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Poems in Franklin, TN
Current price: $25.00

Barnes and Noble
Poems in Franklin, TN
Current price: $25.00
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Comprised of ironic, unsentimental poems on subjects of everyday life,
Poems
is the 57th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets.
The first of seven books of poetry published during Dugan’s lifetime,
examines the unusual details of everyday subjects, including waterfalls, house plants, love, war, religion, and the Irish. Explorations inevitably arouse feelings of alienation, defeat, despair, and disenchantment. The poems are also marked by casual humor, mockery, and satire, which produce some of its strongest effects. The tone and style on display in this first book characterize all of Dugan’s subsequent poetry.
Poems
is the 57th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets.
The first of seven books of poetry published during Dugan’s lifetime,
examines the unusual details of everyday subjects, including waterfalls, house plants, love, war, religion, and the Irish. Explorations inevitably arouse feelings of alienation, defeat, despair, and disenchantment. The poems are also marked by casual humor, mockery, and satire, which produce some of its strongest effects. The tone and style on display in this first book characterize all of Dugan’s subsequent poetry.
Comprised of ironic, unsentimental poems on subjects of everyday life,
Poems
is the 57th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets.
The first of seven books of poetry published during Dugan’s lifetime,
examines the unusual details of everyday subjects, including waterfalls, house plants, love, war, religion, and the Irish. Explorations inevitably arouse feelings of alienation, defeat, despair, and disenchantment. The poems are also marked by casual humor, mockery, and satire, which produce some of its strongest effects. The tone and style on display in this first book characterize all of Dugan’s subsequent poetry.
Poems
is the 57th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets.
The first of seven books of poetry published during Dugan’s lifetime,
examines the unusual details of everyday subjects, including waterfalls, house plants, love, war, religion, and the Irish. Explorations inevitably arouse feelings of alienation, defeat, despair, and disenchantment. The poems are also marked by casual humor, mockery, and satire, which produce some of its strongest effects. The tone and style on display in this first book characterize all of Dugan’s subsequent poetry.