The centennial edition of William Carlos Williams's early ground-breaking volume, containing some of his best-loved poems.
Published in 1917 by Four Seas Press, Al Que Quiere! was William Carlos Williams's third poetry book his breakthrough volume and contains some of his best-loved poems ("Tract," "Apology," "El Hombre," "Danse Russe," "January Morning," and "Smell!"), as well as a Whitmanesque concluding long poem, "The Wanderer," that anticipates his epic masterpiece Paterson. Al Que Quiere! is the culmination of an experimental period for Williams that included his translations from Spanish. The Spanish epigraph of Al Que Quiere! is from the short story "El hombre que pareci´a un caballo" ("The Man Who Resembled a Horse") by the Guatemalan author Rafael Are´valo Marti´nez. This centennial edition contains Williams's translation of the story (made with the help of his father), as well as a fascinating chapter from a book of conversations with Williams, I Wanted to Write a Poem, in which he comments on the individual poems.
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963), author of Paterson and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Pictures from Brueghel, is widely considered one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century. Also a short-story writer, novelist, essayist, and translator, he helped in a big way to establish modernism in America.