Álvaro de Campos is one of the most influential heteronyms created by
Portugal's great modernist writer Fernando Pessoa. According to Pessoa,
Campos was born in Tavira (Algarve) in 1890 and studied mechanical
engineering in Glasgow, although he never managed to complete his
degree. In his own day, Campos was celebrated--and slandered--for his
vociferous poetry imbued with a Whitman-inspired free verse, his praise
of the rise of technology, and his polemical views that appeared in
manifestos, interviews, and essays. Here in Margaret Jull Costa and
Patricio Ferrari's translations are the complete poems of Campos. This
edition is based on the Portuguese Tinta-da-china edition and includes
an illuminating introduction about Campos by the Portuguese editors
Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello, facsimiles of original
manuscripts, and a generous selection of Campos's prose texts.