Plus d’un million de livres disponibles en un clic !
Bookbot

Robert Peake

    Robert Peake est un poète britanno-américain dont l'œuvre explore souvent les relations complexes entre les individus et leur environnement. Sa poésie se caractérise par une sélection méticuleuse du langage et un aperçu profond de la psyché humaine. Peake explore des thèmes tels que la mémoire, l'identité et la mutabilité du monde qui nous entoure. Ses recueils offrent aux lecteurs une expérience profonde et stimulante.

    UK, German tax treaty
    Cyclone
    Golden Moments
    The Knowledge
    • The Knowledge

      • 84pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      4,4(5)Évaluer

      Robert Peake's incredible eye for detail illuminates this collection of delicately-attuned poems. Each explores a certain kind of knowledge, one that is felt and experienced, known in your heart and in your bones. From postcards to portraits, ancient and modern wars to cosmopolitan cities, Robert Peake finds a sharp focus for the bigger picture.

      The Knowledge
    • Golden Moments

      A Collection of United States 1984. Commemorative Olympic Issues

      Golden Moments
    • Cyclone

      • 80pages
      • 3 heures de lecture

      Robert Peake's second full collection of poems is about weathering storms--personal, political, psychological--in our present-day climate of chaos. These are matters of life or death, and Cyclone urges us to consider what the ill wind may bring, and how we will survive it. Peake's acutely tuned poems bring eloquence and urgency to matters of profound devastation. With shattering delicacy, he writes of personal loss, of grief and the long aftermath; "whenever the wind sprays into my face, I taste salt of your absence". These poems also hazard an eye at the global weather and find a world in turmoil, wild with unreliable news and terrible forecasts. Manifesting between the storms is the man with the kindest face. Is he here to save us or warn us? A guide or a harbinger? As these brilliantly-visioned poems suggest, nothing is certain in the eye of the storm. Nevertheless, there is some form of consolation and rescue: "He seems at home in this tempest. He seems happy".

      Cyclone