Lunch Poems
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Important poems by the late New York poet published in The New American Poetry, Evergreen Review, Floating Bear and stranger places. Often this poet, strolling through the noisy splintered glare of a Manhattan noon, has paused at a sample Olivetti to type up thirty or forty lines of ruminations, or pondering more deeply has withdrawn to a darkened ware- or firehouse to limn his computed misunderstandings of the eternal questions of life, coexistence, and depth, while never forgetting to eat lunch, his favorite meal. O'Hara speaks directly across the decades to our hopes and fears and especially our delights; his lines are as intimate as a telephone call. Few books of his era show less age. --Dwight Garner, New York Times As collections go, none brings...quality to the fore more than the thirty-seven Lunch Poems, published in 1964 by City Lights. --Nicole Rudick, The Paris Review What O'Hara is getting at is a sense of the evanescence, and the power, of great art, that inextricable contradiction -- that what makes it moving and transcendent is precisely our knowledge that it will pass away.This is the ethos at the center of Lunch Poems: not the informal or the conversational for their own sake but rather in the service of something more intentional, more connective, more engaged. --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles TImes The collection broadcasts snark, exuberance, lonely earnestness, and minute-by-minute autobiography to a wide, vague audience--much like today's Twitter and Facebook feeds. --Micah Mattix, The Atlantic Among the most significant post-war American poets, Frank O'Hara grew up in Grafton, MA, graduating from Harvard in 1950. After earning an MA at Michigan in 1951, O'Hara moved to New York, where he began working for the Museum of Modern Art and writing for Art News. By 1960, he was named Assistant Curator of Painting and Sculpture Exhibitions at MOMA. Along with John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch, James Schuyler, and Barbara Guest, he is considered an original member of the New York School. Though he died in a tragic accident in 1966, recent references to O'Hara on TV shows like Mad Men or Thurston Moore's new single evidence our culture's continuing fascination with this innovative poet.
Autor: | O'Hara Frank |
Nakladatel: | City Lights Books |
Jazyk : | Angličtina |
Vazba: | Paperback |
Počet stran: | 76 |
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Why I am Not a Painter and Other Poems
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Selected Poems
O'Hara Frank
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Lunch Poems
O'Hara Frank
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Selected Poems: Frank O'Hara
O'Hara Frank
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The Fall of America
Allen Ginsberg
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The Bell Tolls for No One
Charles Bukowski
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More Notes of a Dirty Old Man
Bukowski Charles
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To Die for the People
Newton, Huey P.
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Funeral Diva
Sneed, Pamela
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Pictures of the Gone World
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
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Gasoline
Corso Gregory
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Tender Buttons
Gertrude Stein
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Kaddish and Other Poems
Allen Ginsberg
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Roman Poems
Pier Paolo Pasolini
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In Danger
Pier Paolo Pasolini
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Forgotten Journey
Ocampo, Silvina