by Kiwao Nomura
translated by Kyoko Yoshida and Forrest Gander
Omnidawn, 2011
Paper: 978-1-890650-53-7
Library of Congress Classification PL857.O46A2 2011
Dewey Decimal Classification 895.615

ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THIS BOOK
If you think of haiku when you think of Japanese poetry, this book will be a huge surprise. The strange and wild poems of Kiwao Nomura deal with sex and loss and memory by making unpredictable leaps of association. Imagine Fugazi singing philosophy and you get close. Inspired by shamanism, Kiwao Nomura sounds like nothing you’ve ever heard before and like something you want to hear over and over. He is one of the two or three of the most influential living Japanese poets, and his work will be as stunningly original and compelling to contemporary Americans as haiku was to the late Victorians. Anyone interested in making contact with Japanese culture will want to read Spectacle & Pigsty.

See other books on: Asian | Gander, Forrest | Poetry | Spectacle
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