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The Selected Poetry Of Yehuda Amichai

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Berkerley : University of California Press, (c)2013.Description: 1 online resource (218 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780520954441
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • PJ5054 .S454 2013
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Subject: Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000) was Israel's most popular poet, as well as a literary figure of international reputation. In this collection, renowned translators Chana Bloch and Stephen Mitchell have selected Amichai's most beloved poems, including forty poems from his later work. A new foreword by C.K. Williams, written especially for this edition, addresses Amichai's enduring legacy and sets his poetry in the context of the new millennium.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction PJ5054.65 A2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available ocn827208186

Includes bibliographies and index.

Cover; Contents; Foreword 2013; Foreword 1996; PART ONE: edited and translated; From Now and in Other Days (1955); God Has Pity on Kindergarten Children; The U.N. Headquarters in the High Commissioner's House in Jerusalem; Autobiography, 1952; The Smell of Gasoline Ascends in My Nose; Six Poems for Tamar; Yehuda Ha-Levi; Ibn Gabirol; When I Was a Child; Look: Thoughts and Dreams; From We Loved Here; From Two Hopes Away (1958); Gods Hand in the World; Sort of an Apocalypse; And That Is Your Glory; Of Three or Four in a Room; Not Like a Cypress.

Through Two Points Only One Straight Line Can PassHalf the People in the World; For My Birthday; Two Photographs; Poems for a Woman; Children's Procession; Ballad of the Washed Hair; Sonnet from the Voyage; The Visit of the Queen of Sheba; From In a Right Angle: A Cycle of Quatrains; From Poems, 1948-1962; As for the World; In the Middle of This Century; Farewell; Such as Sorrow; Jerusalem; Before; And as Far as Abu Ghosh; You Too Got Tired; The Place Where We Are Right; Mayor; Resurrection; From Summer or Its End; In the Full Severity of Mercy; Too Many; Poem for Arbor Day.

Jacob and the AngelHere; Elegy on an Abandoned Village; The Elegy on the Lost Child; From Now in the Storm, Poems 1963-1968; Jerusalem, 1967; The Bull Returns; A Luxury; To Bake the Bread of Yearning; National Thoughts; A Pity. We Were Such a Good Invention; Elegy; Threading; Now in the Storm; Travels of the Last Benjamin of Tudela; PART TWO: edited and translated; From Not for the Sake of Remembering (1971); Jews in the Land of Israel; Wildpeace; The Way It Was; Instead of Words; Gifts of Love; Ballad in the Streets of Buenos Aires; Psalm.

From Behind All This a Great Happiness Is Hiding (1976)Seven Laments for the War-Dead; Like the Inner Wall of a House; Love Song; I've Grown Very Hairy; A Dog After Love; A Bride Without a Dowry; The Sweet Breakdowns of Abigail; To a Convert; My Father in a White Space Suit; A Letter of Recommendation; On the Day I Left; A Letter; In a Leap Year; A Quiet Joy; A Mutual Lullaby; From Songs of Zion the Beautiful; From Time (1978); Songs of Continuity; At the Monastery of Latroun; When I Was Young, the Whole Country Was Young; I Walked Past a House Where I Lived Once; To My Love, Combing Her Hair.

The Diameter of the BombWhen I Banged My Head on the Door; You Carry the Weight of Heavy Buttocks; Advice for Good Love; You Are So Small and Slight in the Rain; A Man Like That on a Bald Mountain in Jerusalem; When a Man's Far Away from His Country; The Eve of Rosh Hashanah; I've Already Been Weaned; In the Garden, at the White Table; From the Book of Esther I Filtered the Sediment; So I Went Down to the Ancient Harbor; Now the Lifeguards Have All Gone Home; Near the Wall of a House; From A Great Tranquillity: Questions and Answers (1980); You Can Rely on Him; You Mustn't Show Weakness.

Lost Objects.

Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000) was Israel's most popular poet, as well as a literary figure of international reputation. In this collection, renowned translators Chana Bloch and Stephen Mitchell have selected Amichai's most beloved poems, including forty poems from his later work. A new foreword by C.K. Williams, written especially for this edition, addresses Amichai's enduring legacy and sets his poetry in the context of the new millennium.

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