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Poets of World War II
This anthology brings together 120 poems about World War II by 62 American poets,
chosen, as editor Harvey Shapiro writes in his introduction, "with a purpose: to
demonstrate that the American poets of this war produced a body of work that has
not yet been recognized for its clean and powerful eloquence." The poets are generally
unsentimental, ironic, and often astonished by what they have experienced, and their
insights still have the power to shake up our perceptions of that war and of war
in general. Most of the poets included in the volume served in the armed forces;
some -- Louis Simpson, Anthony Hecht, Kenneth Koch -- saw combat in the infantry,
while others -- James Dickey, Howard Nemerov, Richard Hugo, John Ciardi -- fought
in the air. Also included: poets who experienced the war as civilians, including
Robinson Jeffers, Marianne Moore, and Conrad Aiken; poems by conscientious objectors
and draft resisters, including William Stafford and Robert Lowell; and an elegy
by James Tate for his father, who was killed in action when Tate was an infant.
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Poetry of the world wars
Beginning with Thomas Hardy's "Men Who March Away" and concluding with Edwin Muir's
"The Child Dying," editor Foss presents a wide array of poems dealing with the two
world wars--and the years of disillusionment and healing that lay between.
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