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Paperback Yehuda Amichai: A Life of Poetry, 1948-1994 Book

ISBN: 006092666X

ISBN13: 9780060926663

Yehuda Amichai: A Life of Poetry, 1948-1994

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Book Overview

Yehuda Amichai: A Life of Poetry 1948-1994 offers a comprehensive and timely evaluation of the body of work of one of our most valuable poets in any language. Employing the style and idiom of a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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A poet of great human insight and beauty

Amichai is I believe the most read of all modern Hebrew poets. His writing works on many different levels, and often has a simple surface story meaning which is eminently understandable. But beneath there are layers of complexity and irony, a deep awareness of Hebrew poetry, and traditional religious sources. Amichai's themes are the great themes of literature, themes of love and war, of comradeship and loss. His poetry too centers on his city, Jerusalem, and is a reading of its landscapes and mindscapes. In this volume there are scholarly essays that enhance our understanding of this poet. But Amichai who learned much from American modern poets use of the colloquial is excellently translated into English here. Who meets this volume meets a poetry of exceptional meaning and beauty.

"Hearts without rations, prophecies without water"

"Pain is a grandfather:/Sired two generations/of look-alike pains."Not a single poem in this collection is superfluous. Each leads to the next and weaves a tapestry of images. Poetry in general, when it is really good, has the ability to touch you on a level you did not think possible. "If we don't remain together, we won't remain at all. Let alone life." It expresses thoughts and feelings in words you could not find. "Eternity is a perfect/Form of mutual loneliness." It introduces new angles to old ideas or contributes poignancy to unconsidered thoughts. Sometimes, the experience of the poet is foreign to the reader, but the reader can still feel on some level the feeling the poet felt. Amichai is among my favorite poets for his ability to create such a rich and sudden injection of reaction in me.I find it unfortunate that I don't read Hebrew and have to read Amichai's poetry in the "lie of translation". I suspect a great deal is lost, but I still cannot fault what access I do have to these poems. I cannot do much justice to Amichai with descriptive words. You will have to read it yourself. I know poetry is not necessarily everyone's favorite thing, but I think it is an acquired taste. "And we didn't know then that remnants of happiness/ Are like remnants of every collapse/ That you have to clear away to start anew."
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