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The Nothing Bird. Selected Poems.
Pierre Peuchmaurd
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Description for The Nothing Bird. Selected Poems.
paperback. Translator(s): Belli, E. C. Num Pages: 104 pages. BIC Classification: DCF. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 152 x 7. Weight in Grams: 181.
Pierre Peuchmaurd (1948-2009) was born in Paris, and became fascinated with surrealism in his teenage years. Though his poetry came to transcend the boundaries of surrealist work--by being both more lyrical and inhabited by more substantial narratives--he never forgot the movement and the artists that first inspired him. This is the first collection of his work in English. "The Nothing Bird is an exemplar of the art of translation at its best. E. C. Belli has translated the exquisitely lyric, surrealist poems of the late Pierre Peuchmaurd into equally exquisite poems in English. These translations sing. From first page ... Read more
Pierre Peuchmaurd (1948-2009) was born in Paris, and became fascinated with surrealism in his teenage years. Though his poetry came to transcend the boundaries of surrealist work--by being both more lyrical and inhabited by more substantial narratives--he never forgot the movement and the artists that first inspired him. This is the first collection of his work in English. "The Nothing Bird is an exemplar of the art of translation at its best. E. C. Belli has translated the exquisitely lyric, surrealist poems of the late Pierre Peuchmaurd into equally exquisite poems in English. These translations sing. From first page ... Read more
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2013
Publisher
Oberlin College Press United States
Number of pages
104
Condition
New
Number of Pages
104
Place of Publication
Oberlin, United States
ISBN
9780932440457
SKU
V9780932440457
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Pierre Peuchmaurd
PIERRE PEUCHMAURD (1948–2009) was born in Paris, and became fascinated with surrealism in his teenage years. Though his poetry came to transcend the boundaries of surrealist work—by being both more lyrical and inhabited by more substantial narratives—he n
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