RSS feed
Our main website …
-
Recent Posts
Categories
Independent bookshops
Presses we like
Sites we like
Skylighters
- Alan Richardson
- Basil & Martha King
- Chris Hill
- Daniel Staniforth
- Darryl Sloan
- Dee Sunshine
- Denise Sallee
- Diana Durham
- Elizabeth Guerra
- Gareth Knight
- Garry Craig Powell
- Gordon Strong
- Hugh Fox
- Iain Sinclair
- Janet Farrar
- John Matthews
- Kevan Manwaring
- Kirk Marshall
- Margaret Randall
- Martin Anderson
- Michael Howard
- Mike Harris
- Nick Farrell
- Patrick Harpur
- Peregrin Wildoak
- Pierre Joris
- Richard Froude
- Rikki Ducornet
- Rupert Copping
- Skylight Press
- Steve Blamires
- Wendy Berg
- William G. Gray
Tag Archives: R.W. Emerson
…And Egypt is the River by Michael S. Judge
Every so often a new voice disrupts the silence of sameness, evoking old ghosts and new phantoms with equal surety. …And Egypt Is the River is a collection of mystical prose-poems which the author describes as an attempt, based on … Continue reading →
Posted in American Literature, Literature, New authors, New books, Poetry
|
Tagged American literature, American Poetry, Ancient Egypt, Barth, Baudelaire, Brian Catling, Chinese Characters, Conrad, Dalkey Archive, Daniel Staniforth, Durrell, Egypt, Ernest Fenollosa, experimental literature, Ezra Pound, fiction, Heine, Holderlin, Hugh Kenner, iain sinclair, Kerouac, Kubla Khan, language, Linguistics, Literature, Lud Heat, Martin Anderson, Michael S. Judge, Misouri, mythology, Novalis, novel, poetry, Proem, prose poem, Prose poetry, Psychogeography, R.W. Emerson, Richard Froude, Rikki Ducornet, River, Skylight Press, Suicide Bridge
|
Leave a comment