Redshaw gathers twenty-one original essays on the influential Irish poet
and novelist, which provide a critical context for Montague's Collected
Poems (1995) and the tales and portraits in Company (2001). Montague
played a pivotal role in the international evolution of Irish poetry
from the late 1950s in Dublin through the worst years of the "Troubles"
in Northern Ireland. Here, American, English, and European critics and
scholars touch upon every aspect of Montague's essays, stories, and
poetry. Redshaw offers a survey of the criticism and a descriptive
checklist.
A stunning tribute to a masterful poet [with] seminal
essays by some of the finest critics of contemporary Irish
poetry . . . mandatory reading.-Michael Patrick Gillespie, Marquette
University, President, The American Conference for Irish Studies.