Cargando…

The waltz he was born for : an introduction to the writing of Walt McDonald /

Texas Poet Laureate Walt McDonald has published more than eighteen volumes of award-winning poetry. A poet of the landscape, of war and flying, of people just working hard, McDonald is master of the vital image and sound. And he is a poet whose work invites writers such as these gathered here to fin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Hudgins, Andrew, Whittington, Janice
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Lubbock : Texas Tech University Press, ©2002.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Transcending hardscrabble : the evolving vision of Walt McDonald / Andrew Hudgins
  • All his hands can do : the poetry of Walt McDonald / Henry Taylor
  • Domestic tranquility and national defense : the personal history of Walt McDonald / Jerry Bradley
  • Reclaiming the homefront : Walt McDonald's peacekeeping soldiers / Barbara Rodman
  • McDonald's a band of brothers : a plea for a deeper understanding / Clay Reynolds
  • Walt McDonald's beautiful wasteland / Michael Hobbs
  • Unignored plunder : the Texas poems of Walt McDonald / Dave Oliphant
  • An uneasy truce : wildness and domesticity in the poems of Walt McDonald / April Lindner
  • Walt McDonald, poet of the Southwest / Nick Norwood
  • Poetry to trespass for / Dan Flores
  • Walt McDonald's poetry : images of man's acceptance of his place in time / Laverne Popelka
  • Angel and mirage : concerns of imagination in Walt McDonald and Wallace Stevens / William Wenthe
  • How to spin rightly : Walt McDonald's vision of the artist / Janice Whittington
  • Dark pearls : an introduction to Walter McDonald's poetic journey of faith / Darryl Tippens
  • Intimations of higher matters : anagogical closure in Walter McDonald's Burning the fence / William Jolliff
  • Perseverance in Walter McDonald's poetry / Chris Willerton
  • Forms of incarnation in the recent poetry of Walter McDonald / Helen Maxson
  • An interview with Walt McDonald, april 2000 / Phyllis Bridges.