Selected Poems
Description of Selected Poems
"No poet rivals Mr. Walcott in humor, emotional depth, lavish inventiveness in language or in the ability to express the thoughts of his characters and compel the reader to follow the swift mutations of ideas and images in their minds … [His poetry] makes us realize that history, all of it, belongs to us." ’The New York Times
This career-spannning retrospective, culled from nearly 50 years of work, will go a long way toward reminding readers of the breadth and depth of Nobel laureate Walcott’s achievement. Though he is perhaps best known for his modern epic, Omeros, which tells a Homeric tale set in St. Lucia, Walcott is a fine lyric poet as well, writing in traditional forms and meters as well as in powerful free verse. Alongside the epic tone that he brought into modern verse
I sing of Achille, Afolabe’s son,
who never ascended in an elevator
is lustful writing about a woman humming Bob Marley on a bus, a casual description of being mugged in Greenwich Village or a painter’s-eye view of a fish. The political Walcott is also here; observing a crowd listening to a politician, he writes,
Who will name this silence
respect? Those forced, hoarse hosannas
awe?"
The lyric Walcott is well represented, but the long poems which are
necessarily excerpted’prove more problematic. At best, the editor can
hope that readers, hooked by one of these narrative poems, will be
compelled to seek out the complete version. Nonetheless, this book
represents a milestone in the career of a major writer.
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