Description: The former Poet Laureate of Oregon delivers a definitive collection of poems that reveal his affinity for Native Americans, concern about the dangers of technology, and the love of nature.
Review Quotes:
"Stafford's quiet presence in the landscape of American poetry in my lifetime has been a kind of continuing reassurance whose values always seemed to me beyond question. Even those of us who have read him for years are almost certain to be surprised now, I think, and repeatedly surprised, at the range and freshness of his gift, its responsiveness to the small, the plain, the apparently usual. I think his work as a whole will go on surprising us, growing as we recognize it, bearing witness in plain language to the holiness of the heart's affections which he seemed never to doubt. [This book is] a treasure that he has left us." --W.S. Merwin
"[Stafford] left behind a body of work that represents some of the finest poetry written during the second half of [the twentieth] century . . . The poems, which reveal many of Stafford's themes--his affinity for Native Americans, love of nature, protest of war, and concern about the dangers of technology--are subtle and powerful in tone, but imagery is paramount . . . Highly recommended." --Library Journal "This is a collection to savor and admire. The many contributors to this extraordinary endeavor have completed a task worthy of this much-loved poet." --Harvard Review