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Author Updike, John.

Title Telephone poles and other poems / John Updike.

Publication Info. London : Deutsch, 1964.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Bristol, Main Library - Non Fiction  811 UP LT    Check Shelf
Description viii, 83 pages ; 21 cm
Summary "John Updike's poems are 'what poetry of this sort exactly ought to be - playful but elegant, sharp-eyed, witty' (Phyllis McGinley). some of them, in their humour and verbal jugglery, seem to qualify as 'light verse'; others slip gracefully across the border into the general realm of poetry. No clear cut distinction can be made between the two kinds, because it is less a matter of changes in the poet's mood than of his approach as a whole : he has the sure touch which enables a writer to be gay about grave themes without frivolity. He is consistently concerned with man's cosmic embarrassment, and the same vision illuminates the creatures of 'The High-Hearts' and 'Seagulls'. Science and religion, frequently and variously invoked, frame a single paradox, the paradox of the mundane ; and each poem, whether inspired by an antic headline or a landscape, rejoices in the elusive surface of created things."--Inside jacket flap.
Subject American poetry -- 20th century.
American poetry. (OCoLC)fst00807348
Chronological Term 1900-1999
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