Bradley is an intensely philosophical and formal poet. Mr. Bradley reminds me of the English metaphysical poets
Bradley is an intensely philosophical and formal poet. Thus, an ideal city is described as "a place most unlike those gray convolutions,/ Those tortuous inclinations, mechanisms of defense/ The medieval warren in which it had been imagined. Bradley reminds me of the English metaphysical poets. I gave one to a friend who lives in Connecticut and who got in touch with Bradley and had some fun conversations with him. I wish he would publish a few more books.
I'm not sure a book exactly like this has ever been attempted before. For one thing, the reader gets about 30 prompts to a web page to show the readers a particular painting or a scientist in the world of certain esoteric sciences.
May 08, 2012 Melinda rated it it was amazing. Ian is a complicated guy: He is in love with the extraordinarily beautiful and smart Angela, is studying Near Death Experiences and trying to rescue his beloved parents from Hell after they saved his life when they were in a car accident together. I'm not sure a book exactly like this has ever been attempted before.
Of the Knowledge of Good and Evil Knopf (1991). The Fire Fetched Down Knopf (1996).
The result is a book that illuminates the recesses between artists, audiences, public taste, and the history of American publication. 1985 Yale Younger Poets Series, selected by James Merrill. The Witter Bynner Prize from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. The Peter I. B. Lavan Award from the Academy of American Poets. Of the Knowledge of Good and Evil Knopf (1991). ISBN 978-0-679-44620-0.
The tree of the knowledge of good and evil is one of two specific trees in the story of the Garden of Eden in Genesis 2–3, along with the tree of life. Genesis 2 narrates that Yahweh places the first man and woman in a garden with trees of whose fruits they may eat, but forbids them to eat from "the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
Of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. New York: Knopf, 1991. The Fire Fetched Down.
Bradley was born in Roslyn, New York. He attended the Hill School, Yale University, and the University of Virginia. The result is a book that illuminates the recesses between artists, audiences, public taste, and the history of American publication. 1985 Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition, selected by James Merrill. Of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. He has published nine books of poems, including The Living Fire: New and Selected Poems (2010), which brings together thirty-five years of work, and Gabriel: A Poem (2014), a book-length elegy for his son that The New Yorker called "a masterpiece of sorrow. He has also published five prose books about poetry.
George Bradley's biography and life story. Yale University Press. 1986 Of the Knowledge of Good and Evil Knopf (1991) The Fire Fetched Down Knopf (1996) Some Assembly Required. 2001 A Few of Her Secrets. Anthologies James Tate, David Lehman, ed. (1997). The Best American Poetry 1997. Simon and Schuster Billy Collins, ed.
Author of Some assembly required, The Fire Fetched Down, Problem Solving With Creative Mathematics, Fire Fetched Down Signed, A few of her secrets, Of the knowledge of good .
Author of Some assembly required, The Fire Fetched Down, Problem Solving With Creative Mathematics, Fire Fetched Down Signed, A few of her secrets, Of the knowledge of good and evil, The Yale younger poets anthology, The Yale younger poets anthology.
George Bradley's Yale Younger Poets Anthology is several books-in-one; its Introduction is a witty and thoroughly .
George Bradley's Yale Younger Poets Anthology is several books-in-one; its Introduction is a witty and thoroughly informed contribution to literary history, while its headnotes to the individual poets and wise selections of poems make a critical statement of some power. With superb tact, Bradley also sketches an implicit self-portrait of one of the rare, authentic poets of his own generation offers an overview of the famous Yale Younger Poets series from its inception in 1919 to the present, including often fascinating selections from every winner of the prize and lucid, detailed background discussions of all twelve series judges. Sandra M. Gilbert, Poetry.