Publication

1994 - Knopf, New York, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

86,500 words, Guess

Page Count

346 pages

Identifiers

and 1 more
  • LibraryThing449262

Classifications

  • DDC811/.5409974461
  • LCCPS255.B6 D38 1994

Description

An intimately perceptive account, by a poet who knew them all, of the brilliant circle of poets who lived and worked in Boston through the half-decade beginning in 1955. That was the year Peter Davison, coming to Boston as a book editor, was swept up in a world - in a tumult - of poetry. He rediscovered his father's old friend Robert Frost. He briefly squired Sylvia Plath. He came to know Robert Lowell (whose poems and private disasters dominated the period) and Adrienne Rich, Stanley Kunitz, Richard Wilbur, Anne Sexton, W.S. Merwin, and others who, closely bound together in friendship or rivalry or both, defined the shape of American poetry at mid-century. Through their eyes as well as his own, and often in their words, Davison presents a sharply fresh vision of the shift from confidence to a troubled questioning that overtook America - a transformation that was, in a sense, foreshadowed in the sensibilities, in the writings, sometimes in the lives, of some of our finest poets.

Subjects

Topics

BiographyIn literatureAmerican PoetsAmerican poetryHomes and hauntsIntellectual lifeHistory and criticism

People

Peter Davison (1928-)

Times

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