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Poems Far and Wide
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Poems Far and Wide in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $16.99

Barnes and Noble
Poems Far and Wide in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $16.99
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Size: OS
This very lively collection contains a wide sweep of poems, many of them prize-winning, taking readers on a remarkable journey. Some look to the past, others to the future, but all are of their time: the reverberating now. The tone is contemporary and bold, while the poet's sensibility tends to favour an eclectic inclusiveness. Uniformly, this wide-ranging and poetically engaging collection demands to be enjoyed.
"As striking and triumphant in current poetry as a Gauguin in a gallery of Flemish still life."
- Robert Harris, generally on Jenkins' work, in
Overland
.
"There's a whole-heartedness about how he embraces the world he sees: aware of its faults, but never stinting..."
- Sharon Olinka (USA)
Thylazine
website.
"The wit, language play and urbane imagery we are used to from Jenkins, as well as emotional repth and an infectious delight in language..."
- Mike Ladd, reviewing
Dark River
in
Australian Book Review.
"Innovative, intellectually sprightly, and artistically refreshing."
- Heather Cam, reviewing
A Break in the Weather
Sydney Morning Herald
John Jenkins is the author of nine collections; he also writes non-fiction, short stories, radio plays and sometimes for live performance. Born in Melbourne in 1949, John lived in Sydney in the 1970s, and has worked extensively as a journalist, both at home and overseas and now writes full time. John won the 2003 Arts Rush/Shoalhaven Poetry Prize; the 2004 James Joyce Suspended Sentence Award; and 2013 Melbourne Poets Union International Poetry Prize. He has presented master classes in Dublin and Singapore. John lives near Victoria's Yarra Valley, on the semi-rural fringes of Melbourne. He enjoys walking, good wine and hopes for a better world.
"As striking and triumphant in current poetry as a Gauguin in a gallery of Flemish still life."
- Robert Harris, generally on Jenkins' work, in
Overland
.
"There's a whole-heartedness about how he embraces the world he sees: aware of its faults, but never stinting..."
- Sharon Olinka (USA)
Thylazine
website.
"The wit, language play and urbane imagery we are used to from Jenkins, as well as emotional repth and an infectious delight in language..."
- Mike Ladd, reviewing
Dark River
in
Australian Book Review.
"Innovative, intellectually sprightly, and artistically refreshing."
- Heather Cam, reviewing
A Break in the Weather
Sydney Morning Herald
John Jenkins is the author of nine collections; he also writes non-fiction, short stories, radio plays and sometimes for live performance. Born in Melbourne in 1949, John lived in Sydney in the 1970s, and has worked extensively as a journalist, both at home and overseas and now writes full time. John won the 2003 Arts Rush/Shoalhaven Poetry Prize; the 2004 James Joyce Suspended Sentence Award; and 2013 Melbourne Poets Union International Poetry Prize. He has presented master classes in Dublin and Singapore. John lives near Victoria's Yarra Valley, on the semi-rural fringes of Melbourne. He enjoys walking, good wine and hopes for a better world.
This very lively collection contains a wide sweep of poems, many of them prize-winning, taking readers on a remarkable journey. Some look to the past, others to the future, but all are of their time: the reverberating now. The tone is contemporary and bold, while the poet's sensibility tends to favour an eclectic inclusiveness. Uniformly, this wide-ranging and poetically engaging collection demands to be enjoyed.
"As striking and triumphant in current poetry as a Gauguin in a gallery of Flemish still life."
- Robert Harris, generally on Jenkins' work, in
Overland
.
"There's a whole-heartedness about how he embraces the world he sees: aware of its faults, but never stinting..."
- Sharon Olinka (USA)
Thylazine
website.
"The wit, language play and urbane imagery we are used to from Jenkins, as well as emotional repth and an infectious delight in language..."
- Mike Ladd, reviewing
Dark River
in
Australian Book Review.
"Innovative, intellectually sprightly, and artistically refreshing."
- Heather Cam, reviewing
A Break in the Weather
Sydney Morning Herald
John Jenkins is the author of nine collections; he also writes non-fiction, short stories, radio plays and sometimes for live performance. Born in Melbourne in 1949, John lived in Sydney in the 1970s, and has worked extensively as a journalist, both at home and overseas and now writes full time. John won the 2003 Arts Rush/Shoalhaven Poetry Prize; the 2004 James Joyce Suspended Sentence Award; and 2013 Melbourne Poets Union International Poetry Prize. He has presented master classes in Dublin and Singapore. John lives near Victoria's Yarra Valley, on the semi-rural fringes of Melbourne. He enjoys walking, good wine and hopes for a better world.
"As striking and triumphant in current poetry as a Gauguin in a gallery of Flemish still life."
- Robert Harris, generally on Jenkins' work, in
Overland
.
"There's a whole-heartedness about how he embraces the world he sees: aware of its faults, but never stinting..."
- Sharon Olinka (USA)
Thylazine
website.
"The wit, language play and urbane imagery we are used to from Jenkins, as well as emotional repth and an infectious delight in language..."
- Mike Ladd, reviewing
Dark River
in
Australian Book Review.
"Innovative, intellectually sprightly, and artistically refreshing."
- Heather Cam, reviewing
A Break in the Weather
Sydney Morning Herald
John Jenkins is the author of nine collections; he also writes non-fiction, short stories, radio plays and sometimes for live performance. Born in Melbourne in 1949, John lived in Sydney in the 1970s, and has worked extensively as a journalist, both at home and overseas and now writes full time. John won the 2003 Arts Rush/Shoalhaven Poetry Prize; the 2004 James Joyce Suspended Sentence Award; and 2013 Melbourne Poets Union International Poetry Prize. He has presented master classes in Dublin and Singapore. John lives near Victoria's Yarra Valley, on the semi-rural fringes of Melbourne. He enjoys walking, good wine and hopes for a better world.

















