Epilogue: Selected and Last Poems

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Product Details
Price
$21.95  $20.41
Publisher
Red Hen Press
Publish Date
Pages
406
Dimensions
5.98 X 8.9 X 1.1 inches | 1.45 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781636280424

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About the Author

Frederick Morgan (1922-2004), a native New Yorker and graduate of Princeton University, served during WWII in the US Army's Tank Destroyer Corps. A founder of The Hudson Review in 1947, he edited it for fifty years, remaining affiliated until his death as Founding Editor. He published eleven books of poems, two collections of prose fables, and two books of translations. In 1984, he was made Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government. In 2001, he won the Aiken Taylor Award for poetry. Morgan lived in New York City, with summers in Blue Hill, Maine.

Paula Deitz joined The
Hudson Review
in 1967 and succeeded her husband Frederick Morgan as editor
in 1998. She is also a cultural critic who writes about art, architecture and
landscape design for newspapers and magazines in the United States and abroad.
In addition to her book titled Of
Gardens: Selected Essays
, she edited two Hudson Review anthologies, Writes of Passage: Coming-of-Age Stories and
Memoirs from The Hudson Review
and Poets
Translate Poets: A Hudson Review Anthology
. She resides in New York.
Reviews

"In one of the late poems included in this generous selection of his work, Frederick Morgan refers to 'life's daily chances.' Every preceding page in the book proves that from first to last, Morgan was fully alive to those chances and able to respond to them in ways that turned vigilance into a form of self-affirmation. In the more reserved formalities of his early work, and the comparative freedoms of his later poems, readers will find a consistently marvelous generosity of spirit--one that allows the work to explore personal matters as dexterously as it investigates matters in the wide public world. Epilogue may collect a lifetime's writing, and therefore inevitably contain a good deal of remembering, but one of its many distinctions is to retain a strong appetite for beginning--for seizing on those 'daily chances' and turning them into brightly-seen and durable actualities." --Andrew Motion, UK Poet Laureate (1999-2009)

"Two features tie all the poems in Epilogue together: their limpidity of style and their tireless effort, through memory, dream, story, and fable, to tell the truth. The candid clarity of Morgan's voice, consistent through changes of experience and mood, is precisely what enables the poet and his readers to apprehend that truth."--Rachel Hadas, author of Poems for Camilla


"This final work --not always 'safe for work'--reveals a poet still full of life, but a life 'faced as honestly as Morgan faces our morality, ' notes David Mason in his insightful introduction. All the while, 'Morgan's poetic is that of an ordinary man, albeit a thoughtful and cultivated one, among other things a body in time.'"--James Panero, executive editor of The New Criterion