A volume of poems concerned with intimacy and wholeness, and with
history and how the world endures it--from the Pulitzer Prize-winning
author and "one of the greatest poets of our age ... the Thoreau of our
era" (Edward Hirsch).**
**
A literary event--a new volume of poems by one of the masters of modern
poetry--The Rain in the Trees is W. S. Merwin's first book since the
publication of his Opening the Hand.
Almost no other poet of our time has been able to voice in so subtle a
fashion such a profound series of comments on the passing of history
over the contemporary scene. To do this, he seems to have reinvented the
poem--so that the experience of reading Merwin is unlike the reading of
any other poetry. In such famous books as The Lice, The Moving Target
and (most recently) Opening the Hand, he has produced a body of work
of great profundity and power made from the simplest and most beautiful
poetic speech.
Merwin can now rightfully be called a master, and this book shows in
every way why this is the case.