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"Tillinghast's
poems range confidently among different cultures. He has a sense
of history as a living force. The experiments in metre, rhyme
and free verse in The Stonecutter's Hand are important. He is
a wonderfully gifted poet, one of the few." Louis Simpson
"Of
all the many complex, sometimes self-cancelling, tasks a poet
must address, it may be that the most demanding and severe is
getting things right. Richard Tillinghast performs that office
with an honesty so strict that over and over his poems prove
themselves faithful in ways that bring a quiet, undisputed delight."
Anthony Hecht
Richard
Tillinghast is the author of five books of poetry published
in the United States, including the critically acclaimed The
Stonecutter's Hand, as well as Today
in the Cafe Trieste, published by Salmon which features
a selection of Tillinghast's work, both published and previously
unpublished. James Dickey called Tillinghast 'the best poet
of the younger generation, and deserving more recognition than
most of the poets of the older generation...' His work stands
out among contemporary poetry for its focus on history, and
for the ease with which it moves back and forth between widely
differing poetic idioms. In the early 90s Tillinghast
lived for a year with his family in Kinvara, County Galway,
and he continues to visit Ireland often. He frequently
writes on books and travels for the New York Times.
Salmon Poetry has also published Richard Tillinghast's long
poem, A Quiet Pint in Kinvara, illustrated throughout
by Anne Korff.
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