Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.Du kan altid afmelde dig igen.
An autobiography (in sonnets) by Michael Lally, Poetry honors include: NYC 92nd St. Y Poetry Center's 1972 Discovery Award for The South Orange Sonnets; two National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowships (1974 and 1981, the second attacked in Congress--the NEA accused of rewarding "pornography" for the poem "My Life"--in the first attempt to defund the NEA); 1997 PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award for "Excellence in Literature" for Cant Be Wrong; 2000 American Book Award for It's Not Nostalgia. In 2018 Another Way To Play: Poems 1960-2017 published. Also worked as script writer/"doctor," editor, columnist, book reviewer for The Village Voice and The Washington Post among other publications, and TV and film actor (as Michael David Lally). Writes the blog Lally's Alley on poetry, politics, movies, and other arts.--Lally, Michael
Michael Lally's never before published early work, The Village Sonnets, is something to behold. Within its pages, it contains the pathos of an era framed by a forbidden love story. Each of the "sonnets," that weave a linear narrative, are both poignant and beautiful, and they bring the reader back, page by page, to New York's Greenwich Village in the 1960s.
Helen of Troy has been called a whore, an adulteress and the destroyer of Troy, but questions remain. Did she fall in love with Paris? Was she abducted? Or did she willingly take part in the greatest political cover-up in history? Helen, The First Trojan Horse is about the most enigmatic and vilified woman in history. Helen, The First Trojan Horse explores the untold love story of the ages and provides a new and unique twist on the legend of the Trojan War. Read about this captivating beauty's extraordinary life from her early childhood through the Trojan War, and her horrible death at the hands of a friend. During the Age of Heroes there were many great men. Is it possible that Helen was not only the most beautiful woman who ever lived, she was also a Greek hero?
In compulsively honest poems and prose vignettes, Michael Lally unreels "glimpses of the private movie I have always starred in and now have flashes of wanting only to direct." This book is Lally's rough cut, the rawest scenes intact.
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.