Winner of the 2005 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize.
The long-awaited follow-up to The Key to the City--a finalist for the
National Book Critics Circle Award in 1986--Anne Winters's The
Displaced of Capital emanates a quiet and authoritative passion for
social justice, embodying the voice of a subtle, sophisticated
conscience.
The displaced in the book's title refers to the poor, the homeless, and
the disenfranchised who populate New York, the city that serves at once
as gritty backdrop, city of dreams, and urban nightmare. Winters also
addresses the culturally, ethnically, and emotionally excluded and, in
these politically sensitive poems, writes without sentimentality of a
cityscape of tenements and immigrants, offering her poetry as a
testament to the lives of have-nots. In the central poem, Winters
witnesses the relationship between two women of disparate social classes
whose friendship represents the poet's political convictions. With poems
both powerful and musical, The Displaced of Capital marks Anne
Winters's triumphant return and assures her standing as an essential New
York poet.