Allen Curnow Collected Poems
By (Author) Elizabeth Caffin
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
18th September 2017
New Zealand
Hardback
388
Width 170mm, Height 240mm
This is the definitive collection of work by New Zealands most distinguished poet. Throughout his lifetime, Allen Curnow revised, selected and collected his poetry in various ways. For the first time, this collection brings together all of the poems that Curnow collected in his lifetime grouped in their original volumes. The notes reproduce Curnows comments on individual poems and include relevant editorial guidance. Allen Curnow (19112001) was at the time of his death regarded as one of the greatest of all poets writing in English. For seventy years, from Valley of Decision (1933) to The Bells of Saint Babels (2001), Curnows poetry was always on the move from his early approaches to New Zealand identity and myth to later work concerned with the philosophical encounter between word and world. Curnow also played a major role in New Zealand life as editor, critic, commentator and anthologist, as well as a much-loved writer of light verse under the penname of Whim Wham. In his later years he acquired an impressive international reputation, winning the Commonwealth Prize for Poetry and the Queens Gold Medal for Poetry.
Terry Sturm CBE was a professor of literature at the University of Auckland for many years, editor of The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English (1990, 1998), author of An Unsettled Spirit: The Life and Frontier Fiction of Edith Lyttleton (AUP, 2003), and editor of a selection of Curnows verse written under his pseudonym Whim Wham, Whim Whams New Zealand: The Best of Whim Wham 1937-1988 (Random House, 2005). Elizabeth Caffin was Allen Curnows publisher and director of Auckland University Press for two decades.