Eating Fire: Selected Poetry 1965-1995: Selected Poetry, 1965-95

Eating Fire: Selected Poetry 1965-1995: Selected Poetry, 1965-95

by Margaret Atwood (Author)

Synopsis

The evolution of Margaret Atwood's poetry illuminates one of our major literary talents. Here, as in her novels, is intensity combined with sardonic detachment, and in these early poems her genius for a level stare at the ordinary is wonderfully apparent. Just as startling is her ability to contrast the everyday with the terrifying: 'Each time I hit a key/ on my electric typewriter/ speaking of peaceful trees/ another village explodes.' Her poetic voice is crystal clear, insistent, unmistakably her own. Through bus trips and postcards, wilderness and trivia, she reflects the passion and energy of a writer intensely engaged with her craft and the world. Two former collections, Poems 1965 - 1975 and Poems 1976 - 1986, are presented together with her latest collection, Morning in the Burned House, in this omnibus that represents the development of a major poet.

$4.33

Save:$8.19 (65%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Publisher: Virago Press Ltd
Published: 01 Oct 1998

ISBN 10: 1860495052
ISBN 13: 9781860495052
Book Overview: * Review coverage

Media Reviews
Atwood is the quiet Mata Hari, the mysterious, violent figure ... who pits herself against the ordered too-clean world like an arsonist Michael Ondaatje An acute and poetic observer of the eternal, universal rum relations between women and men THE TIMES Detached, ironic... poems that sing off the page and sting Michele Roberts Lean, symbolic, thoroughly Atwoodesque prose honed into elegant columns... SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY
Author Bio
Margaret Atwood's novel, ALIAS GRACE, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize 1996. She has written many novels, including the prize-winning THE HANDMAID'S TALE, which was also a successful film. In 2000 she won the Booker Prize for her novel The Blind Assassin.