A long-awaited New and Selected collection by an iconic poet of global standing, assaying the full ranges of our shared and borrowed lives: our bonds of eros and our responsibilities to the planet; the singing dictions and searchlight dimensions of perception; the willing plunge into an existence both perishing and beloved, recognized in these Poems as abidingly dazzling, even now, even here.
With quietly magnifying brushwork and numinous clarity, The Asking expands our awareness of both breakage\'s grief and the abiding possibility for repair..
Interrogating language itself, pondering beauty amid bewilderment and transcendence amid transience, Hirshfield invites shimmering truths into black ink.
In an era of algorithm, assertion, silo, and induced distraction, Hirshfield\'s Poems bring a much-needed awakening response, actively countering narrowness.
In Poems of the smallest ant and the vastness of time, of hunger and bounty, physics, war, and love in myriad forms, these pages--drawn from nine books and five decades of writing--bring the insights and slant-lights that come to us only through poems: through questioning arc, tact, a looking both close and sweeping; through music-inflected pondering, recombinatory leap.
A forefront spokesperson for the biosphere and the alliance of science and imagination, Hirshfield offers, as indispensable compass, the choice to embrace what comes.
In its substantial section of new work, Jane Hirshfield continues her signature affirmation of the central contradictions, uncertainties, and harvests of astonishment that shape our human lives.
The Asking takes its title from the closing line of one of its newly appearing poems: don\'t despair of this falling world, not yet didn\'t it give you the asking.
A long-awaited New and Selected collection by an iconic poet of global standing, assaying the full ranges of our shared and borrowed lives: our bonds of eros and our responsibilities to the planet; the singing dictions and searchlight dimensions of perception; the willing plunge into an existence both perishing and beloved, recognized in these Poems as abidingly dazzling, even now, even here