Skip to main content
book cover for Poet in the New World

Poet in the New World

Poems, 1946–1953

Narrated by Robert Hass

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.

Buy on Audible Buy on Kobo Buy on Libro.fm
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.

Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app


1

To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.

2

Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.

Pub Date Feb 04 2025 | Archive Date Apr 01 2025


Description

A new collection of work from Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz that includes previously untranslated poems written during his time in Washington, D.C., and his years in Europe before and after.

One of the most revered poets of the twentieth century, Czeslaw Milosz, a defining voice in Polish literature, famously bore witness to its violence in his native Poland and in the war’s aftermath from exile in Europe and the United States. Immediately after the war, he lived in Washington, D.C., working as a diplomatic official, having left behind an old world stained by bloodshed and still in the throes of ideological conflict as he sought to find his bearings in a new world.

Poet in the New World gathers the poems written during these years—for the first time in English translation—and is contextualized by the poetry that came directly before and after, from poems written in Warsaw in 1945, shortly before he departed for the United States, to others written in Europe from 1951 to 1953, after his significant time away. Capturing Milosz at his existential and stylistic best, this collection of post-war poetry is attuned to the necessity of imagination and the duty of language and is filled with wonder and skepticism. Milosz grapples with the extraordinary violence he had witnessed in Warsaw and the strange postwar United States he has inhabited, all while pondering the enduring fate of his beloved Poland. In the poem “Warsaw,” the poet asks, “How can I live in this country/Where the foot knocks against/the unburied bones of kin?”

Equal parts affecting and illuminating, Poet in the New World is an essential addition to the Milosz canon, in a beautifully rendered work of poetry in translation by Robert Hass and David Frick, that reverberates with the questions of histories past, present, and future.

What does it mean to be a poet caught between the ruins of an old world and the strange comforts of a new one?

  • Poetry of Exile: Explores Milosz’s complex feelings as a Polish diplomat in Washington, D.C., caught between a homeland ravaged by war and an America he struggles to understand.
  • A Major Poetic Translation: For the first time in English, these poems capture a crucial period of transition, rendered by the renowned poet Robert Hass and scholar David Frick.
  • The Complete Milosz Canon: Contextualized with poems written immediately before his departure and after his return to Europe, this collection fills a vital gap in the Nobel laureate’s formidable body of work.

A new collection of work from Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz that includes previously untranslated poems written during his time in Washington, D.C., and his years in Europe before and after.

One of...


Available Editions

EDITION Audiobook, Unabridged
ISBN 9780063423022
PRICE $17.99 (USD)

Available on NetGalley

NetGalley Shelf App (AUDIO)

Average rating from 2 members