Hass, Robert
What Light Can Do: Essays on Art, Imagination, and the Natural World
What Light Can Do: Essays on Art, Imagination, and the Natural World
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New York: Ecco, 2012. 1st ed., first printing (full number line). Quarto in pale, color illus jacket; xi, 479 pages: illustrations; 24 cm Very small remainder mark to bottom edge; else fine in fine jacket. As new. Please see photos. in as new dust-jacket. Hardcover. ISBN: 9780061923920
Signed by Hass on title page. "[A] collection of essays on writers, place, poetry, and photography--with accompanying photos throughout." Contents: A miscellany of short pieces to begin. Wallace Stevens in the world -- Chekhov's anger -- Howl at fifty -- The kingdom of reversals: notes on Hosoe's Mishima -- George Oppen: his art -- Ernesto Cardenal: a Nicaraguan poet's beginning -- A longer essay on literature and war. Study war no more: violence, literature and Immanuel Kant -- Some California writers. Jack London in his time: Martin Eden -- Mary Austin and The land of little rain -- The fury of Robinson Jeffers -- William Everson: some glimpses -- Maxine Hong Kingston: notes on a woman warrior -- Poets and the world. Ko Un and Korean poetry -- Milosz at eighty -- Milosz at ninety-three -- Poetry and terror: some notes on Coming to Jakarta -- Zukofsky at the outset -- Tomaž Šalamun: an introduction -- A bruised sky: two Chinese poets -- Two essays on literature and religion. Reflections on the Epistles of John -- Notes on poetry and spirituality -- Three photographers and their landscapes. Robert Adams and Los Angeles -- Robert Buelteman and the Coast Range -- Laura McPhee and the river of no return -- Three essays on (mainly) American poetry. On teaching poetry -- Families and prisons -- Edward Taylor: how American poetry got started -- Imagining the earth. Cormac McCarthy's trilogy, or, The Puritan conscience and the Mexican dark -- Black nature -- Rivers and stories: an introduction -- An oak grove./ Literature, Modern -- 21st century -- History and criticism.
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