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AUTHORS
Authors A to C
Abiz, Alireza
Adams, Seren
Adcock, Juana
Adès, Timothy
Aguilar, Luis Miguel
Akhmatova, Anna
Akhtar, Sascha Aurora
Alcalá, Rosa
Allen, Tim
Anderson, Martin
Angwin, Roselle
Anonymous
Apollinaire, Guillaume
Arvelo Torrealba, Alberto
Ashton, Kate
Atkins, Marc
Ayres, Michael
Bachman, Merle Lyn
Back, Rachel Tzvia
Bagoo, Andre
Balmer, Josephine
Baranda, María
Barnas, Maria
Barone, Dennis
Bastelaere, Dirk van
Baxt, Ellen
Beake, Fred
Beck, Art
Becker, Jürgen
Bécquer, Gustavo Adolfo
Berengarten, Richard
Bell, James
Berk, Ilhan
Birchard, Guy
Black, Linda
Blank, Debby Jo
Bletsoe, Elisabeth
Blonstein, Anne
Bolton, Ken
Booth, Martin
Boyle, Peter
Bradshaw, Joseph
Bramness, Hanne
Breen, Daragh
Brewerton, Andrew
Brinton, Ian
Brown, Andy
Brown, Pam
Browning, Robert
Brownsword, Chris
Buckheit, Melissa
Bugan, Carmen
Burn, Sean
Caddy, David
Čaks, Aleksandrs
Caleshu, Anthony
Camões, Luis Vaz de
Capildeo, Vahni
Carew, Thomas
Cârneci, Magda
Carpenter, J.R.
Castaño, Yolanda
Castro, Rosalia de
Cavafy, C.P.
Cave, Sarah
Cebreiro, Maria do
Cebrián, Mercedes
Celestine, Alfred
Chanda, Avik
Chaudhuri, Amit
Chávez, Jorge Humberto
cheek, cris
Chernoff, Maxine
Chudleigh, Lady Mary
Cisneros, Antonio
Clariond, Jeannette
Clark, Tom
Clarke, Adrian
Clarkson, Geraldine
Claudel, Paul
Clement, Jennifer
Coghill, Mary
Cole, Peter
Coleridge, Mary
Connolly, Susan
Copeland, Brooklyn
Corcoran, Kelvin
Corless-Smith, Martin
Corlett, Rosemarie
Corman, Cid
Critchley, Emily
Cronin, M.T.C.
Cross, Elsa
Crowe Serrano, Anamaria
Crowther, Claire
Crozier, Andrew
Crucefix, Martyn
Cuadra, Pablo Antonio
Authors D to G
Daniels, Chris
Daly, Catherine
Davidson, Ian
Davidson, Lynn
De Marchi, Pietro
de Rokha, Pablo
de Rokha, Winétt
Debney, Patricia
Deeny Morales, Anna
Deming, Richard
Dent, Peter
Dentz, Shira
Dickey, Laressa
Dickinson, Mark
Diego, Gerardo
Doce, Jordi
Docherty, Tom
Doerr, Joe
Donahue, Joseph
Donis, Giacomo
Donne, John
Dooley, Terence
Dorn, Edward
Draesner, Ulrike
Du Fu
Duffy, Nikolai
Duggan, Laurie
Duncan, Andrew
Dyckman, Susanne
Echavarren, Roberto
Economou, George
Edwards, Ken
Elenkova, Tsvetanka
Ely, Steve
Enslin, Theodore
Eriksson, Helena
Espmark, Kjell
Etter, Carrie
Evans Bauer, Amy
Evans, Paul
Farrell, Patricia
Faust, Clive
Fellows, Gerrie
Ferencuhová, Maria
Finch, Peter
Fine, Aidan
Finkelstein, Norman
Finlay, Alec
Finlayson, Keri
Firestone, Jennifer
Fisher, Allen
Fisher, Roy
Forrest-Thomson, Veronica
Fowler, S.J.
France de Bravo, Brandel
Frank, Edwin
Frazer, Tony
Freind, Bill
Frew, Hazel
Fryatt, Kit
Fulcher, Tamara
Fulton Macpherson, Robin
Furniss, Damian
Futoransky, Luisa
Gaffield, Nancy
Galbraith, Iain
Gander, Forrest
Gardner, Angela
Gaynor, Fergal
Gearen, Cameron
Georges, Richard
Gervitz, Gloria
Gianuzzi, Valentino
Glazova, Anna
Goar, Jim
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Goldhagen, Juergen
Goodby, John
Goodland, Giles
Goodwin, Mark
Gorrick, Anne
Gray, Thomas
Green, Paul A.
Greenslade, David
Gromadzki, Derek
Grossman, Hagit
Grubb, David H. W.
Guess, Carol
Guest, Harry
Guilar, Liam
Gutkind, Christopher
Authors H to K
Hadari, Atar
Hadbawnik, David
Hajdari, Gezim
Hakim, Khaled
Hales, Catherine
Hall, John
Halsey, Alan
Hamilton, Lucy
Hampson, Robert
Harrison, Lesley
Harrison, Martin
Harwood, Lee
Haslam, Michael
Hawkins, Ralph
Hawley, Anthony
Hedeen, Kathleen M.
Heller, Michael
Herbert, W.N.
Herd, David
Herrera, Fernando de
Herrick, Robert
Hertmans, Stefan
Hill, Barry
Hjelmgaard, Lynne
Ho, Tammy Lai-Ming
Hoffman, Eric
Holman, Paul
Holmes, Janet
Holton, Brian
Homan, Brandi
Hooker, Jeremy
Hoover, Paul
Hopkins, Gerard Manley
Huchel, Peter
Hughes, Peter
Huidobro, Vicente
Hummelt, Norbert
Infante, Judith
Ingelmo, Luis
Islam, Nazifa
Jackson, W. D
Jacob, Max
Jaeger, Peter
Jaffin, David
James, John
Jana, Juli
Janssen, Sasja
Johnson, David Hackbridge
Johnson, Kent
Jope, Norman
Jordan, Andrew
Joyce, Trevor
Juhász, Ferenc
Kandinsky, Vasily
Kasid, Abdulkareem
Kavounas, Alice
Kelder, Cralan
Kennedy, Andrew Karpati
Kennedy, David
Kent, Aaron
Khursheed, Bridget
Kling, Thomas
Knight, Kenny
Kolleritsch, Alfred
Kolmar, Gertrud
Kotowicz, Zbigniew
Kozer, José
Kuhl, Nancy
Kuhn, Philip
Authors L to N
Land-Reeves, Charles
Langley, R.F.
Larkin, Maryrose
Larkin, Peter
Law, Sarah
Lawrence, D.H.
Leader, Mary
Leahy, Anna
Lehóczky, Ágnes
Lessing, Karin
Levy, John
Lew, Emma
Lewis, Erica
Lightman, Ira
Litvinova, Natalia
Livshits, Benedikt
Lloyd, David
Locke, A.J.
Loose, Gerry
López Colomé, Pura
López Velarde, Ramón
Lopez, Helen
Lopez, Tony
Lovelace, Richard
Lowenstein, Tom
Loydell, Rupert M
Machado, Antonio
Macneacail, Aonghas
MacSweeney, Barry
Magi, Jill
Mai Cheng
Maillard, Phil
Mallarmé, Stéphane
Mandelstam, Osip
Manrique, Jorge
Marrin, Aubrie
Marriott, D.S.
Marsh, Simon
Martial
Martin, Camille
Martín Gijón, Mario
Massey, Joseph
Mateer, John
Matsumoto, Lila
Matthias, John
Mayer, So
McAlpine, Erica
McIlroy, Ruth
McKay, Becka Mara
Meadows, Deborah
Mehrotra, Arvind Krishna
Mellors, Anthony
Mendelssohn, Anna
Mendiola, Victor Manuel
Messo, George
Middleton, Christopher
Milán, Eduardo
Milbank, John
Militello, Jennifer
Miller, Alice
Miller, David
Mills, Billy
Minor, William
Mishol, Agi
Moga, Eduardo
Monk, Geraldine
Montague, John
Moore, Helen
Moritz, Alfred
Moure, Erin
Muckle, John
Muñoz Rojas, José Antonio
Naylor, Paul
Nerval, Gérard de
Nikolaou, Paschalis
Noon, Alistair
Núñez, Aníbal
Authors 0 to S
O'Brien, Geoffrey
O'Mahony, Niamh
O'Toole, Eliza
Odelius, Kristy
Oliver, Douglas
Olson, Toby
Orozco, Gaspar
Oswald, Peter
Overall, Sonia
Owens, Richard
Owens, Rochelle
Özmen, Gonca
Palacios, Manuela
Papageorgiou, Fani
Parker, Richard
Parmar, Sandeep
Paterson, Alasdair
Pato, Chus
Pearson, Ted
Peck, John
Peet, Christian
Perchik, Simon
Pérez, Omar
Perril, Simon
Pessoa, Fernando
Peyrou, Mariano
Phillips, John
Philpott, Peter
Pizarnik, Alejandra
Poplavsky, Boris
Presley, Frances
Prynne, J.H.
Rakusa, Ilma
Randell, Elaine
Ransford, Tessa
Reckin, Anna
Redgrove, Peter
Reed, Jeremy
Rehm, Pam
Reyes, Alfonso
Riley, John
Riley, Peter
Rilke, Rainer Maria
Rinck, Monika
Rivas, Manuel
Rivera, Eléna
Robinson, Peter
Robles, Jaime
Rodríguez, Claudio
Rodríguez Núñez, Víctor
Rodney, Janet
Roffé, Mercedes
Ronen, Diti
Rose, Gillian
Rosen, Claus von
Rosenberg, David
Roy, Sumana
Rudolf, Anthony
Rushmer, David
Russo, Linda
Ryan, Gig
Saloman, Wendy
Samoilovich, Daniel
Sampaolesi, Mario
Sampson, Julie
Sampson, Sam
Samuels, Lisa
Sánchez Robayna, Andrés
Sashe, Alexandra
Saunders, Lesley
Saxton, Robert
Scroggins, Mark
Scully, Maurice
Seed, Ian
Seed, John
Seiler, Lutz
Selby, Spencer
Selerie, Gavin
Semmens, Aidan
Sergeant, David
Sheerman, Lucy
Shepherdson, Nathan
Sheppard, Robert
Shuttle, Penelope
Silliman, Ron
Simms, Colin
Skoulding, Zoë
Smith, Michael
Smith, Pete
Smith, Simon
Sneeden, Brian
Snyder, Tupa
Sobin, Gustaf
Solà, Irene
Sousa, Luís Amorim de
Speaker, Mary Austin
Spence, Steve
Squires, Geoffrey
Stasiak, M.
Steensen, Sasha
Stone, Will
Stonecipher, Donna
Strang, Em
Strode, William
Studzinska, Agnieszka
Suckling, Sir John
Sutherland, Janet
Sutherland-Smith, James
Swensen, Cole
Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Authors T to Z
Tabios, Eileen
Tal, Hadassa
Tarlo, Harriet
Tarn, Nathaniel
Taylor, Andrew
Taylor, Mervyn
Teitelboim, Volodia
Thompson, Jon
Thompson, Luke
Thompson, Nathan
Thorson, Maureen
Thrilling, Isobel
Thurston, Scott
Torrance, Chris
Treadwell, Elizabeth
Trivedi, Amish
Troup, Siriol
Tsvetaeva, Marina
Turnbull, Gael
Ujevic, Tin
Vaage, Lars Amund
Vaiciunaite, Judita
Vallejo, César
van Bastelaere, Dirk
Vangelisti, Paul
Vas Dias, Robert
Veli, Orhan
Villacañas, Juan Antonio
Virgil
Viti, Christina
Vitkauskas, Lina ramona
Vogel, Molly
Volkow, Veronica
Walker, Laura
Wall, Alan
Walsh, Catherine
Watson, Craig
Watts, Carol
Watts, Stephen
Wearne, Alan
Wehle, Ellen
Weinberger, Eliot
Weiss, Mark
Welch, John
Wevill, David
Wheale, Nigel
White, Petra
Whyte, Christopher
Wiggins, Ruth
Wigman, Menno
Wilkinson, John
Wilkinson, Judith
Williams, JL
Winkler, Ron
Wu, Duncan
Wyatt, Sir Thomas
Yang Lian
Young, Augustus
Zand, Michael
MAGAZINE
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César Vallejo is one the greatest poets of the twentieth century, his monument being the book-length sequence Trilce — one of only two collections of his poetry published during his lifetime, the other being Los heraldos negros (The Black Heralds). After Trilce Vallejo wrote stories, essays, a novel, and several plays, but did not collect any of his subsequent poems for book publication. Since his death, these poems have usually been referred to as the Poemas humanos after the title of one of the posthumous volumes.

The Shearsman edition of his poetry is the most complete one available in English, is fully bilingual, and is based on the very latest scholarship. Each edition comes with an introduction, and comprehensive notes for the English-speaking reader.

The translations are by the Irish poet, and award-winning translator, Michael Smith, and the Peruvian scholar Valentino Gianuzzi.

Biography

In March 1892, César Vallejo was born in Santiago de Chuco, a small town in the Andean sierra of northern Peru. He died in Paris in April 1938.

Increasingly, despite the difficulty of his poetry as compared, for example, with the popular accessibility of the work of the Chilean Nobel prize-winner, Pablo Neruda, this strange Peruvian is now being recognised as the major voice in 20th century Latin-American poetry. Vallejo's background was provincial middle-class, although this should not be taken to mean too much, granted the context of Peru at that time. Even though he did not know Quechua, the Andean world he grew up in is ever-present in his work, visible even in his European writings. His father, Francisco, earned a fairly decent living as a notary and local official. Nonetheless, with a large family to support, of whom César was the youngest, Francisco's earnings would not have gone too far, and money in the Vallejo household was often scarce. Hence, César's ambition to acquire a university degree was fulfilled only after a couple of failed attempts.

It was during one of these financially induced failures (1911–1912), when he had to abandon his university studies and work, first as a tutor to the children of a hacendado on an estate near Huánuco, and later as an assistant cashier on a sugar plantation, that Vallejo witnessed, unforgettably, the exploitation and oppression of the mainly Indo-American workers.

Another disillusionment in Vallejo's early life occurred in July 1920, on his return to his hometown of Santiago de Chuco for the annual fiesta of the town's patron saint. There he found himself embroiled in a local feud, in the course of which a store was burned and a deputy killed. Although, it seems, that he was innocent of any complicity in the events—indeed, Vallejo was helping the Sub-prefect to write up the legal documents—Vallejo was somehow implicated, arrested and charged, and subsequently spent 112 days in prison in Trujillo. This whole experience had a deeply disturbing and long-lasting effect on Vallejo.

After a series of teaching jobs and work as a journalist, Vallejo left Peru for good in the middle of 1923. By that time, his deeply loved mother was dead and a passionate love affair had ended acrimoniously. Vallejo went to Paris. There, with little money, no contacts and no French, he somehow managed to eke out a living with journalism and some teaching. In time, of course, he made friends, and it was in Paris that he became politically radical. He studied Marxism and visited Russia three times in the 1930s to observe for himself the great Soviet experiment in social engineering. And he married a French girl, Georgette Philippart.

When the Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936, Vallejo passionately committed his time and energy to the Republican cause, writing propaganda and acting as a political instructor. When in Spain in 1937, he attended the International Congress of Anti-Fascist Writers. What he saw in Spain during these visits made him fearful for the fate of the Republic, but his fervour for the Republican cause increased rather than diminished. It was during these feverish times that Vallejo wrote most of his magnificent final poems, including the sequence Spain, let this cup pass from me.

In March 1938 Vallejo fell gravely ill, and died in a Paris hospital on the 15th of April. The doctors gave as the cause of his death intestinal infection. Vallejo's wife believed that it was the recurrence of the malaria that had struck him in his youth. On his death-bed, he dictated the following words to Georgette: 'Whatever may be the cause I have to defend before God, beyond death I have a defender: God.'

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