The Silent Poet


Book Description

'The Silent Poet' is about the stories of others and some of my own in a collection for everyone to call their home. It is a space to feel safe through the roller coaster of emotions this book will take you on. Join me in my very own little chaos of poems that you, your heart and soul can relate too. This book is meant to empower everyone in finding their inner peace from all the demons that hinder their growth. this book is for you




Am I The Silent Poet ?


Book Description

I have written over hundreds of poems and the book itself has first 52 poems. With that being said, the work can show how creativeness and the grasp of every moment connects because,” Everything Connects, Eventually!’ You never know maybe I have more poetry books or fiction or novel books on the way. Some of the best poems in this book are, ”What About Nature?” Also: “Sacrifice” and “Everything Changed…”, “What Is Grief?”, “Who’s Dawn?”, “Remember Her”, “Rumors.” See Also: “Untitled“, “Take Me To…”, “The Journey”, “Elegant Lady”, “Why Did No One Ask For Rapport?”, “It Doesn’t Matter What Look They Seek.”, “Dead Ahead” and “Euphonious Dreams.”




The Silence that Remains


Book Description




I Am Not a Silent Poet


Book Description

These poems look at the social fabric of protest and dissent from an insider's point of view. They bear the stamp of societies going through upheavals with a focus on sharp cleavages in humanity. Guha plays with satire and undercuts it with a subtle sense of despair that pervades his poetry. India's North East - and the hills where the poet resides - surface as a motif of hope and nostalgia, and occasionally retreat. The poetry here is personal and social, and at times, a painful denial of the present.PRAISE FOR THE BOOK"In nimble verses, contoured and earthy, playful and dense, bouncy and placid, Ananya S. Guha's I am Not a Silent Poet lays bare the oxymorons of life - it takes us to a hilly Shillong tinted with a robust "fullness," an abundance of colours, an existence taut with many hues of experiential realities; it weeps over the brazen political ideology of a country that muffles honest voices like Gauri Lankesh's; it hinges on myriad contemporary slices of life ranging from a burning Manipur to a wronged Asifa, the demise of innocent children in a violent, hollowed out, India to a society's modes of creating "others" or the peripheral matter - the collection is laced with a unique verbal felicity, a bounce, desires of varied textures and a dreamy nonchalance - the poet has to be heard as his poetry is his protest, his retaliation, and his healing. As he is not a silent poet!"- Dr. Namrata Pathak, author of That's How Mirai Eats A Pomegranate




Keeping Mum


Book Description

A poetry sequel to Sunbathing in the Rain, this book is about depression. It is partly set in a mental hospital, but the treatment here, is playful and uplifting. The author has written this book first in Welsh, and then reinvenented and expanded it in English.




The Hatred of Poetry


Book Description

"The novelist and poet Ben Lerner argues that our hatred of poetry is ultimately a sign of its nagging relevance"--




倫敦襍碎


Book Description

Chiang Yee's account of London, first published in 1938, is original in more ways than one. Not only one of the first widely available books written by a Chinese author in English, it also reverses the conventions of travel writing. For here the "exotic" subject matter is none other than London and its people, quizzically observed as an alien culture by a foreign writer.




Against Silence


Book Description

An urgent new collection from the winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award and “one of the undisputed master poets of our time” (Craig Morgan Teicher, NPR) Words, voices reek of the worlds from which they emerge: different worlds, each with its all but palpable aroma, its parameters, limitations, promise. Words—there is a gap, nonetheless always and forever, between words and the world— slip, slide, are imprecise, BLIND, perish. • Set up a situation,— . . . then reveal an abyss. For more than fifty years, Frank Bidart has given voice to the inner self, to the depths of his own psyche and the unforgettable characters that populate his poems. In Against Silence, the Pulitzer Prize winner’s eleventh collection of poetry, Bidart writes of the cycles we cannot escape and the feelings we cannot forget. Our history is not a tabula rasa but a repeating, refining story of love and hate, of words spoken and old cruelties enacted. Moving among the dead and the living, the figures of his life and of his past, Bidart calls reality forth—with nothing settled and nothing forgotten, we must speak.




100 Chinese Silences


Book Description

"There are one hundred kinds of Chinese silence: the silence of unknown grandfathers; the silence of borrowed Buddha and rebranded Confucius; the silence of alluring stereotypes and exotic reticence. These poems make those silences heard. Writing back to an orientalist tradition that has defined modern American poetry, these 100 Chinese silences unmask the imagined Asias of American literature, revealing the spectral Asian presence that haunts our most eloquent lyrics and self-satisfied wisdom. Rewriting poets from Ezra Pound and Marianne Moore to Gary Snyder and Billy Collins, this book is a sharply critical and wickedly humorous travesty of the modern canon, excavating the Asian (American) bones buried in our poetic language." -- from publishers website.




The Wild Book


Book Description

In early twentieth-century Cuba, bandits terrorize the countryside as a young farm girl struggles with dyslexia. Based on the life of the author's grandmother.