"All books by Kenneth Rexroth"

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  • Women Poets of Japan

    Ikuko Atsumi, Kenneth Rexroth

    Paperback, 1982

    From early as the seventh century up to the present day, no other has had so many important women poets as Japan.
  • Women Poets of Japan

    Ikuko Atsumi, Kenneth Rexroth

    E Book, 2014

    From early as the seventh century up to the present day, no other has had so many important women poets as Japan.
  • Complete Poems

    Li Ch'ing-chao, Kenneth Rexroth, Ling Chung

    Paperback, 1980

    The Complete Poems of Li Ch'ing-chao (1084-c. 1151) brings together for the first time in English translation all the surviving verse of China's greatest woman poet.
  • Kenneth Rexroth and James Laughlin: Selected Letters

    James Laughlin, Kenneth Rexroth, Lee Bartlett

    Hardback, 1991

  • One Hundred More Poems from the Chinese: Love and the Turning Year

    Kenneth Rexroth, Kenneth Rexroth

    Paperback, 1970

    An assemblage of delicate Chinese verse which delicately explore the worlds of love, nature, and meditation.
  • One Hundred Poems from the Chinese

    Kenneth Rexroth

    Paperback, 1971

    The lyrical world of Chinese poetry in faithful translations by Kenneth Rexroth.
  • 100 Poems from the Japanese

    Kenneth Rexroth

    Paperback, 1964

    It is remarkable that any Westerner—even so fine a poet as Kenneth Rexroth—could have captured in translation so much of the subtle essence of classic Japanese poetry: the depth of controlled...
  • One Hundred More Poems from the Japanese

    Kenneth Rexroth

    Paperback, 1976

  • Songs of Love, Moon, & Wind: Poems from the Chinese

    Kenneth Rexroth, Eliot Weinberger

    Paperback, 2009

    “Nothing stands still in this poetry: the wind blows the trees, the lake water ripples and the ever-present road runs in and out of the hills.”—American Poetry Review

  • 100 Poems from the Japanese

    Kenneth Rexroth

    E Book, 2013

    It is remarkable that any Westerner—even so fine a poet as Kenneth Rexroth—could have captured in translation so much of the subtle essence of classic Japanese poetry: the depth of controlled...