From one of America's most beloved poets, a piercing new collection
reflecting on the characters and encounters that haunt us through this
life and into the next
Leading us into a city stirring with gravediggers and beggars, lovers
and dogs, Charles Simic returns with a brilliant collection full of his
singular wit, dark humor, and tenderheartedness. In poems that are often
as spare as they are monumental, he captures the fleeting moments of
modern life--peering inside pawnshop windows, brushing shoulders with
strangers on the street, and walking familiar cemetery rows--to uncover
all the beauty and worry hiding in plain sight.
As the poet reflects on a lifetime's worth of pleasure and loss, he
recalls instances when he "made excuses and hurried away," and considers
the way memory always trails just behind. No Land in Sight is a
testament to all we leave in our wake and, simultaneously, all we hang
on to: the passing minutes, the evening's stillness, and the many lives
we inhabit in dim thresholds and bright mornings alike.