What good does it do for a person to wake up one morning this side of the new millennium

Kim Simonsen
Translated by Randi D Ward
Skip to product information

What good does it do for a person to wake up one morning this side of the new millennium

Kim Simonsen
Translated by Randi D Ward
Release date:
Regular price $27.95
Sale price $27.95 Regular price $0.00
Final Sale. No returns or exchanges.
Oversized: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.
Overweight: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.

Digital download

Immediate access in your Kobo library

Deliver to

In stock online. Free shipping on orders over $49

Buy online, pick up at Bay & Floor

Free pick up today

Find it in store

Out of stock

Found in: Arts & Letters, General Poetry

Earn 140 plum points and save more with plum Rewards. Learn more

View full details

Overview

172 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details

Winner of the Faroese National Book Award

Winner of the Nadia Christensen Prize for Translation

“Luminous and arresting, like the islands themselves.” —Martin Aitken, award-winning translator of Karl Ove Knausgaard’s The Morning Star

“The vulnerability of being alive at such a pivotal period in Earth’s history underpins this highly original, compact collection from Kim Simonsen, superbly translated by Randi Ward.” —Michael Favala Goldman, translator of Tove Ditlevsen’s The Trouble with Happiness

“A collection for those who loved Inger Christensen’s alphabet, Kim Simonsen’s What good does it do for a person to wake up one morning this side of the new millennium, translated by Randi Ward, has a resounding scientific soulfulness. Straightforward in its assessment of humanity’s likely future in the face of climate change, shadowed by our devastating choices, the book nevertheless finds a kind of wonder in the hard shapes of what can be known. The poems play with scale, moving through deep time and across the breadth of the universe, then pulling the focus to, for instance, a black coffee pot with a silvered spout. This wonderful mechanism brings to mind Tomas Tranströmer, and can create the effect of an almost dizzying metaphysics, or a humor marked by the bathos of humanity itself: “Among a hundred billion galaxies,/ with a hundred billion stars in each… those glasses/ make you look like Woody Allen.” English speakers owe a debt of gratitude to Randi Ward, who brings us these poems from the Faroese with the kind of confidence, deftness, and attention only a poet can give to another poet. Her translation is itself a work of art alongside Simonsen’s, and both are worthy of praise.” —Katie Farris, award-winning author of Standing in the Forest of Being Alive

“Kim Simonsen delivers with emotionally charged, poignant poems about heartache and humankind’s place in nature.” —Molly Balsby, Ekstra Bladet

“A moving poetry collection that places time measured in millennia, the galaxies of the universe, our little planet with its view of the sun, and one lonely human being’s immense sorrow into mutual perspective.” —Frederik Schøler, LitteraturNu

“Simonsen’s message is this: The great thing about distance is that it can be bridged. Loss need not be irreversible.” —The Adroit Journal

  • Published date: Sep 26, 2025
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 172
  • Publisher: Deep Vellum
  • ISBN: 9781646053728
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 0.4" L x 9.0" H

Kim Simonsen is a Faroese writer. He is the author of seven books, as well as numerous essays and academic articles. In 2014, Simonsen won the Faroe Islands' National Book Award for his poetry collection What good does it do for a person to wake up one morning this side of the new millennium. His newest poetry collection was nominated for the Nordic Council Literature Prize in 2024.

Randi Ward is a poet, translator, lyricist, and photographer from West Virginia. She earned her MA in Cultural Studies from the University of the Faroe Islands and has twice won the American-Scandinavian Foundation’s Nadia Christensen Prize.

Recently Viewed