Mark Ford: Selected Poems by Mark Ford (2014, Trade Paperback)

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Mark Ford: Selected Poems by Ford, Mark [Paperback]

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherCoffee House Press
ISBN-101566893496
ISBN-139781566893497
eBay Product ID (ePID)171652642

Product Key Features

Book TitleMark Ford: Selected Poems
Number of Pages168 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicGeneral, Subjects & Themes / General, European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Publication Year2014
GenrePoetry, Literary Collections
AuthorMark Ford
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.5 in
Item Weight7.1 Oz
Item Length8.2 in
Item Width5.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
ReviewsTimes Literary Supplement Book of the Year "[Mark Ford''s] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." -- New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore''s most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year." -- New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford''s name a familiar one to more American readers." -- Publishers Weekly "Intelligent, restless originality." -- The Guardian "This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived prcis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." --Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford''s poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, ''work'' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." -- The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." -- Boston Review "...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." -- Cleaver Magazine "Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." --Helen Vendler "Ford''s poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." --John Ashbery "Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have--one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." --Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford''s] dark episodes--slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical--unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." -- London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." --Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." -- Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford''s poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today--on either side of the Atlantic." --David Wojahn, [Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." — New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore''s most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year." — New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford''s poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, ''work'' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review ...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." — Cleaver Magazine Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford''s poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford''s] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." — Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year "[Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." --New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore's most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year."--New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." --Publishers Weekly "Intelligent, restless originality." --The Guardian "This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." --Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." --The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." --Boston Review "...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." --Cleaver Magazine "Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." --Helen Vendler "Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." --John Ashbery "Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have--one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." --Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes--slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical--unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." --London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." --Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries."--Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today--on either side of the Atlantic." --David Wojahn, Intelligent, restless originality."— The Guardian Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States."— Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister."— John Ashbery This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance."— Albert Mobilio, New York Times Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves."— Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale."— London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." — Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." — David Wojahn, Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year "[Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." --New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore's most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year."--New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." --Publishers Weekly "Intelligent, restless originality." --The Guardian "This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived prcis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." --Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." --The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." --Boston Review "...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." --Cleaver Magazine "Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." --Helen Vendler "Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." --John Ashbery "Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have--one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." --Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes--slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical--unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." --London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." --Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries."--Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today--on either side of the Atlantic." --David Wojahn, Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review ...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." — Cleaver Magazine Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Intelligent, restless originality."— The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States."— Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister."— John Ashbery This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance."— Albert Mobilio, New York Times Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves."— Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale."— London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." — Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." — David Wojahn, Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, [Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." — New York Times Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review ...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." — Cleaver Magazine Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." — Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year "[Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." -- New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore''s most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year." -- New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." -- Publishers Weekly "Intelligent, restless originality." -- The Guardian "This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." --Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford''s poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, ''work'' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." -- The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." -- Boston Review "...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." -- Cleaver Magazine "Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." --Helen Vendler "Ford''s poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." --John Ashbery "Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have--one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." --Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford''s] dark episodes--slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical--unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." -- London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." --Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." -- Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today--on either side of the Atlantic." --David Wojahn, [Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." — New York Times Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford's poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, 'work' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review ...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." — Cleaver Magazine Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford's poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford's] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year [Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." — New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore''s most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year." — New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." — Publishers Weekly Intelligent, restless originality." — The Guardian This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived précis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." —Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford''s poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, ''work'' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." — The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." — Boston Review ...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." — Cleaver Magazine Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." —Helen Vendler Ford''s poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." —John Ashbery Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have—one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." —Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford''s] dark episodes—slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical—unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." — London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." —Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." — Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today—on either side of the Atlantic." —David Wojahn, Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year "[Mark Ford's] work opens up emotionally, like a rolling vista that unfurls after a long hike through dense woods. . . He has a stethoscopic ear for the sounds disappointment can squeeze from a human heart." -- New York Times "Mark Ford, perhaps [Nicholas] Moore''s most brilliant disciple, has recently published his own Selected Poems . . among my favorite poetry publications this year." -- New York Times Literary Supplement "If there is an unspoken limit on how many exclamation marks a poet should use during their career, British poet Ford has surpassed it with bursting, exuberant abandon. . . these selected poems are an exercise in play that energetically flaps against time. . . This collection should make Ford's name a familiar one to more American readers." -- Publishers Weekly "Intelligent, restless originality." -- The Guardian "This is not a poetry of incident and handily derived prcis but rather of choreographed tension and inspired utterance." --Albert Mobilio, New York Times "Ford''s poems, elaborated from a witty and sinister imagination, ''work'' in that instinctual way, allowing details to rise into salient being and beautiful formal shape for the reader as for the poet." -- The New York Review of Books "Ford helps American readers take pleasure in seeing with fresh eyes a country they know too well to notice. . . poetry this strange, felt, terrifying, physical, cerebral, and real is indeed a conjuring act." -- Boston Review "...his poems are nothing short of carefully contained energy." -- Cleaver Magazine "Ford is at once a veteran of pop culture and a connoisseur of the desperation of high culture, an indoor reader of the past but also an outdoor breather of physically felt atmospheres. His generation of English poets is still in formation but I believe Ford to be one of its eventual definers, as Ashbery was crucial to postwar writing in the United States." --Helen Vendler "Ford''s poetry is light and agile and sometimes sweet, but it also has a disconcerting way of turning sharp and naughty and even sinister." --John Ashbery "Readers who like some puzzles along with their pleasures, and who admire sophisticated thinking in verse, will find Ford one of the best young poets we have--one attuned in sad, clever, intricate ways to how we speak now, and what we suspect of ourselves." --Stephen Burt, Times Literary Supplement "[Ford''s] dark episodes--slightly surreal, unnerving, and often farcical--unroll before us, as on a screen of rapidly changing images, while an enchanting voice-over, in a diction all its own, tells its painful, accurate and self-mocking tale." -- London Review of Books "Through the years British poet Mark Ford has developed a singular and spirited body of work that has a winning combination of erudition and whimsy. He is a 21st French century fantast with deep roots in romanticism and modernity. How fortunate now to have this generous selection of his life poetry." --Peter Gizzi "This generous Selected Poems is the ideal introduction to the work of Mark Ford, a British poet who is, thankfully, no respecter of literary or geographical boundaries." -- Friday Night Boys "At long last, American readers can possess a substantial selection of Mark Ford's poetry. These are poems of serious play, relentlessly experimental but grounded in quotidian specifics, characterized by a consummate strangeness and an oddball ferocity that never stoops to mere whimsy or the easy tour-de-force. Mark Ford is, quite simply, one of the most singular talents at work today--on either side of the Atlantic." --David Wojahn
SynopsisSelected Poems charts Mark Ford's growing complexity as a writer and his mastery and use of form. John Ashbery calls Ford's work refreshing and it's that exuberance and goodwill that animates the poems, giving them their spontaneity and leavening the grim with comic lan and joy. Myth, history, and the everyday are all at play in this wonderfully diverse collection. Invisible Assets: After he threw he through a plate glass window, nature seemed that much closer. Even the dastardly division in society might be healed by a first-rate glazier. Of course, on Sundays families still picnicked boldly on the village green, and afterwards marveled at the blacksmith's glowing forge-- how strong they all were in those days And yet how small Even a man only six foot tall was then esteemed a veritable giant. Surely the current furor over architecture would have evoked from them only pitying smiles. Meanwhile the market for landscapes has never been firmer. This view, for instance, includes seven counties, and a bull charging around in its paddock. Mark Ford was born in Nairobi, Kenya, in 1962. He has published three collections of poetry and a biography of the French writer Raymond Roussel and is the editor of Frank O'Hara's Selected Poems . He has also translated Roussel's New Impressions of Africa and is the editor of London: A History in Verse . He lives in London, England., Selected Poems charts Mark Ford's growing complexity as a writer and his mastery and use of form. John Ashbery calls Ford's work "refreshing" and it's that exuberance and goodwill that animates the poems, giving them their spontaneity and leavening the grim with comic élan and joy. Myth, history, and the everyday are all at play in this wonderfully diverse collection. Invisible Assets: After he threw he through a plate glass window, nature seemed that much closer. Even the dastardly division in society might be healed by a first-rate glazier. Of course, on Sundays families still picnicked boldly on the village green, and afterwards marveled at the blacksmith's glowing forge-- how strong they all were in those days! And yet how small! Even a man only six foot tall was then esteemed a veritable giant. Surely the current furor over architecture would have evoked from them only pitying smiles. Meanwhile the market for landscapes has never been firmer. This view, for instance, includes seven counties, and a bull charging around in its paddock. Mark Ford was born in Nairobi, Kenya, in 1962. He has published three collections of poetry and a biography of the French writer Raymond Roussel and is the editor of Frank O'Hara's Selected Poems . He has also translated Roussel's New Impressions of Africa and is the editor of London: A History in Verse . He lives in London, England., Selected Poems charts Mark Ford's growing complexity as a writer and his mastery and use of form. John Ashbery calls Ford's work "refreshing" and it's that exuberance and goodwill that animates the poems, giving them their spontaneity and leavening the grim with comic elan and joy. Myth, history, and the everyday are all at play in this wonderfully diverse collection. Invisible Assets: After he threw he through a plate glass window, nature seemed that much closer. Even the dastardly division in society might be healed by a first-rate glazier. Of course, on Sundays families still picnicked boldly on the village green, and afterwards marveled at the blacksmith's glowing forge-- how strong they all were in those days And yet how small Even a man only six foot tall was then esteemed a veritable giant. Surely the current furor over architecture would have evoked from them only pitying smiles. Meanwhile the market for landscapes has never been firmer. This view, for instance, includes seven counties, and a bull charging around in its paddock. Mark Ford was born in Nairobi, Kenya, in 1962. He has published three collections of poetry and a biography of the French writer Raymond Roussel and is the editor of Frank O'Hara's Selected Poems . He has also translated Roussel's New Impressions of Africa and is the editor of London: A History in Verse . He lives in London, England., An exuberant, versatile, and complex debut US collection from one of the United Kingdom's most respected poets.
LC Classification NumberPR6106.O74A6 2014

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