- Zusatztext
In this collection John Heath-Stubbs's newest poems revisit the sounds--since he is now blind--of his favorite landscapes. Spending his formative years in the rural countryside, he learned to identify birds by their song and sound, and here he uses that experience to make new discoveries in form and theme. Technically brilliant, this work is also playfully irreverent when it comes to human folly.
- Autorenportrait
John Heath-Stubbs has been awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry and the St. Augustine Cross for his contribution to the arts. He is also a critic, anthologist, and translator whose works include Galileo's Salad, Artorius, and The Mouse, The Bird and the Sausage.
In this collection John Heath-Stubbs's newest poems revisit the sounds--since he is now blind--of his favorite landscapes. Spending his formative years in the rural countryside, he learned to identify birds by their song and sound, and here he uses that experience to make new discoveries in form and theme. Technically brilliant, this work is also playfully irreverent when it comes to human folly.