Review
Elaine Feinstein has made the juncture between poetry and memoir her own. As befits a poet who is also a master of fiction and biography, she writes with casual erudition and an acute storyteller's eye. Her forays into European culture and history are dazzling. Cities is a profoundly humane, intimate exploration of the places and stages by which a life acquires meaning. Fiona Sampson Cities presents itself as the work of old age, but readers expecting regret or renunciation will be surprised by the affirmative character of this book. While Elaine Feinstein revisits Europe in the aftermath of Nazism, she also praises the good fortune of having lived richly in the sphere of literature and travelled widely among remarkable people. The poems here are lit with striking clarity - things retain their outline and solidity to an unusual degree. Sean O' Brien The strangeness of visited cities, with their fearful histories, has been transmuted here by the responses of a truly gifted poet. Dannie Abse
About the Author
Elaine Feinstein is a biographer, a novelist, a poet, and a translator. She is the author of several books, including The Russian Jerusalem, Talking to the Dead, and Ted Hughes: The Life of a Poet.