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Springing

New and Selected Poems

Marie Ponsot

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Paperback

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English
Alfred A. Knopf
15 January 2004
New and Selected Poems

From the award-winning author of The Bird Catcher, this life-spanning volume offers the delight of both discovery and re-discovery, as Ponsot tends the unruly garden of her mind with her customary care and passion. The book opens with a group of new poems, including ""What Would You Like to Be When You Grow Up?""-a question that has kept Ponsot's work vital for more than five decades. Throughout the selections from her four earlier books and a trove of previously unpublished work covering the years 1946 to 1971, she offers us a ""lost haven in a springing world."" Sometimes sharp in her self-perception, but always listing toward pleasure and elegance, unafraid of grief and the passage of time, Ponsot continually refreshes her language and the spirited self from which it emerges.
By:  
Imprint:   Alfred A. Knopf
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 212mm,  Width: 149mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   362g
ISBN:   9780375709876
ISBN 10:   0375709878
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Marie Ponsot's first book of poems was True Minds (1956); later books are Admit Impediment (1981) and The Green Dark (1988). She is a native New Yorker who has enjoyed teaching at Queens College, Beijing United University, the Poetry Center of the YMHA, New York University, and Columbia University. Among her awards are an NEA Creative Writing grant, the Delmore Schwartz Memorial Prize, and the Shaughnessy Medal of the Modern Language Association. Ponsot's most recent collection, The Bird Catcher, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry in 1998.

Reviews for Springing: New and Selected Poems

Marie Ponsot's poetic achievement is fiercely independent. A courageous eloquence is sustained throughout her work, as she mounts up what Emerson called 'the stairway of surprise.' ---Harold Bloom From the Hardcover edition.


  • Winner of Frost Medal 2005

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