The Selected Poems of Nancy Cunard brings together published and previously unpublished poems written across four decades. From her early years as a coterie poet on the edges of Bloomsbury and
avant-garde London, to her frontline activism in the Spanish Civil War, the fight against fascism and racism in Europe and America, to her late life precariously spent in sanatoriums and
hospitals, this selection brings Cunard’s transnational modernist project to light through her experimental, passionate writing. Expanded to include much of her early lyrical work and
comprehensive, with textual notes and a critical biographical introduction, this edition offers a rare insight into a poet’s wider oeuvre produced around some of the twentieth century’s most
dramatic events. It includes Cunard’s long, psychogeophical poem, Parallax, published originally by the Hogarth Press and a response in part to Eliot’s The Waste Land. An international
modernist poet, publisher and activist, Cunard’s legacy has until now largely been linked to her fortune as shipping heiress or artist’s muse. These poems are a document of the modernist era,
its flux and its energy.