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The Poets' Wives

Published
Apr 2014
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Rating
Pages
304

About This Book

What does it mean to be a poet's wife, his muse and lover, there for the heights of inspiration and the quotidian of the day-to-day, and oftentimes, too, the drudgery of being in a supporting role to "the great man"?

In this exquisite and sensitive new novel, David Park explores this complicated relationship through three luminous characters: Catherine Blake, wife of William Blake, nineteenth-century poet, painter, and engraver; Nadezhda Mandelstam, whose husband, Russian poet Osip Mandelstam, died in a transit camp en route to Siberia during Stalin's rule; and Lydia, the wife of a fictional contemporary Irish poet, who looks back on her husband's life in the days just after his death.

All three women deal with their husband's fame or notoriety, taking seriously their commitment to the men they married and to assisting with and preserving their work. And this despite infidelities, despite a single-mindedness at the expense of others, and despite hardship sometimes beyond comprehension.

Set across continents and centuries, under wildly different circumstances, these three women exist as a testament to love, to relationship despite the odds, and to art. Deeply insightful and beautifully wrought, "The Poets' Wives" is David Park at his best--a novelist who finds dignity and grace away from the spotlight, and who reminds us that art has the power to capture even the quietest of voices.

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Hardcover

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Hardcover
First Edition Apr 2014 Bloomsbury ISBN 1620405245
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eBook

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eBook
Apr 2014 Bloomsbury ISBN B00GN7FDR4
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eBook
Apr 2014 BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING ISBN 1620405261
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eBook
Apr 2014 Bloomsbury ISBN 1408846454
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Audio

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Audible
Apr 2014 Audible Studios for Bloomsbury ISBN B00JKOVWMC
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