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Includes the name: Philip Lamantia

Værker af Philip Lamantia

Bed of Sphinxes: Selected Poems (1997) 38 eksemplarer
Selected poems, 1943-1966 (1967) 29 eksemplarer
Touch of the Marvelous (1966) 28 eksemplarer
Meadowlark West (1986) 20 eksemplarer
Blood of the Air (1970) 19 eksemplarer
Free Spirits: Annals of the Insurgent Imagination (1982) — Redaktør — 17 eksemplarer
Preserving Fire: Selected Prose (2018) 6 eksemplarer
Destroyed works: [poems] (1962) 6 eksemplarer
Ekstasis: [poems] 3 eksemplarer
Narcotica 2 eksemplarer
Erotic poems 2 eksemplarer

Associated Works

The Portable Beat Reader (Viking Portable Library) (1992) — Forfatter — 1,460 eksemplarer
The Complete Poems (1968) — Associated Name, nogle udgaver712 eksemplarer
The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry (1999) — Bidragyder — 594 eksemplarer
City Lights Pocket Poets Anthology (1995) — Bidragyder — 354 eksemplarer
The New American Poetry 1945-1960 (1960) — Bidragyder — 319 eksemplarer

Satte nøgleord på

Almen Viden

Fødselsdato
1927-10-23
Dødsdag
2005-03-07
Køn
male

Medlemmer

Anmeldelser

“You will probably be our greatest living poet since Whitman.”—Henry Miller, letter to Philip Lamantia, 1/26/55

The latest installment of the Pocket Poets Series presents two long-lost books from the classic Beat period. Tau is Philip Lamantia's mystical second collection of poems, slated for publication in 1955 but suppressed by the poet due to his evolving religious beliefs. Mysterious and austere, the poems of Tau are an essential addition to Lamantia's published work, documenting the period between his teenage surrealist debut Erotic Poems (1946) and the religious poems of Ekstasis (1959), also the period of his closest association with Kenneth Rexroth. Later in 1955, when he participated in the 6 Gallery reading where Allen Ginsberg debuted"Howl," Lamantia read none of his own work, instead reading the poems of his best friend, John Hoffman (1928-1952), a legendary Beat poet who died of unknown causes in Mexico at age 24. An archetype of the Beat-era hipster—tall, lean, goateed, and bespectacled—Hoffman is depicted along with Lamantia and others in "Howl," as well as in Kerouac's The Dharma Bums (1958). Yet despite its literary and historical importance, Hoffman's work has never before been published.

Journey to the End makes available for the first time all of Hoffman's surviving poems, an event for scholars and fans of Beat literature. Presented together in a single volume, Tau and Journey to the End are two of the most significant recent additions to the Beat canon. The volume also includes Lamantia's commentary on his friend's life and work, poems by Lamantia dedicated to Hoffman, and detailed biographical notes on both poets.

Praise for Tau and Journey to the End:

“Here are Philip Lamantia’s light-scattering jewels of the Fifties!”
—Michael McClure, author of Huge Dreams: San Francisco and Beat Poems

“The rediscovery of Tau is the literary equivalent of finding lost treasure. Alchemical gold––blood of pure imagination––courses through these lines by the magus of American poetry.”
—Andrew Joron, author of The Cry at Zero: Selected Prose
… (mere)
½
 
Markeret
CityLightsBooks | 1 anden anmeldelse | Sep 11, 2008 |
“You will probably be our greatest living poet since Whitman.”—Henry Miller, letter to Philip Lamantia, 1/26/55

The latest installment of the Pocket Poets Series presents two long-lost books from the classic Beat period. Tau is Philip Lamantia's mystical second collection of poems, slated for publication in 1955 but suppressed by the poet due to his evolving religious beliefs. Mysterious and austere, the poems of Tau are an essential addition to Lamantia's published work, documenting the period between his teenage surrealist debut Erotic Poems (1946) and the religious poems of Ekstasis (1959), also the period of his closest association with Kenneth Rexroth. Later in 1955, when he participated in the 6 Gallery reading where Allen Ginsberg debuted"Howl," Lamantia read none of his own work, instead reading the poems of his best friend, John Hoffman (1928-1952), a legendary Beat poet who died of unknown causes in Mexico at age 24. An archetype of the Beat-era hipster—tall, lean, goateed, and bespectacled—Hoffman is depicted along with Lamantia and others in "Howl," as well as in Kerouac's The Dharma Bums (1958). Yet despite its literary and historical importance, Hoffman's work has never before been published.

Journey to the End makes available for the first time all of Hoffman's surviving poems, an event for scholars and fans of Beat literature. Presented together in a single volume, Tau and Journey to the End are two of the most significant recent additions to the Beat canon. The volume also includes Lamantia's commentary on his friend's life and work, poems by Lamantia dedicated to Hoffman, and detailed biographical notes on both poets.

Praise for Tau and Journey to the End:

“Here are Philip Lamantia’s light-scattering jewels of the Fifties!”
—Michael McClure, author of Huge Dreams: San Francisco and Beat Poems

“The rediscovery of Tau is the literary equivalent of finding lost treasure. Alchemical gold––blood of pure imagination––courses through these lines by the magus of American poetry.”
—Andrew Joron, author of The Cry at Zero: Selected Prose
… (mere)
½
 
Markeret
CityLightsBooks | 1 anden anmeldelse | Sep 11, 2008 |

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Statistikker

Værker
21
Also by
6
Medlemmer
290
Popularitet
#80,656
Vurdering
4.0
Anmeldelser
2
ISBN
17
Udvalgt
3

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