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         Muldoon Paul:     more books (100)
  1. The End of the Poem (Oxford Lectures) by Paul Muldoon, 2006-10-03
  2. Paul Muldoon. Horse Latitudes.(The End of the Poem: Oxford Lectures)(Book review): An article from: World Literature Today by William Pratt, 2007-09-01
  3. 2004 Gaelic Athletic Association All Star Awards Winners (Football): Enda Muldoon, Paul Galvin, Diarmuid Murphy, Sean Cavanagh, Colm Cooper
  4. New Yorker Magazine November 21, 2005 Haruki Murakami Fiction, Article by Woody Allen, Flashman Review by John Updike, Poems by Charles Simic and Paul Muldoon
  5. Poets From Northern Ireland: Poetry by Paul Muldoon, Poetry by Seamus Heaney, Poetry by W. F. Marshall, Ulster Weaver Poets, Van Morrison
  6. Paul Muldoon's carryings on.(Horse Latitudes, The End of the Poem, General Admission)(Book review): An article from: Irish Literary Supplement by Guinn Batten, 2007-09-22
  7. Irish Poems: Poetry by Paul Muldoon, Poetry by Seamus Heaney, Poetry by W. F. Marshall, Poetry by William Butler Yeats, Leda and the Swan
  8. Poetry of Northern Ireland: Poets From Northern Ireland, Seamus Heaney, Van Morrison, Louis Macneice, Paul Muldoon, Ciarán Carson, Nick Laird
  9. Aosdána Members: Seamus Heaney, Brian Friel, Louis le Brocquy, Paul Muldoon, Francis Stuart, John Banville, Dermot Bolger, William Trevor
  10. Faber Poetry: Ted Hughes and Paul Muldoon (Faber poetry cassette) by Ted Hughes, Paul Muldoon, 1983-09
  11. Considering classroom communities: Ciaran Carson and Paul Muldoon.(Critical Essay): An article from: Yearbook of English Studies by Carol Tell, 2005-01-01
  12. People From County Armagh: Billy Wright, Frank Aiken, Edward Bunting, Paul Muldoon, Tomás Ó Fiaich, Henry Bourchier, 5th Earl of Bath
  13. Poems From Northern Ireland: Poetry by Paul Muldoon, Poetry by Seamus Heaney, Poetry by W. F. Marshall, the Haw Lantern, Death of a Naturalist
  14. Biography - Muldoon, Paul (1951-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2004-01-01

81. ASCAP Audio Portrait: Daron Hagen And Paul Muldoon
Daron Hagen and paul muldoon Vera of Las Vegas. Vera of Las Vegas is an entertaining and provocative opera by Composer Daron Hagen and Librettist paul muldoon.
http://www.ascap.com/audioportraits/hagen_muldoon.html
Daron Hagen and Paul Muldoon
Vera of Las Vegas
Vera of Las Vegas is an entertaining and provocative opera by Composer Daron Hagen and Librettist Paul Muldoon. The clever story mixes sleazy culture and big questions, while the contemporary music has many references to 20th century pop and stage music.
  • Vera Of Las Vegas - Composer Daron Hagen and Librettist Paul Muldoon's opera mixes high art and low culture. Daron Hagen explains.
  • Album-Length Show - Daron Hagen says he and Paul Muldoon grew up listening to '70s concept albums - and it rubbed off.
  • Flight Attendant's Blues - The plot unfolds when the first femme fatale appears, Hagen says.
  • Duet - A pivotal point in the opera concerns a startling discovery and an unexpected reaction.

82. The New York Review Of Books: Paul Muldoon
Bibliography of books and articles by paul muldoon, from The New York Review of Books. The New York Review of Books. paul muldoon.
http://www.nybooks.com/authors/7177
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Paul Muldoon
Paul Muldoon, a native of Northern Ireland, is Howard G.B. Clark '21 Professor in the Humanities at Princeton, Professor of Poetry at Oxford, and the author of eight collections of poetry. The poem in this issue appears in his ninth, Moy Sand and Gravel , to be published in October by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. (June 2002)
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June 27, 2002 THE LOAF February 8, 2001 AFFAIRS OF STATE
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Your account Current issue ... NYR Books with any questions about this site. The cover date of the next issue of The New York Review of Books will be June 24, 2004.

83. Paul Muldoon

http://www.fractal.com.mx/F14muldo.html
P AUL MULDOON Poemas
uno de papas, cuatro bueyes,
una vaca lechera, una casa de tejas en el campo.
encontraron todo abandonado, el
negros, como marido y mujer,
cambiando su peso de una pata
a otra, y mirando fijo hacia el futuro.
Erizo El caracol se mueve como un
aerodeslizador, que se eleva
y comparte su secreto con el erizo. El erizo
no comparte su secreto con nadie. Le decimos, Erizo, sal de ti mismo y te amaremos. que tengas que decir. Queremos tus respuestas a nuestras preguntas. El erizo no suelta nada, Olvidamos al dios bajo esta corona de espinas. casi todo el mundo se centra alrededor de nosotros. A menudo cuando el viento Site search Web search powered by FreeFind Sus ramas que se machacan enloquecidas

84. Lyrics | BBC World Service
The Lyrics. Before paul muldoon wrote his new poem, we asked him how he might draw inspiration from some aspect of Shelley s Ozymandias.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/arts/features/poems/muldoon.shtml
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Before Paul Muldoon wrote his new poem, we asked him how he might draw inspiration from some aspect of Shelley's Ozymandias . He said he wanted to write a very personal poem about "a moment of heartbreak in his life" and a mood of utter desolation.
The Stoic by Paul Muldoon
Ozymandias, by Percy Bysshe Shelley The Stoic by Paul Muldoon Hear the poem Biography This was more like it, looking up to find a burlapped fawn half-way across the iced-over canal, an Irish navvy who'd stood there for an age with his long-tailed shovel or broad griffawn, whichever foot he dug with showing the bandage that saved some wear and tear, though not so much that there wasn't a leak of blood through the linen rag, a red picked up nicely by the turban he sported, those reds lending a little brilliance to the bleak scene of suburban or - let's face it - urban sprawl, a very little brilliance. This was more like the afternoon last March

85. General Search Results For PAUL MULDOON
The Noctuary of Narcissus Batt Type Hardback, By muldoon, paul, $11.95, $10.52, Buy Now, More Info. Page Number ( 1 ) Page 1 of 1. All
http://www.booktopia.com.au/frontpagelinesonly.asp?StoreURL=booktopia&searchbycr

86. ArtDeadline.Com's Art Bulletins Service
Art News of Interest An Evening with Poet paul muldoon By Poetry Downtown is pleased to present an evening with Pulitzer Prize winning poet paul muldoon.
http://accessarts.org/artman/publish/article_396.shtml
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Last Updated: Feb 25th, 2004 - 12:24:18 Art News of Interest
An Evening with Poet Paul Muldoon
By Access Arts ArtDeadline.Com
Feb 18, 2004, 18:16
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Poetry Downtown is pleased to present an evening with Pulitzer Prize winning poet Paul Muldoon. Muldoon will speak at the Wieden and Kennedy Atrium, 224 NW 13th Avenue, Portland, Oregon, on Tuesday, March 16 at 7:30 p.m.
Paul Muldoon is one of the English-speaking world¹s most celebrated poets. His work is challenging, full of complex ideas, images and emotion, and drives us to reexamine our usual standards for contemporary poetry. In turn whimsical with wordplay and venturesome rhyming, then sharply cunning and precise, Muldoon¹s verse is intricate and yet still accessible and immediate. In response to those accustomed to an effortless read, Muldoon admits that, "some of it is a little more complex than others. Not because I set out to make it difficult, but becauseŠ complexity is equal to where we are, how we are. Just being here is a complex business." Paul Muldoon was born in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, and educated in Armagh and at the Queen¹s University of Belfast. He worked as a radio and television producer for the BBC from 1973 to 1986, and since 1987 has lived in the United States, where he is now Professor in the Humanities at Princeton University. He is Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Paul Muldoon was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 2003, the International Griffin Prize for Moy Sand and Gravel (2002), the 2004 Shakespeare Prize, the 1997 Irish Times Poetry Prize, and the 1994 T.S. Eliot Prize.

87. Fooling With Words With Bill Moyers: Teacher's Guide
paul muldoon Poetry begins with little glimmers the sense that there might be an interaction between two things, two often quite unlike things that come
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/foolingwithwords/t_txtmuldoon.html
Amiri Baraka
Coleman Barks

Lorna Dee Cervantes

Lucille Clifton
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Shirley Geok-lin Lim

Paul Muldoon
Sharon Olds

Marge Piercy

Robert Pinsky
If you are interested in obtaining printed copies, please write to:
Robert A. Miller, Educational Publishing
Thirteen/WNET 450 West 33rd Street New York, NY 10001 PAUL MULDOON "Poetry begins with little glimmers the sense that there might be an interaction between two things, two often quite unlike things that come together in a metaphor or an image." Born in Northern Ireland in 1951, Paul Muldoon was a radio and television producer with the BBC before moving to the United States in the late 1980s. His passion for exact description grows from his awareness that what is apparent often contains a deeper, stranger story. He currently teaches at Princeton University and was recently elected Professor of Poetry at Oxford. "Symposium" You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it hold its nose to the grindstone and hunt with the hounds. Every dog has a stitch in time. Two heads? You've been sold one good turn. One good turn deserves a bird in the hand.

88. Bloodaxe Books Title Page Clair Wills Reading Paul Muldoon
A book must be the axe which smashes the frozen sea within us . Brian Hinton, Tears in the Fence. Reading paul muldoon By Clair Wills, Reading paul muldoon.
http://www.bloodaxebooks.com/titlepage.asp?isbn=1852243481

89. Thomas O'Grady: Ciaran Carson, Paul Muldoon, Richard Murphy
Book Reviews Ciaran Carson, paul muldoon, Richard Murphy. Thomas O Grady. Selected Poems. Poems 19681998 paul muldoon Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $19 (paper).
http://www.bostonreview.net/BR27.2/ogrady.html
HOME CURRENT ISSUE ARCHIVES SUBSCRIBE Book Reviews: Ciaran Carson, Paul Muldoon, Richard Murphy Thomas O'Grady
Selected Poems

Ciaran Carson
Wake Forest, $12.95 (paper) Poems 1968-1998
Paul Muldoon
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $19 (paper) Collected Poems 1952-2000
Richard Murphy
Wake Forest, $18.95 (paper)
James Joyce is reported to have said that he wrote Finnegans Wake, At its most extravagant, in the nearly book-length Madoc: A Mystery, Muldoon's pursuit of a poetic extreme may even appeal primarily to the perfect audience that Joyce imagined for his "lingerous longerous book of the dark": "that ideal reader suffering from an ideal insomnia." Part history, part parable, part connect-the-dots catalogue of Western philosophy, Madoc Madoc seemed to represent not only the inevitable outcome of Muldoon's distinctive poetic evolution (his tendency toward both longer forms and increasingly arcane points of reference), but also a daunting prospect of further verbal and formal chicanery. In the context of Muldoon's accumulated body of poetry, however, the epically ambitious

90. Your Search For 'Paul Muldoon'
Your search for paul muldoon resulted in 17 matches muldoon , paul and SIMMONS , James . Out of the Blue . FIRST muldoon , paul . Bandana .
http://www.joemccann.com/psearch/search.pl?p=1&lang=en&mode=all&q=Paul Muldoon

91. APR Jan/Feb 2001 Vol. 30/No. 1 | Paul Muldoon
The American Poetry Review paul muldoon paul muldoon, who was born in Northern Ireland in 1951, is the author of eight collections of poetry.
http://www.aprweb.org/issues/jan01/muldoon.html
Paul Muldoon excerpt from The End Of the Poem: "The Mountain" by Robert Frost The sense of the phrase "The End of the Poem" on which I'll focus here has to do with the influence of one poem on another within the body of work of a single poet, whereby the "gaps" or "blanks" in one poem are completed or perfected by anotherwhereby what is missing in "The Mountain," for example, is also bodied out in "Directive"and that the "body" of the work is indivisible from the "body" of the poet. That this consideration of what is missing might be one of the "subjects" of "The Mountain" is signaled from the outset: The mountain held the town as in a shadow.
I saw so much before I slept there once:
I noticed that I missed stars in the west The very first line contains another clue to the secret life of "The Mountain," part of which has to do with Frost's own name. We'll meet the poet's name more obviously in lines 50-54, where the "man who moved so slow" is describing a stream: 'One of the great sights going is to see
It steam in winter like an ox's breath

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