World

Available

Product Details

Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
New Directions Publishing Corporation
Publish Date
Pages
144
Dimensions
5.28 X 7.99 X 0.4 inches | 0.38 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780811234832

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About the Author

Winner of the Premio Reina Sofía for Poetry, Ana Luísa Amaral (1956-2022) was born in Lisbon. She was highly acclaimed not only for her poetry, but also for her plays, children's books, books of essays, and a novel. She was widely regarded as the finest translator into Portuguese of Emily Dickinson and William Shakespeare. Her books have been translated into many languages and her awards include the Premio Internazionale Fondazione Roma and the PEN Prize for Fiction. In 2019, New Directions published her What's in a Name to rave reviews and forthcoming is her new work, World.
For her translations of Spanish and Portuguese, Margaret Jull Costa has won the Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize four times as well as the Premio Valle-Inclán, the International Dublin Literary Award, and the 2008 PEN Prize for best translation from any language for The Maias, by Eça de Queirós (New Directions, 2007).

Reviews

Amaral carves a space for fragmentation, uncertainty, and meditative silence within the repertoire of inherited forms. In this accomplished volume and translation, Amaral's subtle experimentation makes strange an artistic repertoire we thought we knew.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Brilliant: her words celebrate the hidden potentiality inside every woman--and the spontaneity of life itself, even in the contemplation of sudden death.-- "Asymptote"
This bilingual volume, pairing Costa's translations with Amaral's Portuguese originals, relies on humble imagery and plain language to plumb complicated truths.-- "The New York Times Book Review"
Lightning in a bottle: Amaral has a remarkable gift for making the personal universal and the universal intimate.--Hasan Altaf "Paris Review Dailey"
Here is a lucid, forthright poet charmed by the paradoxes of each poem, by the tiny gestures and traces of life faceted within each poem, and by the vocation of poetry itself.--Rachel Blau DuPlessis