

Hero image 0 of This Shadowy Place : Poems (Hardcover), 0 of 1
This Shadowy Place : Poems (Hardcover)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
Dick Allen’s earlier collections have always included poems written in traditional form.
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen’s “stand alone” new poems – narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism – consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows.
Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He’s received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America’s leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010–2015),
succeeding John Hollander.
This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen’s “stand alone” new poems – narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism – consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows.
Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He’s received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America’s leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010–2015),
succeeding John Hollander.
This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
Specs
- Book formatHardcover
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- GenreLiterature & Fiction
- Publication dateFebruary, 2014
- Pages80
- Series titleNew Criterion Poetry Prize
More seller options (1)
Starting from $31.43
About this item
Product details
Dick Allen's earlier collections have always included poems written in traditional form.
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen's "stand alone" new poems - narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism - consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows. Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He's received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America's leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010-2015),
succeeding John Hollander. This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen's "stand alone" new poems - narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism - consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows. Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He's received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America's leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010-2015),
succeeding John Hollander. This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
Dick Allen’s earlier collections have always included poems written in traditional form.
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen’s “stand alone” new poems – narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism – consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows.
Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He’s received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America’s leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010–2015),
succeeding John Hollander.
This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
But This Shadowy Place is his only book in which every poem is rhymed and metered.
Allen’s “stand alone” new poems – narrative, meditative, lyric, sometimes excursions
into Zen Buddhism – consistently merge traditional form with his hallmark cultural,
political and religious themes. Even when seeming to write of himself, Allen is actually
forever writing of the strange and unique transitions from the American Twentieth
Century to the Twenty-first. Known as one of the best craftsmen and poetry performers
in the country, Allen here gives us new poems that when read either silently or aloud
constantly shift between the literal and the metaphorical. The paths in these new poems
lead unexpectedly through both calming and foreboding shadows.
Dick Allen is the author of seven previous poetry collections, including Present Vanishing,
The Day Before, and Ode to the Cold War: Poems New and Selected. He’s received National
Endowment for the Arts and Ingram Merrill Poetry Writing Fellowships, six inclusions in
The Best American Poetry annual volumes, a Pushcart Prize, among numerous other national
awards. His poems have appeared regularly in many of America’s leading magazines,
including The Atlantic, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The
New Criterion, The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, Tricycle, Rattle, and The American
Scholar. Dick Allen was appointed as the Connecticut State Poet Laureate (2010–2015),
succeeding John Hollander.
This Shadowy Place is the thirteenth winner of the annual New Criterion Poetry
Prize. Previous winners of the prize include Deborah Warren, Adam Kirsch, Charles
Tomlinson, Bill Coyle, Geoffrey Brock, J. Allyn Rosser, Daniel Brown, D.H. Tracy, and,
prior to Allen, George Green. The New Criterion Poetry Prize was established in 2000
and is awarded annually to a book-length manuscript of poems that pays close attention
to form. The series has for many years attracted the attention of both readers and critics,
and Booklist has called
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it.
Specifications
Book format
Hardcover
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Literature & Fiction
Publication date
February, 2014
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
Black Mountain Poems, (Hardcover) $27.45 Was $33.00
$2745current price $27.45, Was $33.00$33.00Black Mountain Poems, (Hardcover)
A Little Black Book of Poetry (Hardcover) $21.79
$2179current price $21.79A Little Black Book of Poetry (Hardcover)
Elfin Land: and Other Poems, (Hardcover) $37.37
$3737current price $37.37Elfin Land: and Other Poems, (Hardcover)
Best seller Alchemised (Hardcover) $24.48
Best seller
$2448current price $24.48Alchemised (Hardcover)
1454.6 out of 5 Stars. 145 reviews100 Poems, (Hardcover) $31.03
$3103current price $31.03100 Poems, (Hardcover)
A Day of It: Poems, (Paperback) $16.36
$1636current price $16.36A Day of It: Poems, (Paperback)
Best seller The Widow: A Novel (Hardcover) $22.38
Best seller
$2238current price $22.38The Widow: A Novel (Hardcover)
3174.7 out of 5 Stars. 317 reviewsPoems (Hardcover) $29.95
$2995current price $29.95Poems (Hardcover)
A Trick of Sunlight: Poems, (Hardcover) $30.69
$3069current price $30.69A Trick of Sunlight: Poems, (Hardcover)
Poems, 1908-1919, (Hardcover) $32.95
$3295current price $32.95Poems, 1908-1919, (Hardcover)
The Man on the Hilltop and Other Poems (Hardcover) $30.95
$3095current price $30.95The Man on the Hilltop and Other Poems (Hardcover)
Greening: Poems in the Unfolding of Our Lives, (Hardcover) $18.85
$1885current price $18.85Greening: Poems in the Unfolding of Our Lives, (Hardcover)
Selected Poems | Medbh McGuckian (Hardcover) $17.14
$1714current price $17.14Selected Poems | Medbh McGuckian (Hardcover)
A Litany of SHE Poems, (Hardcover) $34.27
$3427current price $34.27A Litany of SHE Poems, (Hardcover)
Wesleyan Poetry Septet for the Luminous Ones, (Hardcover) $25.69
$2569current price $25.69Wesleyan Poetry Septet for the Luminous Ones, (Hardcover)
Poems (Hardcover) $30.95
$3095current price $30.95Poems (Hardcover)
Reflections: Poems from a Regular Dude! (Hardcover) $25.71
$2571current price $25.71Reflections: Poems from a Regular Dude! (Hardcover)
Pitt Poetry Series: Flying At Night : Poems 1965-1985 (Hardcover) $34.49
$3449current price $34.49Pitt Poetry Series: Flying At Night : Poems 1965-1985 (Hardcover)
Firefish: The Collected Poems, (Hardcover) $29.99 Was $34.00
$2999current price $29.99, Was $34.00$34.00Firefish: The Collected Poems, (Hardcover)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet

