News that the 2011 Nobel Prize for Literature had been awarded to the
Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer was greeted with widespread approval by
poets and poetry readers the world over. The author of fifteen
collections of poems, Tranströmer had in fact been nominated for the
prize every year since 1993, a sign of his huge standing and importance
in world poetry, undiminished in recent years despite a stroke in 1990
that left him partially paralyzed and unable to speak. The Nobel
citation praised Tranströmer's poems of "condensed, translucent images"
which give us "fresh access to reality", and that startling originality
is everywhere to be seen in the poems gathered here, first published as
two separate volumes by the Dedalus Press, The Wild Marketplace (1985)
and For the Living and the Dead (1994), both translated by John F.
Deane, the latter in collaboration with the poet himself.