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Paul Muldoon

    20 juin 1951

    Paul Muldoon est un poète célébré, reconnu pour son expérimentation linguistique et ses aperçus percutants sur l'identité et l'histoire irlandaises. Ses œuvres explorent souvent les complexités de la narration et l'entrelacement du passé et du présent. Le style de Muldoon se caractérise par un engagement ludique avec la langue, des formes innovantes et de riches allusions. Enracinée dans la tradition mais tournée vers l'avenir, sa poésie offre aux lecteurs une perspective distinctive sur l'expérience humaine.

    The Word on the Street
    Adventures in Form
    Poems 1968-1998
    Meeting the British
    The Faber book of contemporary Irish poetry
    The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present
    • 2025

      Britain's most prestigious literary magazine brings you the very best new fiction, memoir, reportage, poetry, photography and art from around the world. Granta consistently publishes innovative and prize-winning writing in each quarterly issue, such as 'Rain' by Colin Barrett and 'The Room-Service Waiter' by Tom Crewe (both winners of the 2024 O. Henry Prize for Short Fiction), as well as 'Theories of Care' by Sophie Mackintosh, which won the 2024 Pushcart Prize.

      Granta 172
    • 2024

      'To describe Paul Muldoon's influence on contemporary poetry is like trying to assess the influence of The Beatles on post-war music: it's to be seen and heard in the work of almost every British and Irish poet since the 1970's.' Irish Post

      Joy in Service on Rue Tagore
    • 2023

      When it appeared in 1973, Seamus Heaney described its author as 'unusually gifted, endowed with an individual sense of rhythm, a natural and copious vocabulary, a technical accomplishment and an intellectual boldness that mark him as the most promising poet to appear in Ireland for years'.

      New Weather
    • 2021

      The hard-hitting new poetry collection from 'Ireland's most ingenious poet' (Telegraph).

      Howdie-Skelp
    • 2021

      #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER A Washington Post Notable Book Excerpted in The New Yorker A work of unparalleled candor and splendorous beauty, The Lyrics celebrates the creative life and the musical genius of Paul McCartney through his most meaningful songs.

      The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present
    • 2019

      Meeting the British

      • 80pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      4,2(5)Évaluer

      Meeting the British is Paul Muldoon's fifth collection of poems. They range from an account of the first recorded case of germ warfare, through a meditation on a bar of soap, to a sequence of monologues spoken by some of the famous, or infamous, inhabitants of '7, Middagh Street', New York, on Thanksgiving Day, 1940.

      Meeting the British
    • 2019

      Frolic and Detour

      • 144pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,2(5)Évaluer

      The stirring, mindful and deeply humane new collection of poems from Paul Muldoon - now in paperback.

      Frolic and Detour
    • 2017

      Paul Muldoon is widely considered the greatest living poet of his generation. The former Professor of Poetry at Oxford, and once poetry editor of The New Yorker, Muldoon's influence on poetry since his debut is incalculable. At once playful, profoundly literate, pop savvy and allusive to the max, his poetry has thousands of readers and fans worldwide. Any new collection of this Pulitzer-winner is an event. Book jacket.

      Sadie and the Sadists: Song Lyrics from Paul Muldoon
    • 2016

      Selected Poems 1968-2014

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,8(37)Évaluer

      “The most significant English-Language poet born since the second world war.” —The Times Literary Supplement Selected Poems 1968–2014 offers forty-six years of work drawn from twelve individual collections by a poet who “began as a prodigy and has gone on to become a virtuoso” (Michael Hofmann). Hailed by Seamus Heaney as “one of the era’s true originals,” Paul Muldoon seems determined to escape definition, yet this volume, compiled by the poet himself, serves as an indispensable introduction to his trademark combination of intellectual hijinks and emotional honesty. Among his many honors are the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the Shakespeare Prize “for contributions from English-speaking Europe to the European inheritance.” “Among contemporaries, Paul Muldoon, one of the great poets of the past hundred years, who can be everything in his poems—word-playful, lyrical, hilarious, melancholy. And angry. Only Yeats before him could write with such measured fury.” —Roger Rosenblatt, The New York Times

      Selected Poems 1968-2014
    • 2015