Limit this search to....

Apocalypse and Other Poems
Contributor(s): Cardenal, Ernesto (Author), Walsh, Donald D. (Editor), Pring-Mill, Robert (Editor)
ISBN: 0811206629     ISBN-13: 9780811206624
Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
OUR PRICE:   $13.25  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: December 1977
Qty:
Annotation: Cardenal, Apocalypse and Other Poems. Poems for revolution.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | Caribbean & Latin American
- Poetry | Subjects & Themes - General
Dewey: 861
LCCN: 77007280
Physical Information: 0.29" H x 5.18" W x 7.94" (0.24 lbs) 100 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Apocalypse and Other Poems by Nicaragua's revolutionist poet-priest, Ernesto Cardenal, is the author's second book, the first of poetry, to be published by New Directions. The editors of this volume, Robert Pring-Mill and Donald D. Walsh, have chosen a representative selection of Cardenal's shorter protest poems, epigrams, religious, and Amerindian verse. Also included are two of Cardenal's most impressive longer works: the haunting and melodic elegy, "Coplas on the Death of Merton," and the title poem, "Apocalypse," in which the theme of an ever-threatening nuclear holocaust is the core of a modern rendering of the Book of Revelations. At Our Lady of Solentiname, his religious community on an island in Lake Nicaragua, living and working in the manner of the early Christians, Father Cardenal embodies what he professes: "Now in Latin America, to practice religion is to make revolution." An informative introduction has been contributed by Robert Pring-Mill of Oxford University. The translations are by Thomas Merton, Robert Pring-Mill, Kenneth Rexroth and Mireya Jaimes-Freyre, and Donald D. Walsh, who also translated In Cuba, Cardenal's assessment of Fidel Castro's revolutionary society, published by New Directions in 1974.

Contributor Bio(s): Cardenal, Ernesto: - Ernesto Cardenal was born in 1925 in Granada, Nicaragua. Revolutionary activist, disciple of Thomas Merton, Roman Catholic priest, founder of the contemplative commune Our Lady of Solentiname, ambassador for the Sandinistas, Minister of Culture in post-Somoza Nicaragua, and co-founder of the international cultural center House of Three Worlds, Cardenal, on his eightieth birthday, was given the nation's highest cultural honor, the Order of Rubén Darío, by President Enrique Bolaños in 2005. His work has been translated into more than twenty languages.