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Books : Literature & Fiction : Authors, A-Z : ( C ) : Clampitt, Amy
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Reflecting on her poetic predecessors and contemporaries, Amy Clampitt reveals the many connections in their craft
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Distinguished poet Amy Clampitt selects some of the finest works by one of England's most passionate authors, John Donne, in a collection that includes "The Bait," "To His Mistress Going to Bed," "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," "Hymn to God my God, in my Sickness," and many others. Reprint.
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A final collection of poems considers the splendors and nightmares of the world and focuses and such topics as Maine fog, a bayou afternoon, and the waning old Greenwich Village crowd. Reprint.
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Amy Clampitt lived in Manhattan for almost forty years before she found success at the age of sixty-three with the publication of The Kingfisher (1983). Her letters from 1950 until her death in 1994 are a testimony to her fiercely independent spirit and her quest for various kinds of truth-religious, spiritual, political, and artistic. The letters detail her life in Manhattan, a religious conversion (and then a gradual religious disillusionment), as well as her ongoing efforts to find a place for herself in the world of literature
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