Review:
"Heraclitus's fragments come to us like sparks off an anvil. . . . a luminous translation."
"A pellucid and informed translation." (Rita Dove, "The Washington Post")
"Breathtaking." (Richard Howard)
"Heraclitus''s fragments come to us like sparks off an anvil. . . . a luminous translation." (Nicholas Christopher)
"Breathtaking." (Richard Howard)
"A pellucid and informed translation." (Rita Dove, "The Washington Post")
"Heraclitus's fragments come to us like sparks off an anvil. . . . a luminous translation." (Nicholas Christopher)
"Breathtaking." (Richard Howard)
"A pellucid and informed translation." (Rita Dove, The Washington Post)
-Heraclitus's fragments come to us like sparks off an anvil. . . . a luminous translation.- (Nicholas Christopher)
-Breathtaking.- (Richard Howard)
-A pellucid and informed translation.- (Rita Dove, The Washington Post)
About the Author:
Brooks Haxton's poetry translations include Dances for Flute and Thunder: Poems from the Ancient Greek, which was nominated for a PEN translation award, and Victor Hugo's Selected Poems for Penguin Classics.
James Hillman has written more than twenty books, including The Force of Character, Re-Visioning Psychology (nominated for a Pulitzer in 1975), and The Soul's Code, which debuted at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list in 1996. He is an internationally renowned lecturer, teacher, and psychologist and has taught at Yale, Syracuse, and the University of Chicago. Born in New Jersey, Hillman now lives in Thompson, Connecticut.
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