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Books published by publisher New Directions Publishing

  • Selected Poems

    Hilda Doolittle, Louis L. Martz

    eBook (New Directions, Sept. 17, 1988)
    "Like every major artist she challenges the reader's intellect and imagination."—Boston HeraldSelected Poems, the first selection to encompass the rich diversity of Hilda Doolittle's poetry, is both confirmation and celebration of her long-overdue inclusion in the modernist canon. With both the general reader and the student in mind, editor Louis L. Martz of Yale University (who also edited H.D.'s Collected Poems 1912-1944) has provided generous examples of H.D.'s work. From her early "Imagist" period, through the "lost" poems of the thirties where H.D. discovered her unique creative voice, to the great prophetic poems of the war years combined in Trilogy, the selection triumphantly concludes with portions of the late sequences Helen in Egypt and Hermetic Definition which focus on rebirth, reconciliation, and the reunion of the divided self.
  • The Prince and the hoodie

    Ebony Baskin

    eBook (New Direction Publishing LLC, Nov. 15, 2019)
    It's Prince Daniel's 9th birthday and there is a birthday party being held in his honor! The Prince receives a hoodie as a gift and is excited to wear it for his party, but his mother forbids him to. Why? What happens next, will change everything.
  • A Child's Christmas in Wales

    Dylan Thomas

    Paperback (New Directions, Oct. 25, 2016)
    The classic Christmas tale, with beautiful new illustrations This gem of lyric prose has enchanted both young and old for over half a century and is now a modern classic. Dylan Thomas (1914–1953), one of the greatest poets and storytellers of the twentieth century, captures a child’s-eye view and an adult’s fond memories of a magical time of presents, aunts and uncles, the frozen sea, and in the best of circumstances, newly fallen snow. Illustrations Throughout
  • The Promise: Book Eight of The Crafters' Club Series

    Louise Guy

    Paperback (Go Direct Publishing, Sept. 15, 2016)
    When cousin Sam defies the Crafters’ Club and sneaks into the Minecraft world alone, danger and unexpected chaos erupts. Set on a path of destruction, Sam must be stopped. Can the Crafters’ Club members keep their promise, stop Sam, and return to the real world before lives are lost?
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  • Eagle or Sun?: Poems

    Octavio Paz

    Paperback (New Directions, Jan. 17, 1976)
    “Octavio Paz is such a masterly presence in the dialogue of Latin American culture that it is easy to forget he is first and foremost a poet… in the polyphony of his voices the poetic one still rings loudest and clearest.” ― Roberto González Echevarría, New York Times Book Review The first major book of short prose poetry in Spanish, Eagle or Sun? (Aguila o Sol?) exerted an enormous influence on modern Latin American writing. Written in 1949-50 by Nobel Laureate Octavio Paz, Eagle or Sun? has as its mythopoeic "place" Mexico––a country caught up in its pre-Columbian past, the world of modern imperialism, and an apocalyptic future foretold by the Aztec calendar. Indeed, three personae of the book--the goddess Itzapaplotl, the prophet clerk, the poet––are manifestations of the threefold aspects of the land. Paz himself explains: "Eagle or Sun? is an exploration of Mexico, yes, but at the same time, and above all, it is an exploration of the relations between language and the poet, reality and language, the poet and history."
  • The Sacred Fount: Novel

    Henry James

    Paperback (New Directions, )
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  • A Far Rockaway of the Heart: Poems

    Lawrence Ferlinghetti

    Paperback (New Directions, Sept. 17, 1998)
    A Far Rockaway of the Heart is Ferlinghetti's sequel to A Coney Island of the Mind, written forty years later, in what the author has called "a poetry seizure" that lasted more than a year. A sequence of one hundred and one poems with recurrent themes, it includes various sections on love, art, music, history, and literature, as well as confrontations with major figures in the avant-garde before the arrival of the Beat generation. This edition now includes eighteen new poems from Ferlinghetti's "Pictures of the Gone World" which he publishes under his City Lights imprint. A self-styled "stand-up tragedian," Ferlinghetti has been called "the foremost chronicler of our times." If A Coney Island of the Mind was a generations vibrant eye-opener, A Far Rockaway of the Heart is a wake-up call for a new age.
  • Stephen Hero

    James Joyce, Theodore Spencer, John J. Slocum, Herbert Cahoon

    Paperback (New Directions, June 17, 1963)
    Stephen Hero is an early version of Joyce's A Portrait of the artist as a Young Man. It was originally rejected on grounds of indecency―so the story goes― by twenty publishers, whereupon Joyce threw the manuscript in the fire, but Mrs. Joyce rescued several unburnt portions. Although Joyce later entirely rewrote his novel of a young Irishman's rebellion against church, country and family, this early version is beautifully composed, the mood being more discursive and personal than in A Portrait. Many episodes later cut for the sake of good novelistic form, especially autobiographical episodes of sensual and family life, are fully presented, with some of the most vivacious dialogue Joyce ever wrote. Between them, the two versions give us a clear example of Joyce's literary development as well as many details of his life. This edition of Stephen Hero for the first time printed the five missing pages of the novel found among the papers in the Joyce Collection of the Cornell University Library. These pages fill gaps in the text as edited in 1956 by John J. Slocum and Herbert Cahoon and also extend the narrative. The main text of Stephen Hero is a connected, nearly self-contained passage of 383 manuscript pages which turned up soon after Joyce's death. It was first edited by Theodore Spencer and published by New Directions in 1944. In this edition, introductions by the successive editors discuss the literary and bibliographical aspects of this important early work by one of the great modern masters.
  • The Man Outside: Play & stories

    Wolfgang Borchert, David Porter

    Paperback (New Directions, Jan. 17, 1971)
    This collection of Borchert’s most important prose, translated by A. D. Porter with an Introduction by Stephen Spender, includes the complete text of the title play, as well as 39 stories and assorted pieces that comprise much of the author’s output during the two short, fever-ridden years in which he wrote, complemented by Kay Boyle’s appreciative Foreword. Wolfgang Borchert died in 1947––the twenty-six-year-old victim of a malaria-like fever contracted during World War II. This was just one day after the premier of his play, The Man Outside, which caused an immediate furor throughout his native Germany with its youthful, indeed revolutionary, vision against war and the dehumanizing effects of the police state. In a very real sense, Borchert was both the moral and physical victim of the Third Reich and the Nazi war machine. As a Wehrmacht conscript, he twice served on the Russian front, where he was wounded, and twice was imprisoned for his outspokenness. His voice speaks plainly and powerfully from out of the war’s carnage all the more poignantly for its being cut short at so young an age.
  • Spirit: Book Five of The Crafters' Club Series

    Louise Guy

    Paperback (Go Direct Publishing, Oct. 24, 2015)
    When the Crafters' Club members re-enter the Minecraft world, unforeseen problems destroy the thrill of locating the masked hero. Frightening cave explorations, battles with mobs, and an intense rescue mission are just some of the challenges they face. Can the Crafters' Club piece together the clues required to help the hero, free a prisoner, and survive another exhilarating adventure? Spirit is the fifth book in The Crafters' Club Series.
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  • Under Milk Wood: A Play for Voices

    Dylan Thomas

    Paperback (New Directions, Jan. 17, 1954)
    Completed just before his death in 1953, this work gives the fullest expression to Thomas' sense of the magnificent flavor and variety of life. A moving and hilarious account of a spring day in a small Welsh coastal town, Under Milk Wood is "lyrical, impassioned and funny, an Our Town given universality" (The New Statesman and Nation).
  • The Flowers of Evil

    C BAUDELAIRE

    (New Directions Publishing, Oct. 6, 1989)
    This bold new translation with facing French text restores once banned poems to their original places and reveals the full richness and variety of the collection. This book is intended for general readers interested in Baudelaire, French poetry and 19th-century French culture. Students of Baudelaire, French literature.