This long-awaited volume brings together for the ?rst time the life's work of a major American voice. In a remarkable generation of poets, Galway Kinnell was an acknowledged, true master. From the book-length poem memorializing the grit, beauty, and swarming assertion of immigrant life along a lower Manhattan avenue, to searing poems of human con?ict and war, to incandescent re?ections on love, family, and the natural world - including "Blackberry Eating," "St. Francis and the Sow," and "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps" - to the un?inchingly introspective poems of his later life, Kinnell's work lastingly shaped the consciousness of his age. Spanning 65 years of intense, inspired creativity, this volume, with its inclusion of previously uncollected poems, is the essential collection for old and new devotees of a "poet of the rarest ability . . . who can ?esh out music, raise the spirits, and break the heart." (Boston Globe)