
Summary
The Books of Catullus is the first full English translation to take the Roman poet at his word. Simon Smith’s versions are scholarly yet eccentric, mapping theme and register to contemporary equivalents (such as poem 16, which echoes Frank O’Hara). He divides Catullus’s complete verses into three books’, the form in which it is thought the poems were originally received.Smith gets the all-important rhythm of Catullus, whose meters, like all else about this poet, are deceptively complex’, writ…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781784105501 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1784105503 |
| Author: | Gaius Valerius Catullus, Simon Smith |
| Publisher: | Carcanet Press Ltd |
| Imprint: | Carcanet Classics |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 192 |
| Release Date: | 4 May 2018 |
| Weight: | 256g |
| Dimensions: | 216mm x 135mm x 15mm |
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Critics Review
`One might say the best translation is to have dozens of translations, and this is true for Catullus. He exists in every age because the work is timeless. With grace, elegance, skill, daring, and lyric beauty we find the work all over again in Smith’s magnificent new translation.’ - Peter Gizzi
About The Author
Gaius Valerius Catullus
Gaius Valerius Catullus was born in Verona, northern Italy in 84 BCE and died in Rome in 54 BCE. Little detail about his life survives. What is known is inferred from the poems or from indirect secondary sources. He was a contemporary of Cicero and Caesar, the latter a friend of his father, and an immediate antecedent of the Augustan poets Horace, Propertius and Ovid. His surviving poems are among the finest lyric verse of ancient Rome.; Simon Smith has published five collections of poetry. His third collection, Mercury (Salt), was long-listed for the Costa Prize in 2007. A selected poems, More Flowers Than You Could Possibly Carry, appeared from Shearsman in 2016, and his latest pamphlet is Salon Noir (Equipage, 2016). He is Reader in Creative Writing at the University of Kent, was a Hawthornden Writing Fellow in 2009, and a judge of the National Poetry Prize in 2004. He holds a PhD from the University of Glasgow.
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