The Perennial Poetry (2010)


Book Description

Andrew Staniland's "The Perennial Poetry (2010)" is a collection of contemporary English Romantic poetry written in classical metre. There are poems about spiritual experience, creativity, love and poetry itself. The subjects include contemporary films and paintings, Chartres cathedral and the war in Afghanistan, a trip to Tallinn and writing a themed poem for a poetry competition. There are odes and sonnets, including translations of French, Spanish, Italian and German sonnets. Revised edition.




Poems (1982-2004)


Book Description

This is a collection of poems by Andrew Staniland from 1982 to 2004. Some are written in free verse, some in metric verse. They are in the romantic tradition of English poetry and explore contemporary spiritual and psychotherapeutic experience. Revised edition.




New Poems (2006)


Book Description

The poems in Andrew Staniland's "New Poems (2006)" are poems about contemporary spiritual experience, written in classical metre, in the romantic tradition of English poetry. They include a series of odes and a sequence of short poems which give the collection its title. Revised edition.




Perennial


Book Description




Selected Poems 2000-2016 by Andreas Gripp


Book Description

Updated 2nd edition of Selected Poems featuring new poetry by Canadian poet Andreas Gripp




Ideal Cities


Book Description

“These poems are so generous, so bright and sharp, so funny and winning, they feel immense.” —Paul Guest “Erika Meitner is the new voice of intelligent and emotional poems. Good for poetry. Good for poetry lovers. Good for the rest of us, too.” — Nikki Giovanni Exploring themes of pregnancy, motherhood, ancestry, and life in the borderline slums of Washington, DC, the richly felt and adroit poetry of Erika Meitner’s Ideal Cities moves, mesmerizes, and delights. The work of an important emerging voice in contemporary American poetry—a winner of the 2009 National Poetry Series Prize as selected by Paul Guest—Ideal Cities gloriously perpetuates NPS’s long-standing tradition of promoting exceptional poetry from lesser-known poets.




Letters Of Introduction


Book Description

Andrew Staniland's "Letters Of Introduction" includes a series of odes, four "Sonnets On Public Life" and a series of "Three-Line Variations" that are an English lyrical equivalent of haiku. There are poems about post-truth politics and #MeToo, as well as poems about Armenia, written before the April 2018 revolution, including a sequence, "Thirty-Nine Letters", that has a poem for each letter of the Armenian alphabet.




A Georgian Anthology


Book Description

Andrew Staniland's "A Georgian Anthology" is a sequence of poems inspired by the classical myths about Prometheus and Colchis, by Georgia's own mythology and history, by its poetry, especially Shota Rustaveli's "The Knight In The Panther Skin", and by the beauty of the Georgian landscape, with its castles, towers, monasteries and the mountains of the Caucasus.




Rhapsodies (2014)


Book Description

Andrew Staniland's "Rhapsodies (2014)" takes its title from the verse form of the two long poems at its centre, "Rhapsody" and "Corona Lumina", written in long rhyming couplets. The same verse form is used for a poem about the Ukrainian musicians Dakh Daughters and Valentin Silvestrov. There are translations from Russian and Ukrainian, a tribute to Seamus Heaney and a sequence of short poems about an album by the French singer-songwriter Amélie-les-crayons. Revised edition.




Playful Poems


Book Description

Andrew Staniland's "Playful Poems" is a sequence of over a hundred short poems written between March 2015 and August 2016 and prompted by reading most of Shakespeare's plays in their likely chronological order. There are poems about the wars in Ukraine and Syria, refugees, dictators, nationalism and Brexit, as well as "The lovely wood of piebald light/That any English poem is".