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Charles Simic

    9 de mayo de 1938 – 9 de enero de 2023

    Charles Simic crea poesía que se adentra en las sutiles absurdidades de la vida cotidiana, revelando profundas verdades en lo ordinario. Su obra a menudo navega por temas de memoria, conflicto y la búsqueda persistente de sentido en medio del caos. El estilo distintivo de Simic se caracteriza por su claridad, economía de lenguaje y una notable habilidad para destilar importantes ideas a partir de las más pequeñas observaciones. Los lectores conectan con su escritura por su honestidad sin adornos y su sabiduría perdurable.

    Charles Simic
    No Land in Sight
    Come Closer and Listen
    Selected Poems 1963-2003
    Selected Early Poems
    The World Doesn't End
    That Little Something
    • That Little Something

      • 96 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      Presents a collection of poems that examines the darker side of history and human behavior, looking at the strange interplay between ordinary life and extremes and between reality and imagination.

      That Little Something
    • Words plus words relate the poet's reaction to anything; for example, his secret the room is empty, and the window is open

      The World Doesn't End
    • Selected Early Poems

      • 252 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      Selected Early Poems spans the years 1963-1983 and includes works from Simic’s first twelve collections. United States poet laureate & Pulitzer Prize winner, Charles Simic adds a new introduction to the most comprehensive collection of his early poetry from 1963-1983.

      Selected Early Poems
    • Selected Poems 1963-2003

      • 176 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Serbian by birth, brought up under Nazi occupation and transplanted to America in his teens, Charles Simic has had the opportunity to distill a highly particular vision of the world, in which comic gaiety goes hand in hand with the recognition of our darker spiritual and philosophical problems. Blending the real and the surreal, the urbane and the uncanny, Simic's poems construct a neighbourhood of experience that is estranged yet recognisably at home with its surroundings. He notes what the eye sees and what the subsconscious has to say on the matter, in a poetry which is a triumph of the plain style.This selection, made by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author himself from forty years of writing, is an outstanding overview of one of the wisest American poets.'Simic's writing comes dancing out on the balls of its feet, colloquially fit as a fiddle, a sparring partner for the world.' Seamus Heaney

      Selected Poems 1963-2003
    • Come Closer and Listen

      • 96 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      An insightful and haunting new collection from Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Charles Simic Irreverent and sly, observant and keenly imagined, Come Closer and Listen is the latest work from one of our most beloved poets.

      Come Closer and Listen
    • No Land in Sight

      • 96 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      From one of America's most beloved poets, a piercing new collection reflecting on the characters and encounters that haunt us through this life and into the nextLeading us into a city stirring with gravediggers and beggars, lovers and dogs, Charles Simic returns with a brilliant collection full of his singular wit, dark humor, and tenderheartedness. In poems that are often as spare as they are monumental, he captures the fleeting moments of modern life—peering inside pawnshop windows, brushing shoulders with strangers on the street, and walking familiar cemetery rows—to uncover all the beauty and worry hiding in plain sight.As the poet reflects on a lifetime’s worth of pleasure and loss, he recalls instances when he “made excuses and hurried away,” and considers the way memory always trails just behind. No Land in Sight is a testament to all we leave in our wake and, simultaneously, all we hang on the passing minutes, the evening’s stillness, and the many lives we inhabit in dim thresholds and bright mornings alike.

      No Land in Sight
    • New and Selected Poems

      1962-2012

      • 384 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      Charles Simic's poetry showcases his mastery through a distinctive style characterized by jittery syntax and profound insights. His unique voice creates an eccentric kingdom of thought, inviting readers into a world rich with unexpected imagery and philosophical depth. The collection reflects his ability to blend the ordinary with the extraordinary, offering a captivating exploration of language and perception.

      New and Selected Poems
    • Master Breasts

      Objectified, Aestheticized, Fantasized, Eroticized, Feminized by Photography's Most Titillating Masters

      • 110 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      Photographs of breasts are everywhere: in museums, on book covers, in fashion ads, and on posters. Alluring symbols of womanhood, breasts have fascinated generations of image makers. Here, for the first time between two covers, is the breast in photography: the titillating breast, the maternal breast, the aging breast, and the symbolic breast.

      Master Breasts
    • Nájdeme tu 16 básní. Simicova poézia predstavuje ten typ citlivosti, ktorá nás svojím ustavičným spochybňovaním spôsobov vnímania vystríha pred tými, ktorých Simic nazýva „nepriateľmi slobodných bytostí“.

      Svet sa nekončí
    • Charles Simic, der große amerikanische Lyriker, erinnert sich an seine Kindheit und Jugend in Belgrad, Paris und Amerika. Als er drei Jahre alt ist, bombardieren die Deutschen seine Heimatstadt Belgrad. 'Alle Kinder spielten Krieg. Wie liebten wir den Klang der Maschinengewehre! Diese Art zu spielen machte die Erwachsenen verrückt.' Und die sind eigentlich schon verrückt genug: der Großvater, der in seinem Haß auf die Kirche den Priester verprügelt; der Onkel, der den Deutschen einen Armeelaster klaut, um mit seiner Freundin eine Spritztour zu machen, was zur Verhaftung des Vaters durch die Gestapo führt. Überhaupt der Vater: er ist die geliebte Hauptfigur in diesen Erinnerungen, ein Geschichtenerzähler und Schlawiner. Im Juni 1953 erhält die Mutter für sich und die Kinder die Erlaubnis zur Ausreise, 1954, nach einem Jahr in Paris, die Visa für Amerika, wo Simics Karriere als amerikanischer Dichter beginnt.

      Die Fliege in der Suppe