UK publisher Canongate has just announced that a posthumous volume of Leonard Cohen's poetry, The Flame, will be released in October of next year. It will be published by Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux ...
The NewsHour's poetry series looks at iconic writer and poet Leonard Cohen who discusses the difference between writing a song and a poem, and explains why "Out of the thousands who are known or want ...
Editor’s note: The following is an excerpt from Marcia Pally’s From This Broken Hill I Sing To You: God, Sex, and Politics in the Work of Leonard Cohen. It has been edited for length and style. “If ...
Leonard Cohen, 'œThanks for the Dance'ť (Columbia/Legacy Recordings) Leonard Cohen's last album, released just weeks before he passed in 2016, was 'œYou Want It Darker,'ť which had a sense of finality ...
Leonard Cohen's last album, released just weeks before he passed in 2016, was "You Want It Darker," which had a sense of finality that made it a fine conclusion to his brilliant musical career.
Now 82, Cohen has a new album, You Want It Darker, with songs that wrestle with mortality, question God and long for transcendence. Originally... Leonard Cohen On Poetry, Music And Why He Left The Zen ...
Leonard Cohen‘s final book of poetry, The Flame, will be published in October 2018, the Guardian reports. Cohen finished the book just months before his death, in November 2016, at age 82. The ...
"The Flame" by Leonard Cohen is a gathering of late work by the poet, singer, and chronicler of life’s more difficult moments. Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) wrote hundreds of songs, all of which began as ...
This cover image released by Columbia/Legacy shows "Thanks for the Dance" by Leonard Cohen. (Columbia/Legacy via AP) Leonard Cohen, “Thanks for the Dance” (Columbia/Legacy Recordings) Leonard Cohen’s ...
Matthew Robert Anderson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations ...
At the hour of his death the hopeless little screens were full of the U.S. presidential election and hysteria surrounding Mr. Trump’s victory. Combining the two events, many flocked to social media to ...