The Alphabet in the Park
Selected Poems
Adélia Prado

Wesleyan Poetry Series
Wesleyan University Press
distributed by University Press of New England

1990 • 80 pp. 6 x 9"
Poetry / Literature & Language-Spanish & Portuguese

$14.95 Paper, 0-8195-1177-3



Paper, 978-0-8195-1177-5


Poetry that eloquently concentrates on the spiritual and physical lives of women.

This is the first book published in English by of the work of Brazilian poet Adélia Prado. Incorporating poems published over the past fifteen years, The Alphabet in the Park is a book of passion and intelligence, wit and instinct. These are poems about human concerns, especially those of women, about living in one’s body and out of it, about the physical but also the spiritual and the imaginative life. Prado also writes about ordinary matters; she insists that the human experience is both mystical and carnal. To Prado these are not contradictory: “It’s the soul that’s erotic,” she writes.

As Ellen Watson says in her introduction, “Adélia Prados poetry is a poetry of abundance. These poems overflow with the humble, grand, various stuff of daily life – necklaces, bicycles, fish; saints and prostitutes and presidents; innumerable chickens and musical instruments…And, seemingly at every turn, there is food.” But also, an abundance of dark things, cancer, death, greed. These are poems of appetite, all kinds.

“From a dark corner of despair Prado can rocket to pure joy in one line. All the contradictions, paradoxes, and dualities of our lives thrive here. This is poetry at its hottest and most naked, beautiful poetry of the body and soul”—James Tate

“This is a marvelous book: ingeniously translated, Prado’s world is exciting, fully realized, strange to us. She writes with gusto, wit, tenderness, compassion, and vulnerability.” —Stuart Friebert








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