Limit this search to....

Wild Kingdom: Poems
Contributor(s): Seshadri, Vijay (Author)
ISBN: 1555972365     ISBN-13: 9781555972363
Publisher: Graywolf Press
OUR PRICE:   $12.60  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: February 1996
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Vijay Seshadri's poems are wittily alive to everything, continually quick and surprising, expertly turned."--Richard Wilbur
"Vijay Seshadri tracks 'the signature stinks and blood trails' of our species--its squalor and splendor, seen here with both charity and rage--exhilaratingly in this book. The poems have both electric energy and gravitas. Short and long poems (which is rare) equally have authority. The distinction with which this new voice deciphers the 'Rosetta stone' of our 'defective mythologies' is unmistakable, and absorbing."--Frank Bidart
"Wild Kingdom" marks the debut of an audacious new voice in American poetry. Vijay Seshadri's poems inhabit the crossroads of history and wilderness, the imaginative realm where fir and alder trees share a common life with reggae bands, refugees, office buildings, and speeding traffic.
"These are poems full of musical light and dark wit. Their cadences are wonderfully poised between regret and discovery. Vijay Seshadri is a lyric poet who can mix elegy and affirmation within a few stanzas of one another. He makes the landscape and the cityscape into one challenging and heartbreaking place where the old transformations of language can still happen."--Eaven Boland
Vijay Seshadri was born in India and came to America at age five. He grew up in Columbus, Ohio. His work has appeared in the "Threepenny Review," the "New Yorker," "Shenandoah," "Antaeus," and "AGNI,"

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | American - Asian American
Dewey: 811.54
LCCN: 95080895
Physical Information: 0.25" H x 5.96" W x 8.9" (0.28 lbs) 68 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Wild Kingdom marks the debut of an audacious new voice in American poetry. Vijay Seshadri's poems inhabit the crossroads of history and wilderness, the imaginative realm where fir and alder trees share a common life with reggae bands, refugees, office buildings, and speeding traffic.