its lyric intensity, metaphysical wit, and thematic and formal range. Poet and critic Sean O’Brien writes, “His work indicates one of the gifts of the major poet, of making the one life speak for all, and its corollary, of seeming to be able to speak to anyone.”
$ 20.95
1999 132 pages paperback “Longley has all the necessary gifts – precision, the celebrant’s tongue, and that touch of mystery that sets certain poets apart.” George Mackey Brown
“His measured rhythms, skilfully crafted metaphors and elaborate syntax always insist on poetry’s origins in ceremony, its powers to commemorate and dignify.” Mark Ford
$ 12.95
1996 62 pages paperback "It is a volume in which the preoccupations of a poetic lifetime are richly deepened, intensified and supplemented in poems of lucid, ceremonious courtesy and goodwill: a 'flowering' itself, in more than one sense." Neil Corcoran, Times Literary Supplement
"Longley's wittiest book to date.… The Ghost Orchid is as distinguished and memorable a collection as any published in our times." David Wheatley, Irish Review
$ 9.95
1987 206 pages paperback First edition "An intrepid Irish poet.... To read these forty-three undated poems is to admire the virtual absence of solecism. To realize that they were conceived and shaped over a period of seventeen years is to appreciate the struggle which must have accompanied and determined the lyric force and the fearless compassion that together define Longley's poetic profile." Vernon Young, Parnassus
$ 40.00
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