This book was originally published in 1982. For the majority of
English-speaking readers Russian literature means above all great prose
writers: Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, Turgenev and Chekhov, the Pasternak of
Doctor Zhivago and Solzhenitsyn. However, even casual observers have
become aware that poetry has always mattered in Russian society more
than in most Western countries, and many non-specialist Western readers
have discovered through a number of fine translations the tremendous
power and richness of twentieth-century Russian poetry. Peter France has
been closely involved in some of the translation work and he has now
produced a serious and detailed study of modern Russian poetry aimed at
readers with little or no Russian. The book traces the main developments
in Russian poetry over the last two hundred years and concentrates on
major poets who have of late become increasingly well known in
English-speaking countries through the publication of good poetic
translations.