Paradise (Selected Poems)
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$18.95
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Product Details
Author:
Elena Shvarts, Michael Molnar, Catriona Kelly
Format:
Paperback
Publisher:
Bloodaxe Books (January 27, 1993)
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9781852242497
ISBN-10:
1852242493
File:
CONSORTIUM-Metadata_Only_Consortium_Customer_Group_Metadata_20260401130216-20260401.xml
Folder:
CONSORTIUM
List Price:
$18.95
Case Pack:
50
As low as:
$16.30
Publisher Identifier:
P-PER
Discount Code:
C
Country of Origin:
United Kingdom
Pub Discount:
60
Weight:
6.88oz
Imprint:
Bloodaxe Books
Overview
Elena Shvarts was the most outstanding Russian poet of her generation. 'Paradise' presents a dual language selection of her earlier poetry, and was a Poetry Book Society Recommended Translation.
Each new generation has to reinterpret St Petersburg, the place, the culture and its significance for Russia. Shvarts's haunted and demonic city is nearer Dostoyevsky's than Akhmatova's or Brodsky's. Her poetry draws backwoods Russian folklore with its cruelty, its religiosity and its quaint humour, into stone, cosmopolitan Petropolis. She brings out both the truth and the irony of Peter the Great's 'Paradise', celebrating and reviling her native city as a crossroads of dimensions, a reality riddled with mythical monuments and religious symbols. Despite the blood beneath its pavements, her St Petersburg also reveals traces of an angelic origin: 'Black rats nest over the shining river, in undergrowth, / They're permitted, welcome, nothing can ruin paradise on earth.'
Elena Shvarts stood outside all schools and movements in contemporary Russian poetry. She once famously described poetry as a 'dance without legs'. Her own poetry fits this description perfectly, a combination of deeply rhythmic and lyrical dance with the eccentric, perpetual movement of flight. The world of her poems is strange and grotesque; often the setting is urban, but unrecognisable - towns emptied of the everyday and peopled only by animals, spirits and strange elemental forces. A peculiar religious fervour illuminates these scenes, but her religion is unorthodox and highly individual. Shvarts’s poetry is visionary. Her vision takes her to the edge of language and rhythm, and she was one of the few contemporary poets brave enough to trust her vision absolutely.








