Beat Poets [With Ribbon Book Mark]: Everyman's Library Pocket Poets
Editat de Carmela Ciuraru, Kevin Youngen Limba Engleză Mixed media product – 30 iun 2002
The defining work of Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac provides the foundation for this collection, which also features the improvisational verse of such Beat legends as Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Gary Snyder, and Michael McClure and the work of such women writers as Diane DiPrima and Denise Levertov. LeRoi Jones’s plaintive “Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note” and Bob Kaufman’s stirring “Abomunist Manifesto” appear here alongside statements on poetics and the alternately incendiary and earnest correspondence of Beat Generation writers.
Visceral and powerful, infused with an unmediated spiritual and social awareness, this is a rich and varied tribute and, in the populist spirit of the Beats, a vital addition to the libraries of readers everywhere.
Din seria Everyman's Library Pocket Poets
- Preț: 95.29 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 84.32 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 96.11 lei
- Preț: 96.11 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 106.20 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 104.56 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 104.97 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 96.30 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 86.38 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 81.23 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 106.01 lei
- Preț: 113.54 lei
- Preț: 104.97 lei
- Preț: 127.40 lei
- Preț: 95.70 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 96.11 lei
- Preț: 81.42 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 106.42 lei
- Preț: 105.19 lei
- Preț: 129.26 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 105.38 lei
- Preț: 107.24 lei
- Preț: 81.23 lei
- Preț: 129.40 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 81.42 lei
- Preț: 81.64 lei
- Preț: 138.06 lei
- Preț: 105.60 lei
- Preț: 117.35 lei
Preț: 105.79 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 159
Preț estimativ în valută:
20.25€ • 21.06$ • 16.71£
20.25€ • 21.06$ • 16.71£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 24 martie-07 aprilie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780375413322
ISBN-10: 0375413324
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 113 x 158 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Everyman's Library
Seria Everyman's Library Pocket Poets
ISBN-10: 0375413324
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 113 x 158 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Everyman's Library
Seria Everyman's Library Pocket Poets
Notă biografică
Carmela Ciuraru is the editor of the anthology First Loves: Poets Introduce the Essential Poems That Captivated and Inspired Them, and the former editor of the Journal of the Poetry Society of America. A graduate of Columbia University's School of Journalism, she lives in New York City.
Cuprins
Foreword
RAY BREMSER (1934–98)
From Poems of Madness (“City Madness”)
GREGORY CORSO (1930–2001)
Hello
From Ode to Coit Tower
From Transformation & Escape
I Am 25
Poets Hitchhiking on the Highway
Away One Year
After Reading “In the Clearing”
Writ on the Eve of My 32nd Birthday
Second Night in N.Y.C. After 3 Years
ELISE COWEN (1933–62)
“Trust yourself—but not too far”
ROBERT CREELEY (1926– )
Chasing the Bird
The Dishonest Mailmen
I Know a Man
The End
The Hill
The Rain
For Love
DIANE di PRIMA (1934– )
Revolutionary Letter #1
Poem in Praise of My Husband (Taos)
The Quarrel
April Fool Birthday Poem for Grandpa
Poetics
LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI (1919– )
#9 (“Truth is not the secret of a few”)
#13 (“It was a face which darkness could kill”)
#22 (“crazy to be alive in such a strange world”)
#39 (“A blockage in the bowel”’)
ALLEN GINSBERG (1926–97)
From Howl
“Back on Times Square, Dreaming of Times Square”
My Alba
Song
Malest Cornifici Tuo Catullo
Tears
From Kaddish
A Supermarket in California
Sunflower Sutra
From America
BARBARA GUEST (1923– )
Parachutes, My Love, Could Carry Us Higher
Sunday Evening
LEROI JONES (Amiri Baraka) (1934– )
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note
Sex, like desire
War Poem
Political Poem
LENORE KANDEL (1932– )
Enlightenment Poem
Blues for Sister Sally
Junk/Angel
BOB KAUFMAN (1925–86)
Benediction
West Coast Sounds—1956
Fragment
Ginsberg (for Allen)
Abomunist Manifesto
JACK KEROUAC (1922–69)
Mexican Loneliness
How to Meditate
A Sudden Sketch Poem
116
Hymn
From Mexico City Blues
TULI KUPFERBERG (1923– )
“I dreamed of a bum seven foot tall”
“My muse goosed me”
JOANNE KYGER (1934– )
“It is lonely”
“My father died this spring”
May 29
“It’s a great day”
PHILIP LAMANTIA (1927– )
From Hypodermic Light
High
“Man is in pain”
DENISE LEVERTOV (1923–97)
The Gypsy’s Window
The Flight
The Marriage
The Marriage (II)
Poem from Manhattan
JOANNA McCLURE (1930– )
A Vacancy
MICHAEL McCLURE (1932– )
The Flowers of Politics (I)
The Flowers of Politics (II)
Mad Sonnet 13
DAVID MELTZER (1937– )
From the Untitled Epic Poem
6th Raga: For Bob Alexander
15th Raga: For Bela Lugosi
HAROLD NORSE (1916– )
Picasso Visits Braque
I Would Not Recommend Love
“I Have Always Liked George Gershwin More than Ernest Hemingway”
I Have Seen the Light and It Is My Mind
Hotel Nirvana
FRANK O’HARA (1926–66)
Personal Poem
Autobiographia Literaria
Today
My Heart
Avenue A
Now That I Am in Madrid and Can Think
Having a Coke With You
PETER ORLOVSKY (1933– )
Peter’s Jealous of Allen
“Writing poems is a Saintly thing”
Some One Liked Me When I Was Twelve
Collaboration: Letter to Charlie Chaplin
MARIE PONSOT (1921– )
Take My Disproportionate Desire
Matins & Lauds
Communion of Saints: The Poor Bastard Under the Bridge
Easter Saturday, NY, NY
Rockefeller the Center
GARY SNYDER (1930– )
Migration of Birds
A Sinecure for P. Whalen
Under the Skin of It
August on Sourdough, a Visit from Dick Brewer
ANNE WALDMAN (1945– )
How the Sestina (Yawn) Works
Revolution
Diaries
The Blue That Reminds Me of the Boat When She Left
LEW WELCH (1926–72)
“Whenever I make a new poem”
“I know a man’s supposed to have his hair cut short”
PHILIP WHALEN (1923– )
For C.
20:vii:58, On Which I Renounce the Notion of Social Responsibility
Prose Take-Out, Portland, 13:ix:58
Something Nice About Myself
True Confessions
JOHN WIENERS (1934– )
A Poem for Tea Heads
From A Poem for Painters
A Poem for the Insane
LETTERS, ENCOUNTERS, & STATEMENTS
ON POETICS
Donald Allen (1912– )
William Burroughs (1914–97)
Gregory Corso
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac
Frank O’Hara
Peter Orlovsky
Acknowledgments
Index of First Lines
RAY BREMSER (1934–98)
From Poems of Madness (“City Madness”)
GREGORY CORSO (1930–2001)
Hello
From Ode to Coit Tower
From Transformation & Escape
I Am 25
Poets Hitchhiking on the Highway
Away One Year
After Reading “In the Clearing”
Writ on the Eve of My 32nd Birthday
Second Night in N.Y.C. After 3 Years
ELISE COWEN (1933–62)
“Trust yourself—but not too far”
ROBERT CREELEY (1926– )
Chasing the Bird
The Dishonest Mailmen
I Know a Man
The End
The Hill
The Rain
For Love
DIANE di PRIMA (1934– )
Revolutionary Letter #1
Poem in Praise of My Husband (Taos)
The Quarrel
April Fool Birthday Poem for Grandpa
Poetics
LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI (1919– )
#9 (“Truth is not the secret of a few”)
#13 (“It was a face which darkness could kill”)
#22 (“crazy to be alive in such a strange world”)
#39 (“A blockage in the bowel”’)
ALLEN GINSBERG (1926–97)
From Howl
“Back on Times Square, Dreaming of Times Square”
My Alba
Song
Malest Cornifici Tuo Catullo
Tears
From Kaddish
A Supermarket in California
Sunflower Sutra
From America
BARBARA GUEST (1923– )
Parachutes, My Love, Could Carry Us Higher
Sunday Evening
LEROI JONES (Amiri Baraka) (1934– )
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note
Sex, like desire
War Poem
Political Poem
LENORE KANDEL (1932– )
Enlightenment Poem
Blues for Sister Sally
Junk/Angel
BOB KAUFMAN (1925–86)
Benediction
West Coast Sounds—1956
Fragment
Ginsberg (for Allen)
Abomunist Manifesto
JACK KEROUAC (1922–69)
Mexican Loneliness
How to Meditate
A Sudden Sketch Poem
116
Hymn
From Mexico City Blues
TULI KUPFERBERG (1923– )
“I dreamed of a bum seven foot tall”
“My muse goosed me”
JOANNE KYGER (1934– )
“It is lonely”
“My father died this spring”
May 29
“It’s a great day”
PHILIP LAMANTIA (1927– )
From Hypodermic Light
High
“Man is in pain”
DENISE LEVERTOV (1923–97)
The Gypsy’s Window
The Flight
The Marriage
The Marriage (II)
Poem from Manhattan
JOANNA McCLURE (1930– )
A Vacancy
MICHAEL McCLURE (1932– )
The Flowers of Politics (I)
The Flowers of Politics (II)
Mad Sonnet 13
DAVID MELTZER (1937– )
From the Untitled Epic Poem
6th Raga: For Bob Alexander
15th Raga: For Bela Lugosi
HAROLD NORSE (1916– )
Picasso Visits Braque
I Would Not Recommend Love
“I Have Always Liked George Gershwin More than Ernest Hemingway”
I Have Seen the Light and It Is My Mind
Hotel Nirvana
FRANK O’HARA (1926–66)
Personal Poem
Autobiographia Literaria
Today
My Heart
Avenue A
Now That I Am in Madrid and Can Think
Having a Coke With You
PETER ORLOVSKY (1933– )
Peter’s Jealous of Allen
“Writing poems is a Saintly thing”
Some One Liked Me When I Was Twelve
Collaboration: Letter to Charlie Chaplin
MARIE PONSOT (1921– )
Take My Disproportionate Desire
Matins & Lauds
Communion of Saints: The Poor Bastard Under the Bridge
Easter Saturday, NY, NY
Rockefeller the Center
GARY SNYDER (1930– )
Migration of Birds
A Sinecure for P. Whalen
Under the Skin of It
August on Sourdough, a Visit from Dick Brewer
ANNE WALDMAN (1945– )
How the Sestina (Yawn) Works
Revolution
Diaries
The Blue That Reminds Me of the Boat When She Left
LEW WELCH (1926–72)
“Whenever I make a new poem”
“I know a man’s supposed to have his hair cut short”
PHILIP WHALEN (1923– )
For C.
20:vii:58, On Which I Renounce the Notion of Social Responsibility
Prose Take-Out, Portland, 13:ix:58
Something Nice About Myself
True Confessions
JOHN WIENERS (1934– )
A Poem for Tea Heads
From A Poem for Painters
A Poem for the Insane
LETTERS, ENCOUNTERS, & STATEMENTS
ON POETICS
Donald Allen (1912– )
William Burroughs (1914–97)
Gregory Corso
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac
Frank O’Hara
Peter Orlovsky
Acknowledgments
Index of First Lines