This is the most comprehensive English translation of the work of G�翹nter Eich, one of the most important German poets of the postwar period. The author of the POW poem "Inventory," one of the
most famous lyrics in the German language, Eich was rivaled only by Paul Celan as the leading poet in the generation after Gottfried Benn and Bertolt Brecht. Expertly translated and introduced
by Michael Hofmann, this collection gathers eighty poems, many drawn from Eich's later work and most of them translated here for the first time. The volume also includes the original German
texts on facing pages. As an early member of "Gruppe 47" (from which G�翹nter Grass and Heinrich B�繞ll later shot to prominence), Eich (1907-72) was at the vanguard of an effort to restore
German as a language for poetry after the vitriol, propaganda, and lies of the Third Reich. Short and clear, these are timeless poems in which the ominousness of fairy tales meets the delicacy
and suggestiveness of Far Eastern poetry. In his late poems, he writes frequently, movingly, and often wryly of infirmity and illness. "To my mind," Hofmann writes, "there's something in Eich
of Paul Klee's pictures: both are homemade, modest in scale, immediately delightful, inventive, cogent." Unjustly neglected in English, Eich finds his ideal translator here.