The Caryatids, Enitharmon Press,
London, 1975
Unity, Singing Horse Press, Blue
Bell, Pennsylvania, 1981
Losing to Compassion, Origin Press, Kyoto, 1985
Tesserae, Stride, Exeter, 1993
Stromata, Burning Deck Press,
Providence, Rhode Island, 1995
Appearance & Event, Paradigm
Press, Providence, Rhode Island, 1997
Spiritual Letters (1-12), hawkhaven press, San Francisco,
California, 1999
Dark Ground, Wild Honey Press,
Bray, Co. Wicklow, 2000
David Miller's 'Spiritual Letters (I-II)
and other writings' is now available from Reality Street Editions (63 All
Saints Street, Hastings, Sussex TN34 3BN). The book sells for £6.50 per
copy (please add £1 for postage & packing for a single copy if
ordering direct from the publisher). For further details please see the
Reality Street web site: http://freespace.virgin.net/reality.street/
The book can also be obtained from Small
Press Distribution in Berkeley (USA): http://www.spdbooks.org
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"These two directions in Miller's
poetry - the critique of the material world and the approach to the
spiritual - are intricately interconnected, and by no means mutually
exclusive. Indeed, they seem to form part of a deeply felt ethical
imperative at work in his poetry: an imperative which forges its social
critique on the basis of an ethical spirituality."
Tim Woods, The Poet's Voice
"...a kind of poésie noire, an
urban poetry of shadows and glimpses, street lamps and whispers. The
crucial relationship between word and life is ultimately mysterious,
inimitable and unknowable, yet its existence surfaces most convincingly in
the poem."
Fred Muratori (on Stromata), American Book Review
"In all of Miller's work there is
this precision and fullness, the act of writing becoming a way of dreaming
more fully.... Of all the present writers in English... Miller is the
closest to Mallarmé, not in any formal or recognisable imitation, but in
the way both behave when they write. What Julia Kristeva learned from her
analysis of the great Symbolist poet could probably be discerned as easily
from Miller's poetry. This is high praise indeed."
Tim Allen, Terrible Work
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press comments here...