When
Derek Mahon's Selected Poems appeared in 1990 The New
Yorker remarked on their 'astonishing excellence'. This long poem meditates on the idea of cultural decadence in its historical
and contemporary manifestations: apocalyptic fears, sexual 'anarchy',
the conflicting claims of art and nature.
Describing himself as 'a decadent who lived to tell the story' and 'a rueful
veteran of the gender wars', the poet revisits London,
Paris, New York, the Aegean and his native Ulster; dramatizes
key aestheticians like Schopenhauer and Wilde; and offers his
own lyrical response to the closing century. The Yellow Book
is a work of remarkable depth and scope by one of the finest poets
of the age.