Poetry Books
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250

Used price: $15.22

Silver Pennies-A Children's Book of PoetryReview Date: 2008-06-23
Beautiful Contents, Terrible Package!Review Date: 2001-03-16
Glad I found thisReview Date: 2005-10-02
After all the cutesy-wootsy, sanitized, dumbed-down kids' books I've read through, this is a delight.
Have you ever watched the fairies when the rain is done...?Review Date: 2002-02-12
What an Incredible FindReview Date: 2001-01-07

Used price: $0.54
Collectible price: $10.00

Review for Something to SomeoneReview Date: 2007-03-29
Foot prints In The MindReview Date: 2006-01-30
I enjoy your books. I am looking forward to more. If you would increase the size of the letters and make them a little darker that would make it as comfortable to the eyes as it is to the mind. When a person goes through their second childhood ,as I am ,one doesn't see as well as the first time they read your books.
Thank you,
Harold Phillips
A Moment in TimeReview Date: 2006-09-10
We should be
One step closer
To what we should be"
The pages are unnumbered and there are no titles. The pages like shadows of rippling water in a beautiful pond or dry desert sands blown across a vast escape are classically arranged and present poetic musings of a deep heartfelt nature.
The third poem is a profound start to a book of pure poetic longing. Javan expresses his inner turmoil over life's paradox. He expresses his need to seek balance between two extremes.
"For while some people have
A shoulder to cry on
It is the destiny of others
That they must cry alone"
A few poems are a prayer and others resemble a poet growing through changing life circumstances. The wisdom from a life well lived all while fighting the human condition and realizing the need for human connection.
Javan is a sensitive soul touched by beauty and he expresses his thoughts in poems that read like beautiful gifts from the heart. Now and then you meet someone amazing who sends you a poetry book of great meaning. "Something to Someone" is a beautiful gift where your soul can grow. Thank you!
~The Rebecca Review
wonderfulReview Date: 2002-04-02
Poetry With A PointReview Date: 2005-03-31
The poetry within Javan's pages is elegant in its simplistic nature. Instead of intrepreting each with your mind, as with those of the more formal, literary (cold?) genre, you will find that you read them in the format intended - translated with the heart.
Sometimes it is in the simple that one finds the genius of something and I found this particular philosophy easy to think while reading Javan's verses.
I can understand the appeal of his books to a wide audience because Javan's are very open, honest and the life topics written about, apply to everyone - regardless of gender or station in life - never leaving a hint of bitterness in the afterthought of reading.
The story of Javan's journey to publishing sucess (located at is web site) is also interesting and inspiring.
I recommend any of the four books written by Javan, especially to any who never before thought they would enjoy reading poetry. Check out the prices of each book - they can't be beat and are well worth the value!

Used price: $2.50

We Used to Be Wives: Divorce Unveiled Through PoetryReview Date: 2002-09-13
Poems Provide Poignant Insight into DivorceReview Date: 2002-06-19
Inspirational Poems On The Subject Of DivorceReview Date: 2002-09-16
Srrong recommendation for women experiencing divorceReview Date: 2002-06-13
A Book for EveryoneReview Date: 2002-05-28

Used price: $10.00

Nature Poetry at its BestReview Date: 2008-05-25
why I wake early by mary oliverReview Date: 2008-01-23
Read this and you love the morningsReview Date: 2008-03-06
Life is better with poetryReview Date: 2007-05-29
Pay AttentionReview Date: 2007-10-11
Look and See
This morning, at waterside, a sparrow flew
to a water rock and landed, by error, on the back
of an eider duck; lightly it fluttered off, amused.
The duck, too, was not provoked,but, you might say, was
laughing.
This afternoon a gull sailing over
our house was casually scratching
its stomach of white feathers with one
pink foot as it flew.
Oh Lord, how shining and festive is your gift to us, if we
only look, and see.
Last night I attended a talk at The Wisconsin Book Festival by Rick Bass and Terry Tempest Williams. Their theme was to not only pay attention to the wonders of nature, but to pay attention to what is happening to it, local warming, the lack of water in the West, the disruption of migration patterns and habitat. Pay Attention.

Used price: $9.44

Awesome BookReview Date: 2008-05-31
Scare 'emReview Date: 2008-05-29
My Two Year Old has this MemorizedReview Date: 2008-04-19
My 4-year-old's favorite book for a monthReview Date: 2007-11-06
WOLF'S HERE! Review Date: 2007-08-18

Used price: $3.52
Collectible price: $17.50

Amazing!Review Date: 2008-01-18
Bradley Hathaway "All the Hits So Far But Don't Expect Too Much."Review Date: 2007-12-11
Absolutly Amazing!Review Date: 2007-07-22
Ahhhh!!!! I LOOOOOVE him!!!!Review Date: 2006-04-12
Inspiration for allReview Date: 2006-02-01
The book is an excellent way to explain where the poems came from and a little more about what they mean. The book creates a context for the poems that help people understand the poems and not jump to conclusions about what Bradley "really" meant.
This book/cd offers an enjoyable collection of honest, insightful, and sometimes satirical, poems that will make you laugh, cry, and think.

Used price: $12.33

Poetic LeapsReview Date: 2003-08-04
at me as the Poet so vividly describes them. They were
so real and descriptive, true to life. I found them honest,
dark and religouse.
POEMS TO SOOTH THE HEARTReview Date: 2003-01-25
that I have read in American poems an short stories.
Author has a way of cutting through the core, and
delivering them right to your heart, The poems I
read have inspired me to now start to write.
Besides my husband says im good.
Poetic BeautyReview Date: 2005-03-14
American Poems hit right into my soul very moving and touching, the poet brings it to life. I found it true poetic
beauty
SHADOWSReview Date: 2004-01-11
ALWAYS THERE NEVER LEAVING,POETIC, VERSATILE
TRUE TO LIFE. LIKE A SHADOW THAT LURKS FOR
THE LIGHT. MOVING TOUCHING AND ALWAYS THERE.
PATRIOTIC POETRYReview Date: 2003-08-04

Used price: $6.45
Collectible price: $25.00

Classic Literary BiographyReview Date: 2002-04-13
Rimbaud was a rebellious, enigmatic, brilliant, and inscrutable poet who, in just four short years between the ages of sixteen and twenty, wrote the poetry which has made him a figure of mythic proportions, not only in French literature, but in the literature and history of Modernism. Starkie, in brilliantly lucid prose and with loving attention to every detail, tells Rimbaud's life story and connects that story to the writing of the poems and the evolution of Rimbaud's views on poetry and the task of the poet.
Influenced by his studies of Kabbalah, alchemy and illuminism, and writing in the long shadow of Baudelaire's "Les Fleurs du Mal", Rimbaud precociously enunciated his attack on the then dominant Parnassian school of French poetry at the tender age of sixteen. Starkie examines Rimbaud's original aesthetic doctrine in great detail; in her words, the poet must discover a "new language . . . capable of expressing the ineffable, a new language not bound by logic, nor by grammar or syntax." In Rimbaud's words, the "Poet" must make himself a "seer" by a "long, immense and systematic derangement of all the senses."
From this initial position, Starkie brilliantly details Rimbaud's turbulent relationship with Paul Verlaine and his descent into what one reviewer has aptly described as a "perpetual roister of absinthe, hashish and sodomy." Starkie painstakingly relates Rimbaud's poetry to his experiences with Verlaine in London and Paris. In particular, Starkie convincingly demonstrates, through careful exegesis of the poems and their correspondences with Rimbaud's letters and other biographical materials, that the "Illuminations" (perhaps Rimbaud's most brilliant poems) were written over several years preceding and following "Une Saison en Enfer". Starkie then goes on to demonstrate that the latter prose poems were hardly intended to be Rimbaud's "farewell to literature in general, but only to visionary literature." In other words, "Une Saison en Enfer" represents the rejection by Rimbaud of his original mind-bending iconoclasm--the liquidation "of all his previous dreams and aspirations"--in favor of a rational and materialist aesthetics. Of course, after completing "Une Saison en Enfer", Rimbaud's life moved in completely different directions and there is, unfortunately, no existing evidence that he continued his poetic endeavor after the age of twenty.
Starkie's biography captures the details of the remainder of Rimbaud's life--he died at the age of thirty-seven--with fascinating and attentive detail. And the remainder of his life, as related by Starkie, is a biography in itself--vagabond in Europe, sailor to the East Indies, gun runner and (slave?) trader in Abyssinia, and mysterious cult hero of the emerging French symbolist movement. Indeed, in 1888, more than fourteen years after Rimbaud's known literary career had ended, he received a letter from a prominent Parisian editor: "You have become, among a little coterie, a sort of legendary figure . . . This little group, who claim you as their Master, do not know what has become of you, but hope you will one day reappear, and rescue them from obscurity." Starkie scrutinizes all of these events with scrupulous attention to detail and accuracy.
This is truly a classic of literary biography! (One additional comment: Rimbaud's poetry and letters are quoted extensively in the original French. If you are not fluent in French, you should have Wallace Fowlie's English translation of Rimbaud's Complete Works and Selected Letters by your side as a reference.)
Too Fast to Live, Too Young to DieReview Date: 2000-10-01
Rimbaud is a remembered for his outrageous behavior as much as for his amazing literary work. Drunk on absinthe, he would insult priests, other poets, casual passersby. He was both unkempt and anti-social, to say the least, but his influence on surrealism cannot be denied and such works as A Season in Hell have exerted tremendous influence over the literary community. Rimbaud's experimentation with language and with imagery is so astounding that the reader is left bewildered and amazed.
Rimbaud, in fact, established a new approach to writing. In a letter to a friend, dated 1871, he wrote, "the Poet makes himself a seer by a long, immense and systematic derangement of all the senses." Rimbaud's systematic derangement released all future poets from the bourgeois bonds of the good and evil of conventional morality. For the first time, perhaps, poets felt free to explore the powerful, unarticulated, subconscious regions of the mind. As Rimbaud, himself, wrote in "Alchemy of the Word," "I boasted of inventing, with rhythm from within me, a kind of poetry that all the senses, sooner or later, would recognize. And I alone would be its translator...I began it as an investigation. I turned silences and nights into words. What was unutterable, I wrote down. I made the whirling world stand still." And so he did.
Enid Starkie, who devoted much of her life to the study of this fascinating young rebel, tells us that Rimbaud was disgusted by those who approached poetry as a hobby or a social activity only. These writers, he said, had the soul of a banker or and accountant. "The soul must be made monstrous." Rimbaud believed this with all his heart and he stated it in no uncertain terms. "I say the Poet is therefore truly the thief of fire!" Rimbaud, truly a man possessed of Promethean prowess and stature, also suffered endless torment. He was an outcast, rejected by society, but, though seemingly frail at times, he was really possessed of superhuman strength. It was this emotional strength that allowed him to produce poetry that was both astounding and lasting.
Starkie describes how Rimbaud, with his mentor and lover, the poet, Paul Verlaine, became the sensation of both Paris and London as he attacked and insulted poets of the day for, as he put it, murdering the language. He engaged in debauchery of the most astonishing kind, but it was a debauchery that led to a sublime state of artistic creativity seldom achieved.
Enid Starkie's biography is wonderful and eminently readable. It stands as the premier chronicle of Rimbaud's life and work. Anyone seeking to understand this complex young man and his equally complex work should read this book. It is, in fact, essential.
an authoritative biography Review Date: 2004-07-21
(...)
The mistakes of E. StarkieReview Date: 2002-07-17
Starkie wants to show us a rimbaud that failed in Abyssinia. It seems that he deserved a punishment for having left the poetry. The truth is that Arthur Rimbaud was an excellent trader that made a little fortune.
A few moths ago I went to Charleville. There, the Rimbaud's museum has a place where important studies about Rimbaud are shown. In spite of the Starkie's play is very well-known, it has not earned a place there.
What a Literary Biography Should be!Review Date: 2000-06-18
Used price: $3.23

A Baby BlessingReview Date: 2006-07-13
A Beautiful Book to Own or GiveReview Date: 2005-08-25
The book is gorgeous! It is beautifully written and beautifully illustrated. It makes a perfect gift for any newborn.
Perfect Touch!Review Date: 2005-04-26
Made me cry (tears of joy)Review Date: 2006-03-08
Wishing and HopingReview Date: 2004-12-07

Popular Fiction Writer Anne Perry recommends this ballad.Review Date: 2007-04-22
"This is the story of the English King Alfred's desperate stand against invading Danes in 878. England is conquered, and Alfred is a fugitive when he sees a vision of the Virgin Mary that bids him call together the remnants of his people for a final battle. "The Ballad of the White Horse" is an epic poem of courage, passion and unsurpassable beauty."
If you'd like to read other tales and poems by Chesterton, you might want to get "The Ballad of the White Horse" as part of a collection of his poetry that I edited for not much more money. It's called G. K. Chesterton's Early Poetry and has "The Ballad of the White Horse," along with two other books of Chesterton poetry under one cover. That means you'll also get his best humorous poetry, "Greybeards at Play." No less a writer than George Orwell ranked Chesterton as one of the three best writers of funny poetry in twentieth century England. The poems are a riot of the ridiculous and are accompanied with equally funny sketches he did.
And although Anne Perry and I have the same last name, as far as I know we're not related. Her's is a pen name. Mine is a real name. I guess I'm not creative enough to invent a name for myself.
G. K. Chesterton's Early Poetry: Greybeards At Play, The Wild Knight And Other Poems, The Ballad Of The White Horse
An epic poem of phenomenal powerReview Date: 2007-01-14
One of the greatest books I have ever readReview Date: 2007-08-21
I have never read any author who could make the English language sing the way Chesterton does in this poem -- for over a hundred pages. In contrast to contemporary "poets" whose "poems" consist of a bunch of strange words scattered apparently at random on a page, whose meaning, if there is one, is far beyond obscurity, Chesterton had apparently unlimited ability to create rhyme and alliteration, and then he bound it all tightly in the sing-song ballad style that carries it all swiftly along. The words of this poem are glorious to hear, and really, this book should be read aloud, so that one might hear the music of the words.
And few have ever been able to match the way Chesterton paints pictures with words. I will quote one passage, and hope it is not to long, to illustrate this. The scene here is Alfred's army making one final charge against the Danish camp:
Then bursting all and blasting
Came Christendom like death,
Kicked of such catapults of will,
The staves shiver, the barrels spill,
The waggons waver and crash and kill
The waggoners beneath.
Barriers go backward, banners rend,
Great shields groan like a gong,
Horses like horns of nightmare
Neigh horribly and long.
Horses ramp and rock and boil
And break their golden reins,
And slide on carnage clamorously,
Down where the bitter blood doth lie,
Where Ogier went on foot to die
In the old way of the Danes.
It would be hard to imagine anyone anyone describing such a violent scene in so few words any better than Chesterton does in that passage. And this passage is but one of dozens of glorious word-pictures that Chesterton's poetry paints in this book.
Beyond its magnificent use of the English language, this book also contains much philosophical insight -- insight that, although first published in 1911, is directly and clearly applicable today. Chesterton expresses very clearly the way that Christianity has formed the heart of Western culture over the ages, and the way that Christian faith -- which seems all about self-denial and thus sadness -- leads to unconquerable joy.
The book, of course, is not perfect; no work of literature can be. There are places where it gets a bit too preachy for my taste. But the book's flaws are few and minor, while its good points are many and glorious.
How good is this book? I have read it at least 50 times in my life, and I still enjoy reading it. In my opinion it is one of the truly greatest works written in the English language. It is one of the few books I have read that truly deserves five stars.
Simply amazingReview Date: 2006-02-19
Overall grade: A+
The Ballad of the White Horse by G. K. ChestertonReview Date: 2005-07-03
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250