Witch's Island and Other Poems
by
Book Details
About the Book
PETER HARGITAI’s work, both in scope and in style, remains well outside the pale of current poetic fashion including the McPoems of MFA mills and the lip- tongue- ear literature of hiphop. Influenced by the great Hungarian poet Attila József’s obsession with the eternal mother as a metaphor for all human longing, Hargitai probes the nature of spiritual exile on terms that are neither Freudian nor Jungian, American, or Hungarian, but on terms that are uniquely personal and movingly human.
“If traditional confessional poetry, now considered classical, had its halcyon days in the work of Roethke, Lowell, and Plath, it can be said to have reached a new, ethnically charged peak in the work of Peter Hargitai.”
Pembroke Magazine
“Peter Hargitai is a remarkable versatile and humanely touching poet with a truly distinctive style and voice. These deeply probing intellectual poems exhibit an impressive range and vivacity of genres."
Laurence Lieberman Poetry Editor University of Illinois PressAbout the Author
Peter Hargitai has taught English, rhetoric, and literature for four decades. As a poet, novelist, and translator, he has garnered numerous literary awards including the Landon Translation Award from the Academy of American Poets, the Fust Milan Award from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the Pro Cultura Hungarica Medal and the 2009 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Poetry Prize. His translation of Attila József is listed in Harold Bloom’s The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages.