Patrick Crotty is a Professor of Scottish and Irish Literature at
the University of Aberdeen and a regular reviewer for the Times
Literary Supplement. His translations from seventeenth-,
eighteenth- and twentieth-century Irish verse have appeared in many
anthologies. He edited Modern Irish Poetry- An Anthology and is
currently co-editing with Alan Riach the annotated three-volume
Complete Collected Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid.
Seamus Heaney was born in County Derry, Northern Ireland. Death of
a Naturalist, his first book, appeared in 1966 and since then he
has published poetry, criticism and translations which have
established him as one of the most acclaimed writers of our time.
In 1995 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
'This is the best available single-volume collection of Irish
poetry yet published.'
*Guardian*
'...excellently edited, exceedingly confident, historically
revealing and frequently surprising. The Penguin Book of Irish
Poetry is a feat. It is the largest anthology of Irish verse yet
spanning 1,500 years - and is more comprehensive than predecessors
in its inclusion of a large quantity of pre-Yeats material and
translations from languages other than Irish and Old English. A
third of the 200+ translations are being published for the first
time. It is, as Seamus Heaney says in the preface, the most
confident anthology of the country's verse ... Patrick Crotty, the
editor and a professor of Irish literature at Aberdeen University,
should be congratulated for the precise, considerate and
independent thinking he has brought to his selections."
*Irish Times*
This is a magnificent anthology...The Penguin Book of Irish Poetry
is so rich in its inclusions, so superbly organised, showing such
breadth of scholarship and (in general) felicity of
judgement...applause for a great achievement...
*Independent*
'The great length of the anthology allows brave decisions...the
discrimination, imagination, deftness and heft of the whole is
masterful. Much more than an anthology, this is an alternative
history of Ireland, in poems that burn into the mind - the newly
minted no less than the canonical.'
*Financial Times*
Heaney occupies his rightful place in the year's stand-out
anthology: The Penguin Book of Irish Poetry, edited by Patrick
Crotty. From bards of the eighth century to Nick Laird (born in
1975), with ample space for translations from the Irish (over many
centuries), for ballads and songs and rhymes, this sumptuous
1000-page gathering will last many winters out.
*Books of the Year, The Independent*
Patrick Crotty's Penguin Book of Irish Poetry threw a capacious net
over many centuries, including a rich haul of wonderful new
translations from the Irish, many by himself (as well as Heaney and
others).
*TLS Books of the Year Recommendation*
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