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The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry

Front Cover
17 Reviews
Counterpoint, 1999 - Poetry - 192 pages
In elegy, subversive call, song, or meditation, Wendell Berry's clear yet complex vision of what it means to be human is rare in American poetry. In these one hundred poems, drawn from nine previous collections, Berry's play of sound and syntax moves in our minds like something just remembered, and remains with us like an afterimage on the eye. He loves the pleasure of daily work outdoors, and his love of family and community is centered in a place on earth. As an activist and farmer, Berry's poems are balanced by reverence.

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Review: The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry

User Review  - Kenneth - Goodreads

I really like Wendell Berry, both his novels and poetry. I think this book of selected Poems gives a great overview for Mr Berry's talents and passions. Read full review

Review: The Selected Poems Of Wendell Berry

User Review  - Gloria - Goodreads

3.5 stars. I am not qualified to rate poetry, I can only share what speaks to me. And these did: The Broken Ground The opening out and out, body yielding body: the breaking through which the new comes ... Read full review

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About the author (1999)

Wendell Berry The prolific poet, novelist, and essayist Wendell Berry is a fifth-generation native of north central Kentucky. Berry taught at Stanford University; traveled to Italy and France on a Guggenheim Fellowship; and taught at New York University and the University of Kentucky, Lexington, before moving to Henry County. Berry owns and operates Lanes Landing Farm, a small, hilly piece of property on the Kentucky River. He embraced full-time farming as a career, using horses and organic methods to tend the land. Harmony with nature in general, and the farming tradition in particular, is a central theme of Berry's diverse work. As a poet, Berry gained popularity within the literary community. Collected Poems, 1957-1982, was particularly well-received. Novels and short stories set in Port William, a fictional town paralleling his real-life home town of Port Royal further established his literary reputation. The Memory of Old Jack, Berry's third novel, received Chicago's Friends of American Writers Award for 1975. Berry reached his broadest audience and attained his greatest popular acclaim through his essays. The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture is a springboard for contemporary environmental concerns. In his life as well as his art, Berry has advocated a responsible, contextual relationship with individuals in a local, agrarian economy.

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