First Place, Large Not-for-Profit Publisher, Typographic Text, 2011
Washington Book Publishers Design and Effectiveness Awards
Guillaume Apollinaire's first book of poems has charmed readers with its
brief celebrations of animals, birds, fish, insects, and the mythical
poet Orpheus since it was first published in 1911. Though Apollinaire
would go on to longer and more ambitious work, his Bestiary reveals
key elements of his later poetry, among them surprising images, wit,
formal mastery, and wry irony.
X. J. Kennedy's fresh translation follows Apollinaire in casting the
poems into rhymed stanzas, suggesting music and sudden closures while
remaining faithful to their sense. Kennedy provides the English
alongside the original French, inviting readers to compare the two and
appreciate the fidelity of the former to the latter. He includes a
critical and historical essay that relates the Bestiary to its sources
in medieval "creature books," provides a brief biography and summation
of the troubled circumstances surrounding the book's initial
publication, and places the poems in the context of Apollinaire's work
as a poet and as a champion of avant garde art.
This short introduction to the work of an essentially modern writer
includes four curious poems apparently suppressed from the first edition
and reprints of the Raoul Dufy woodcuts published in the 1911 edition.