EBOOK

About
C. K. Williams (1936—2015), one of the most treasured American poets of the past century, was also one of the most surprising. From poem to poem, his voice would shift in register and style, yet a certain essence would remain: his conviction, his ethic, and his burning gaze.
“Invisible Mending: The Best of C. K. Williams” is the essential collection of the great poet's work. Selected by his family and friends and with an introduction by the award-winning poet Alan Shapiro, this book charts Williams's path from gifted young poet to his status as one of the most consequential poets of his, or any, generation. This collection distills the prolific poet's body of work into one indispensable volume, through which one can trace the shifts and innovations that Williams's work bore on American poetry.
“Invisible Mending: The Best of C. K. Williams” is the essential collection of the great poet's work. Selected by his family and friends and with an introduction by the award-winning poet Alan Shapiro, this book charts Williams's path from gifted young poet to his status as one of the most consequential poets of his, or any, generation. This collection distills the prolific poet's body of work into one indispensable volume, through which one can trace the shifts and innovations that Williams's work bore on American poetry.
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Reviews
"This remarkable volume gathers essential work from Williams (1936-2015; Falling Ill), highlighting his ranging thought and moral intensity as well as his transformations as a poet . . . Sensitive and humane, this dazzles."
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"C.K. Williams is a masterful straight-speaker, and throughout his body of work the reader cannot help but feel his dynamic mind and astute irony. This collection of selected poems, Invisible Mending, introduced by Alan Shapiro, captures the reach and spirit of this one-of-kind American voice. And, in his longish, Whitman-like lines, C.K. is a witness who addresses head-on what glorifies and ails
Yusef Komunyakaa, author of Everyday Mojo Songs of Earth
"Of the poets who have answered the call of Walt Whitman, C. K. Williams came closest to doing something beyond style with the American tongue Whitman took for his own . . . [H]is most exquisite pieces remain . . . hypnotic, estranged from the poetry of the day"
William Logan, The New Criterion