Life in the Forest is Denise Levertov’s first major collection since the publication in 1975 of The Freeing of the Dust, winner of the Leonore Marshall Poetry Prize, and is her eleventh book with New Directions, in a connection of nearly twenty years’ standing. Ms. Levertov’s work holds that tenuous yet inspiring ground between reflection and discourse. The dynamics of this sensitive balance is pointed up in Life in the Forest by a thematic grouping which invites internal association from poem to poem and section to section. “The poems I had been moving towards,” she explains, “were impelled by two forces: first, a recurring need…to vary a habitual lyric mode; not to abandon it, by any means, but from time to time explore more expansive means; and second, the decision to try to avoid over use of the autobiographical, the dominant first-person singular of so much American poetry—good and bad—of recent years.”
Denise Levertov Livres
Denise Levertov était une poète renommée pour son engagement perspicace à la fois dans le quotidien et le politique. Ses premières œuvres étaient marquées par le lyrisme et l'accent mis sur l'expérience personnelle, tandis que sa poésie ultérieure répondait puissamment aux bouleversements sociaux et politiques de son temps. Levertov tissait magistralement l'intime et le public, utilisant souvent des images concrètes pour transmettre de profondes postures émotionnelles et politiques. Ses vers explorent des thèmes d'amour, de perte, de foi et d'injustice sociale avec une honnêteté et une urgence inébranlables, faisant d'elle une voix significative de la littérature contemporaine.



Brimming over with the inspirational words and thoughts of some of our finest writers, Cries of the Spirit is a beautiful sourcebook of poetry and prose in praise of life and all that it entails. Here women's voices fill the age-old silence about matters central to their experience-from menstruation, sexual intimacy, and childbirth to caretaking, household rituals, and death. These writings represent a healing vision of the sacred that emerges from the particular consciousness of women-a vision that partakes of the world of earth and flesh.