A life-enhancing tour through classic and contemporary poems that have made men cry: âThe Holdens remind us that you donât have to be an academic or a postgraduate in creative writing to be moved by verseâŠ.Itâs plain funâ (The Wall Street Journal).
Grown men arenât supposed to cryâŠYet in this fascinating anthology, one hundred menâdistinguished in literature and film, science and architecture, theater and human rightsâconfess to being moved to tears by poems that continue to haunt them. Although the majority are public figures not prone to crying, here they admit to breaking down, often in words as powerful as the poems themselves.
Their selections include classics by visionaries, such as Walt Whitman, W.H. Auden, and Philip Larkin, as well as modern works by masters, including Billy Collins, Seamus Heaney, Derek Walcott, and poets who span the globe from Pablo Neruda to Rabindranath Tagore. The poems chosen range from the sixteenth century to the twenty-first, with more than a dozen by women, including Mary Oliver, Elizabeth Bishop, and Gwendolyn Brooks. Their themes range from love in its many guises, through mortality and loss, to the beauty and variety of nature. All are moved to tears by the exquisite way a poet captures, in Alexander Popeâs famous phrase, âwhat oft was thought, but neâer so well expressâd.â
From J.J. Abrams to John le CarrĂ©, Salman Rushdie to Jonathan Franzen, Daniel Radcliffe to Nick Cave to Stephen Fry, Stanley Tucci to Colin Firth to the late Christopher Hitchens, this collection delivers private insight into the souls of men whose writing, acting, and thinking are admired around the world. âEveryone who reads this collection will be roused: disturbed by the pain, exalted in the zest for joy given by poetsâ (Nadine Gordimer, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature).