
A Company of Poets
Louis Simpson(Author)
The University of Michigan Press
Published on 31. March 1981
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-0-472-06326-0 (ISBN)
Description
This is a collection of essays, reviews, and interviews in which the author, himself a distinguished poet, expresses his ideas about the nature of poetry and criticizes his contemporaries. Simpson takes his stand with the "poetry of feeling" and agrees with Woodsworth that poetry should be written in a selection of the language "really spoken by men." His reviews of American poets who have since become famous show Simpson to be an acute an innovative thinker. There are also essays on modern classics: Apollinaire, MacDiarmid, Lawrence, Crane, and Pound. The collection shows the full range of the critic of whom the Times Literary Supplement recently said: "Simpson's critical and narrative voice is very distinctive - it is generous, sympathetic, spontaneously free and wittily fatalistic. Most originally, perhaps, this voice marries criticism, biography, literary and cultural history in an imaginative atmosphere of sheer wonder and discovery."
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 133 mm
Thickness: 41 mm
Weight
426 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-472-06326-0 (9780472063260)
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Schweitzer Classification