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Edwin Morgan (1920–2010)

Autor(a) de Collected Poems

63+ Works 412 Membros 7 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: Edwin Morgan, Ed. Edwin Morgan

Obras de Edwin Morgan

Collected Poems (1990) 50 cópias
A Book of Lives (2007) 17 cópias
Virtual and Other Realities (1997) 15 cópias
Cathures (2002) 14 cópias
The Play of Gilgamesh (2005) 10 cópias
New English Dramatists 14 (1970) 9 cópias
The new divan (1977) 7 cópias
Sweeping Out the Dark (1994) 6 cópias
The second life (1968) 6 cópias
Scottish Short Stories (1976) 6 cópias
Sonnets from Scotland (1984) 5 cópias
Scottish Satirical Verse (1980) 5 cópias
Collins Albatross Book of Longer Poems (1963) — Editor — 4 cópias
Poems of thirty years (1982) 3 cópias
emergent poems 3 cópias
Demon (1999) 3 cópias
Instamatic Poems (1972) 3 cópias
Centenary Selected Poems (2020) 3 cópias
Baudelaire 2 cópias
Grafts/Takes (1983) 2 cópias
Essays (1974) 2 cópias
Love and a Life: 50 Poems (2003) 2 cópias
Themes on a Variation (1988) 2 cópias
Tales from Limerick Zoo (1988) 2 cópias
Horizons (1971) — Contribuinte — 1 exemplar(es)
New Writing Scotland 7 (1989) 1 exemplar(es)
Helen And Desire 1 exemplar(es)
Grafts (1983) 1 exemplar(es)
Star Gate: Science Fiction Poems (1979) 1 exemplar(es)
Glasgow sonnets (1972) 1 exemplar(es)
Twelve songs (1970) 1 exemplar(es)
Sovpoems 1 exemplar(es)
The apple-tree (1989) 1 exemplar(es)
Tales from Baron Munchausen (2005) 1 exemplar(es)
From the video box (1986) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

The Book of Fantasy (1940) — Contribuinte — 604 cópias
Extraordinary Tales (1955) — Contribuinte — 274 cópias
British Poetry Since 1945 (1970) — Contribuinte, algumas edições167 cópias
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contribuinte, algumas edições108 cópias
Nova Scotia: New Scottish Speculative Fiction (2005) — Contribuinte — 63 cópias
Beowulf (1987) — Tradutor — 54 cópias
The Gowk Storm (1933) — Introdução, algumas edições45 cópias
Science Fiction (1973) — Autor — 40 cópias
The Poetry Cure (2005) — Contribuinte — 19 cópias
New Writing 13 (2005) — Contribuinte — 17 cópias
Starfield (1989) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Gay Hunter (Cosmos) (1934) — Introdução, algumas edições10 cópias
Nothing Solemn: An anthology of comic verse (1973) — Contribuinte — 3 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome de batismo
Morgan, Edwin George
Data de nascimento
1920-04-27
Data de falecimento
2010-08-19
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
UK
Local de nascimento
Hyndland, Scotland, UK
Locais de residência
Rutherglen, Scotland, UK
Educação
Rutherglen Academy, Glasgow
Glasgow High School
University of Glasgow
Ocupação
professor
Organizações
University of Glasgow
Premiações
Order of the British Empire (officer|1982)
The Hungarian Order of Merit (1997)
Poet Laureate of Glasgow (1999)
Queen's Medal for Poetry (2000)
Scots Makar (2004-2011)
Pequena biografia
Morgan was a 'closet' homosexual who did not publicly admit to the fact until he was 70. From 1963 to 1978 the defining relationship in his life was with John Scott, although they never lived together. Homosexuality was a criminal offence in Scotland until 1980, two years after Scott's death.

Membros

Resenhas

Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with the Ian Hamilton Finlay & The Wild Hawthorn Press 1958 - 1991 exhibition. Includes full page colour illustrations and two essays by Edwin Morgan titled "Early Finlay" and "Finlay in the 70s and 80s" in parallel English and Spanish.
 
Marcado
petervanbeveren | Jul 13, 2022 |
41/2021. This is a 1969 collection of work by Alan Bold, Edward (Kamau) Brathwaite, and Edwin Morgan. This is at least a partial re-read for me. Alan Bold's work is justly neglected now, while Brathwaite has achieved classic status as a Caribbean poet, and Edwin Morgan is a national treasure in both Scotland and the rest of Britain.

Firstly, my review of the 60 page selection of Alan Bold's poems: no. 1*

Next, the 50 page selection of Edward (Kamau) Brathwaite's poems from his first three books Rights of Passage, Masks, and Islands, had a few good lines but on the whole they didn't make me want to re-read any further into his works. 3*

From The Emigrants: "In London, Undergrounds are cold.
The train rolls in from darkness
with our fears."

From South: "And gulls, their white sails slanted seaward,
fly into the limitless morning before us."

Lastly, the 50 page selection of Edwin Morgan's poems: YES. 5*
… (mais)
 
Marcado
spiralsheep | Mar 1, 2021 |
Of all the poetry collections I've read, this is probably the one in which I was engaged by the biggest percentage of the poems. There's still a lot here that just makes me do a *derp* face, but a lot of it also really struck me. For just pure awesome, you can't beat "The Loch Ness Monster's Song," and "The Video Box No. 25" is one of those rare poems (for me) that just absolutely knocked me on my arse. Recommended.
 
Marcado
lycomayflower | Jul 30, 2018 |
THREE SCOTTISH POETS: MacCAIG, MORGAN, LOCHHEAD edited by Roderick Watson… I ordered this book because I had read a delightful poem by Norman MacCaig called "Small Boy" and was disappointed not to find it here. I was not thrilled with the quality of the print job either (Canongate Classics, printed and bound by Clays Ltd)—and it would have helped to have the poet's name on the bottom of the page for his/her section—but I found much to love in the words. Best read in a Scottish brogue, these were some of my favorite lines from each:

Norman MacCaig: "The thatched roof rings like heaven where mice / Squeak small hosannahs all night long" and "a sea tin-tacked with rain" and "I love frogs that sit / like Buddha" and "The collie underneath the table / Slumps with a world-rejecting sigh."

Edwin Morgan: "After many summer dyes, the swan-white ice / glints only crystal beyond white. Even / dearest blue's not there, though poets would find it" and "half reluctant, half truculent, / half handsome, half absurd, / but let me see you forget him: not to be done."

Of course, there were entire poems that were magnificent in addition to those few select lines. My favorite voice in the collection, though, belongs to Liz Lochhead. Her observations of the smallest details take on significance (e.g., her shampoo in "The Empty Song"). The majority of her poems are about relationships along with a brilliant monologue called "Verena: Security" in which she honestly explores the pros and cons of a significant other working away from home for weeks at a time. I'll leave you and this review with the last stanza of Lochhead's "Hafiz on Danforth Avenue":

And to tell you this is easy,
scribbling this was as simple
as the shopping-list it jostles
on the next page of my notebook.
Love, as well as bread and coffee
it says eggplants, olive oil
don't forget
the nutmeg and the cinnamon.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
DonnaMarieMerritt | 1 outra resenha | Dec 7, 2014 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
63
Also by
18
Membros
412
Popularidade
#59,116
Avaliação
4.0
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
82
Idiomas
1
Favorito
2

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