Carl McKever continues with new styles of poetry in his third volume of Poetic Expressions. In this book, an afterword and foreword is included; written by Anna Maria Clark. New features can be found and once Carl returns from his break in September, he will working on Volume 4. Hope you enjoy this volume more, since it has sonnets and quatrains.
Poetic Expressions Volume II is an addition to Poetic Expressions; including new poems of different styles of writing. This book includes a Poets' Purpose feature, A Tribute to my Parents, and new goals of writing that Carl McKever is trying to obtain. After 5 years of successful writing of poetry, Carl still remains active in Florida State Poets Association, Iowa Poetry Association, Dubuque Area Writers' Guild, and Association of Writers and Writing Programs. Daily, he is reaching out to his local community and library (Carnegie Stout Public Library) to recruit others who have a passion and burden for poetry; as well as new-beginning poets.
Poetic Expressions Vol. VI is comprised of new poems written by Carl McKever and his writing goals for 2013 and 2014 (Chicago School of Poetics). Carl would like you to know how book reviews are handled and this book will explicitly explain that process for you. Romantic poems, personal poems, short stories, and riddles are all contained in this book.
Carl McKever wants to thank you, the audience, for his success in creating Poetic Expressions Vol. V. The foreword has been excluded from this book to prevent misuse of information security. In this book, you will find short stories filled with laughter and excitement. Carl's future goals are displayed in the final remarks of this book and you can learn about his great accomplishments by reading the preface of this book. We are happy and delighted to inform you of Carl McKever's 6th commemoration of being a poet and now, creative writer. Six years of due diligence in promoting and appreciating the passion towards poetry!
'It is impossible to say just what I mean!' Prufrock's frustration in Eliot's celebrated poem underlines the pessimistic view of language at the heart of much Modernist poetry. Locating the greatest Italian poet of the twentieth century, Eugenio Montale, firmly within European Modernism, thisbook examines the struggle with language that is central to his work. What can a poet do when words fail him? Does he put down his pen, retreat into silence? Does he seek instead to push language towards its limits, and, if so, what tools can he employ? What part does metaphor, the via negativa,allusive or understated writing have in this process? These are just some of the issues that Clodagh J. Brook seeks to address. In its unravelling of the inexpressibility paradox, her book offers a new reading of Montale's early verse, and reveals how in articles and metapoetic comments Montalegives us insights into both his poetics and the whole process of expression.
Considered by many to be the most characteristically American of our twentieth-century poets, William Carlos Williams "wanted to write a poem / that you would understand / ,,,But you got to try hard—." So that readers could more fully understand the extent of Williams' radical simplicity, all of his published poetry, excluding Paterson, was reissued in two definite volumes, of which this is the first.