Essays After Eighty - The Poetry Shop

Essays After Eighty

$18.99
Sale price  $18.99 Regular price  $23.99
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Essays After Eighty - The Poetry Shop

Ecco Press

Essays After Eighty

$18.99
Sale price  $18.99 Regular price  $23.99
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"Alternately lyrical and laugh-out-loud funny."--New York Times

"Deliciously readable . . . Donald Hall, if abandoned by the muse of poetry, has wrought his prose to a keen autumnal edge." -- Wall Street Journal


His entire life, Donald Hall has dedicated himself to the written word, putting together a storied career as a poet, essayist, and memoirist. Now, in the "unknown, unanticipated galaxy" of very old age, he is writing essays that startle, move, and delight. In Essays After Eighty, Hall ruminates on his past: "thirty was terrifying, forty I never noticed because I was drunk, fifty was best with a total change of life, sixty extended the bliss of fifty . . ." He also addresses his present: "When I turned eighty and rubbed testosterone on my chest, my beard roared like a lion and gained four inches." Most memorably, Hall writes about his enduring love affair with his ancestral Eagle Pond Farm and with the writing life that sustains him every day: "Yesterday my first nap was at 9:30 a.m., but when I awoke I wrote again."

"Alluring, inspirational hominess . . . Essays After Eighty is a treasure . . . balancing frankness about losses with humor and gratitude." -- Washington Post

"A fine book of remembering all sorts of things past, Essays After Eighty is to be treasured." -- Boston Globe

Book Details

ISBN:
9780544570313
Binding:
Paperback
Pages:
144
Authors:
Donald Hall
Published Date:
2015-11-03
Language:
English

About Donald Hall

Donald Hall (1928–2018) was a poet born in New Haven, Connecticut, who served as Poetry Editor of The Paris Review from 1953 to 1961 and edited the anthology New Poets of England and America (1957). He and his wife, poet Jane Kenyon, lived at Eagle Pond Farm in Wilmot, New Hampshire. After Kenyon's death from leukemia in 1995, he wrote Without (Houghton Mifflin, 1998). His long poem The One Day (Ticknor & Fields, 1988) won the National Book Critics Circle Award. He served as United States Poet Laureate from 2006 to 2007 and received the National Medal of Arts.

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