A Collection of Les Murray's poetry that reveals the variety, intensity,
and generosity of this great Australian poet's work.
I starred last night, I shone:
I was footwork and firework in one,
a rocket that wriggled up and shot
darkness with a parasol of brilliants
and a peewee descant on a flung bit . . .
-from "Performance"
Les Murray is as keenly admired as any poet working today. Joseph
Brodsky called him simply "the one by whom the language lives." Harold
Bloom has compared him to Walt Whitman, as well as to John Ashbery and
A. R. Ammons, adding: "I can think of no American poet of Murray's own
generation who is his equal in range, intensity, and the absolute joy of
being."
Selected Poems includes the strongest poems from each of Murray's books
of poems so far-The Ilex Tree (1965), The Weatherboard Cathedral
(1969), Poems Against Economics (1972), Lunch and Counter Lunch
(1974), Ethnic Radio (1977), The People's Otherworld (1983), The
Daylight Moon (1987), Dog Fox Field (1992), Translations from the
Natural World (1992), and Subhuman Redneck Poems (1996)-along with a
dozen new poems. It is the best opportunity yet for American readers to
encounter the poetry of this eloquent and moving writer.