Skip to main content
Yannis Ritsos: a true poet of his time
Poetry with Andy Croft

The Greek communist poet Yiannis Ritsos (1909-1990) was one of the greatest European poets of the 20th century. He wrote more than 100 books — poems, plays, fiction, translations and essays. His work has been translated into over 40 different languages.

He won the Lenin Peace Prize and was nominated nine times for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Pablo Picasso drew his picture. Louis Aragon called Ritsos “the greatest poet of our age.”

Twenty-five years after his death, Ritsos’s poetry remains largely unavailable in Britain. Following the publication earlier this year of Romiosini, a book-length poem about the Greek communist partisans in the second world war, Smokestack Books has now published another epic poem by Ritsos, Epitaphios (£8.95).

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
boix
Literature / 22 June 2026
22 June 2026

From post-human revolution in Puerto Rico to trans poetics and queer mythmaking, these three books that imagine new ways of being together

GOMBROWICZ HAUNT: Cafe Tortoni at 825 Avenida de Mayo / Pic: Dziczka/CC; insert Bohdan Paczowski/CC
Book Review / 19 April 2026
19 April 2026

CHRIS MOSS joins the hunt in Argentina for the works of Poland’s most enigmatic exile

boix
Letters from Latin America / 23 September 2025
23 September 2025

A ghost story by Mexican Ave Barrera, a Surrealist poetry collection by Peruvian Cesar Moro, and a manifesto-poem on women’s labour and capitalist havoc by Peruvian Valeria Roman Marroquin

William Blake by Thomas Phillips, 1807 / Public Domain
Culture / 21 July 2025
21 July 2025

MATTHEW HAWKINS applauds a psychotherapist’s dissection of William Blake