As a writer with a profound gift for observation, Thomas had always been a punctilious note-taker, and his war-diary was clearly intended as an aide-mémoire for future works which he never had chance to write. Isolated sentences in the diary often have the cadence of first lines of poems, and many of the descriptions, with their casual observations of wild animals, human behaviour, and sudden moments of destruction, are compelling even in note-form. The poems in this book are intended as a tribute to one of the most accomplished prose-stylists of the early twentieth century – and one of its subtlest and most original poets. Some may be read in the voice of Thomas himself; others range more widely – but all make partial use of Thomas’s own words.
Détails
- Date de publication
- Oct 28, 2013
- Langue
- English
- Catégorie
- Poésie
- Copyright
- Tous droits réservés - Licence de copyright standard
- Contributeurs
- Par (auteur): Giles Watson
Caractéristiques
- Pages
- 47
- Type de reliure
- Livre à couverture souple Livre à couverture souple
- Couleur de l’intérieur
- Couleur
- Dimensions
- Petit paysage (9 x 7 po / 229 x 178 mm)