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Emily Dickinson

Black Letter Press

Design by Alice Winkler

Emily Dickinson, unrecognized in her own time, is known posthumously for her innovative use of form and syntax. Dickinson's poetry was heavily influenced by the Metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century England, as well as her reading of the Book of Revelation and her upbringing in a Puritan New England town, which encouraged a Calvinist, orthodox, and conservative approach to Christianity. While she was extremely prolific as a poet and regularly enclosed poems in letters to friends, she was not publicly recognized during her lifetime. Upon her death, Dickinson's family discovered forty handbound volumes of nearly 1,800 poems, or "fascicles" as they are sometimes called. Dickinson assembled these booklets by folding and sewing five or six sheets of stationery paper and copying what seem to be the final versions of poems.

This collection of Emily Dickinson, edited by Claudio Rocchetti, comprises fifty poems, eight letters, and seven fragments.

Details

​Hardcover bound in green Fedrigoni Imitlin

Measures 100x160 mm

120-gram red Endpapers

Printed on 115 g wood-free, age-resistant Arena Ivory Rough paper

Sewn book block

Black ribbon marker and Headbands

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