Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Incidents of Travel in Poetry: New and Selected Poems [Minkštas viršelis]

4.05/5 (84 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 316 pages, aukštis x plotis: 190x177 mm, weight: 467 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jan-2016
  • Leidėjas: City Lights Books
  • ISBN-10: 087286667X
  • ISBN-13: 9780872866676
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 316 pages, aukštis x plotis: 190x177 mm, weight: 467 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jan-2016
  • Leidėjas: City Lights Books
  • ISBN-10: 087286667X
  • ISBN-13: 9780872866676
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"Frank Lima is an American Villon."--David Shapiro "Highly recommended for -reasons that go beyond historical -completeness."--Library Journal, starred review "This collection is not to be missed."--Publishers Weekly, starred review Protege of Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch, and Allen Ginsberg, Frank Lima (1939-2013) was the only Latino member of the New York School during its historical heyday. After enduring a difficult and violent childhood, he discovered poetry as an inmate of a juvenile drug treatment center under the tutelage of the painter, Sherman Drexler, who introduced him to his poet friends. After his poetry debut in the Evergreen Review in 1962, Lima appeared in key New York School anthologies and published two full-length collections of his own. In the late 1970s, Lima left the poetry world to pursue a successful career as a chef, though he returned intermittently and continued to write a poem a day until his death. Incidents of Travel in Poetry is a landmark re-introduction to the work of this major Latino poet. Beginning with poems from Inventory (1964), his installment in the legendary Tibor de Nagy poetry series, Incidents includes selections from Lima's previous volumes, tracing his development from his early snapshots of street life to his later surrealist-influenced abstract lyricism. The bulk of the collection comes from his later unpublished manuscripts, and thus Incidents represents the full range of Lima's work for the very first time. Praise for Incidents of Travel in Poetry: "Finally. Finally. Finally. Here's the Frank Lima collection that poetry lovers worldwide have been waiting for. Lima was an authentic outlier and Incidents of Travel transcends and decolonizes any attempt at easy categorization. With this new body of work, we are reaping the price Lima paid for being ostracized. Our reward? The dream we wish we could have, whispers that hint of a new waste land, and we'll always be in his debt for having Lima as a guide."--Willie Perdomo, The Essential Hits of Shorty Bon Bon. "Frank Lima is a masterful writer of ecstatic, devastating, and hauntingly personal poetry. His candor is irresistible and transformative, as cuttingly witty in one poem as elegiac and sorrowful in the next. Complete with its nuances and disappointments, nobody writes the poetry of domestic reverence quite like Lima. In this generous selection of work from the poet's life, including poetry from 1997 onward, we can finally solidify Lima as a figure of crucial importance to our understanding of the New York School writers. This work shines with all the love and labor of Lima's thoroughly American experience, one which is inextricable from the trauma of cultural duality. Lima's voice speaks to us like an intimate friend, a co-conspirator in hope. 'Blessed are the poets who invented us as poets,' he writes in a poem for David Shapiro, an ode to both his best friend and to poetry. Blessed are we now to have this landmark collection of work from Frank Lima. This book is a long overdue treasure." --Wendy Xu From his first contact with poetry while incarcerated as a juvenile offender in Harlem, through his meetings with Langston Hughes and Frank O'Hara, his years with Berkson and Padgett and Berrigan, his stint as a chef, and his years of living his Vow to Poetry when he wrote at least a poem a day in total obscurity--Lima's life is an epic of contradictions. Frank Lima is a poet the world has been waiting to discover. Now we can."--Bob Holman

Recenzijos

"Vibrant and sprawling, this overdue volume captures the wild range and astounding breadth of a lifetime of poetry produced by New York School member Lima ... This collection is not to be missed."--Publishers Weekly, starred review "Lima has been identified as a major Latino American poet and a second-generation member of the New York School, but he rejected both labels--appropriately, as his poetry has its own distinctive energy and calm, concrete dreaminess. The occasional early poem in this excellent overview evokes Spanish Harlem street scenes ('fat garbage cans/ screaming with the stench/ of rice & beans'), and the opening 'Mom I'm All Screwed Up' is a wrenching shriek at his sexually abusive mother. Mostly, though, Lima takes in the world and himself without excess; there's a revitalizing realness in his work as he moves from passion ('Anyhow I feel like an overcrowded greenhouse when you're around') to older-age meditation ('We stopped searching for the / Answers because we could not live in their blue tents.' Highly recommended for -reasons that go beyond historical -completeness."--Library Journal, starred review "[ Incidents of Travel in Poetry], beautifully culled by editors Garrett Caples and Julien Poirier, comprises the breadth of Lima's work, from his early poems written as a heroin-addicted New York School outsider to his later surrealistic ones informed by freewriting ... Lima's verse is uninhibited and unafraid; he writes with pungent frankness."--The Paris Review "[ A] perfect example of the sort of a reality check, wit and candor that Lima brought to the New York literary scene. His posthumous full-length collection, Incidents of Travel in Poetry: New and Selected Poems, published by City Lights, spans the lifetime of this enigmatic poet, who fell in love with writing as an inmate in a juvenile rehab; went on to form friendships and apprenticeships with Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch and Allen Ginsberg; published a few volumes; battled addictions; was married five times; became a high-profile chef; and wrote a great deal of material that hasn't been published anywhere until now ... For many readers, this is an introduction to Lima's work, and it was an excellent decision on the publisher's part to include three essays to help contextualize the material. The two opening essays, by editors [ Garrett] Caples and Julien Poirier respectively, provide the first instance of Lima's comprehensive critical biography, meticulously cobbled through research and interviews with Lima's friends, colleagues, and family members."--Chicago Tribune "I join with the rest of the poetry world in being brought to shame for having long neglected one of its most excellent practitioners during his own lifetime ... There is ample material for tomorrow's editors and scholars to begin poring over and eventually bring to light. Lima is a poet whose future legacy is full of nothing but promise."--Bookslut "[ H]e became probably the most thoroughgoing American Surrealist since Philip Lamantia, though rarely without a bit of Reverdyesque heart in some pocket or other as well. Whether his Surrealism is mainly French in origin--Desnos? Eluard?--or has deeper Latin American roots is a question for the scholars, not me. The problem with Surrealism in general is that it is an art of arbitrary combinations produced with the desire that chance become destiny. And as Lima puts it, 'Destiny can be as cold as an abandoned car, / Or as rewarding as sleeping late ... / It will never give you a gold star for good behavior.' But the dice roll in Lima's favor more often than one might expect, so that when he writes, 'My telephone calls you. / Are you strong enough to listen?' When I read that thousands of pages remain unpublished, I wonder--how many times can you toss a winner?--but here I am compelled to stop and consider, and realize that Lima is among those of whom he says, 'When they spoke about life, / their words became waves of suicide. / Proof that life imitates life.' More than half the book consists of poems not previously published, dating from the 1990s and early 2000s, when Lima was writing furiously though nearly forgotten by the poetry world, still silently helping us 'live right into the answers of the heart.'"--Barry Schwabsky, Hyperallergic "This scrupulously edited edition, compiled with the aid of Helen Lima, Frank's widow, makes available the wide range of Lima's oeuvre and establishes him as a great American poet. It also finally opens the lid on the vast stores of work that have been hidden from view until now. ... Lima's trajectory as an artist is marked by restlessness. His earliest poems--sharp-edged, pitiless, psychedelic accounts of gangster life in Spanish Harlem--are devastatingly assured, deserving of their own place in American letters ... Lima's outsider practice only deepened in his later years. Having removed all manner of monkeys from his back (heroin, alcohol, childhood trauma), he wrote a poem a day for many years. This flood of late work was provoked or permitted by a convergence of factors: sobriety, a stable marriage, the discovery of Peter Elbow's pedagogy of freewriting, the death of his friend Kenneth Koch and a concomitant vow to poetry. Perhaps, above all, simple happiness. Whatever the source, fully half of Incidents of Travel in Poetry is composed of poems written between 1997, when his last published book came out, and 2013, the year of his death, and they were years of intense creative production."--Nico Alvarado, Harvard Review

Daugiau informacijos

PRINT CAMPAIGN: concentrating on New York media and Latin American publications - SF Chronicle, SF Bay Guardian, SF Weekly, 7x7, San Francisco Magazine, Bookforum, New York Review of Books, Boston Review, Bloomsbury Review, Brooklyn Rail, Poetry Flash, Poets and Writers, Chicago Review, Denver Quarterly, Hudson Review, Kenyon Review, LA Times Book Review, NY Times, The Nation, New Yorker, Newsday, St Marks Poetry Project, Bay Area Reporter, Beat Scene Magazine

An excerpt from the introduction and some poems from this book will appear in Poetry Magazine around the time of the release.

We'll send to the trades: PW, Booklist, and Library Journal.

SOCIAL MEDIA AND ONLINE CAMPAIGN: Daily Beast, Boing Boing, Reality Sandwich, Rumpus, BOMB, Constant Critic, Conversational Reading, Poetry Daily, thepoetry.com, Poetry Society of America, Identity Theory, NYer's Book Bench, Bookslut, and Shelf Awareness, Literary Kicks, Beat Review, Dharma Beat, Kerouac Project, Daily Beat, ThirdMindBooks, The Volta, NY School Poets Blog

City Lights Facebook (26K likes) & City Lights Twitter (68K Followers) with frequent posts/tweets about Lima's life and work.

Endorsements from Dave Shapiro, Lisa Jarnot, Joseph Lease, and more
Introduction Incidents of Travel in New York: The Lives of Frank Lima xi
Garrett Caples
A Note on the Text xxxiii
Julien Poirier
Acknowledgments xxxvi
From Inventory: Poems (1964)
1(18)
Mom I'm All Screwed Up
3(2)
Mulatta
5(2)
Inventory---To 100th Street
7(3)
The Memory of Benny "Kid" Paret
10(2)
Primavera
12(1)
Pudgy
13(3)
Abuela's Wake
16(3)
Ventriloquist (1967) collaboration with Joe Brainard
19(4)
From Underground with the Oriole (1971)
23(20)
Beach
25(1)
Haiku
26(1)
The Woman
27(2)
Submarine
29(1)
Acid
30(1)
Poem (Tomorrow)
31(1)
Underground with the Oriole
32(2)
Summer (a love poem)
34(2)
Ode to Love (1 & 2)
36(5)
Morning sara
41(2)
From Angel (1976)
43(20)
159 John Street
45(1)
Natasha
46(1)
Hart's Island
47(1)
Hunter Mountain
48(2)
Soliloquy
50(1)
Lobster
51(1)
The Underworld
52(1)
From "Dracula to the Angels"
53(1)
El Bronx
54(1)
The Turtles of the Bronx
55(1)
Scenario
56(2)
Cuachtemoc
58(2)
Ochun
60(1)
Plena
61(2)
From Inventory: New & Selected Poems (1997)
63(72)
Scattered Vignettes
65(19)
In Memory of Eugene Perez
84(51)
From Year's End
85(2)
Year's End
87(1)
The History of Night
88(1)
Winter Pond
89(1)
The Hand
90(1)
My Heart
91(1)
On Poetry
92(1)
Poem from Amor
93(1)
The Future
94(1)
Maiz
95(2)
From Tulum (1993)
97(2)
Tu Bano
99(2)
Seimpre el Fuego
101(2)
Mi Tierra
103(2)
Tulum
105(4)
From Orfeo/New Poems (1994)
109(2)
The Skeletons
111(1)
This Is a Poem About My Life
112(2)
March '94
114(2)
Children of the Fish
116(1)
Easter
117(2)
Palm Sunday
119(2)
Tattoo
121(2)
Lost Things
123(1)
The Cedar
124(1)
Orfeo
125(4)
Culo Prieto
129(2)
Joe Ceravolo
131(1)
Whispers
132(1)
Oklahoma America
133(2)
From The Beatitudes (1997--2000)
135(8)
A Brief History of Genesis
137(3)
Eternity
140(1)
New Testament to Sadness
141(2)
From Incidents of Travel in Poetry (1998--2002)
143(128)
Incidents of Travel in Poetry
145(4)
Christophe Lima
149(3)
Michael Gizzi's Famous Liver
152(1)
Epicedium to Potter's Field
153(1)
Ode to Vanessa del Rio
154(1)
Scene Two (In the Fog)
155(1)
Bittersweet
156(2)
Guadalajara City
158(2)
Necromancy
160(1)
A Layer of the Heart
161(1)
A la Carte
162(2)
Environs of Saint Petersburg/Nov. '95
164(4)
Urbane Parables
168(2)
Dream
170(1)
Poets
171(1)
The Weather
172(2)
Luis Borges
174(2)
Byron
176(2)
Setting Up a Tombstone
178(2)
Waiting For...
180(1)
Frank O'Hara
181(1)
Heckyll & Jeckyll
182(2)
The Life of Chocolate
184(4)
The Unbearable Truth
188(1)
Afterlife
189(1)
After the Greek Restaurant
190(1)
A Comfort Station
191(2)
Alligator of Happiness
193(1)
Juarez
194(1)
Ode to Things About Destiny
195(2)
The Daily Nose
197(2)
Blue Postcard from the Fjords
199(2)
My Blue Agave
201(2)
King Lear
203(1)
Before the World Ends
204(2)
After You There is Poetry
206(1)
The Body of Prayer
207(1)
Each Morning Takes Longer to Get Here
208(1)
The Public Health of the Heart
209(1)
Wreckage du Jour
210(1)
Autobiography
211(1)
The World as Red as Wine
212(1)
After Reading the Cards
213(1)
To Live by Night with You
214(2)
Catching My Breath
216(2)
Felonies and Arias of the Heart
218(2)
Appetizer
220(1)
The Blessed
221(2)
Dolphins in the Dark
223(1)
Someone Else's Memory
224(2)
Archives du Jour
226(1)
"This is a Wonderful Ballad"
227(1)
Sorrow Is Not Shy
228(1)
Selected Things
229(2)
A Case of Overwhelming Evidence
231(2)
Notes from the Hazards of Life
233(2)
For a Ceremony
235(2)
Notes from the Phantom Doctor
237(1)
The Thorns
238(2)
Invitation to a Self-Portrait
240(1)
Spanakopita and Taramosalata
241(1)
New York Sutra
242(2)
Las Mananitas (The Little Mornings)
244(1)
Fresh Figs
245(1)
My Life as a Book
246(1)
The Shelf Life of Poetry
247(1)
Quietly Across the Sky on Valentine's Day
248(1)
On Greek Mythology circa 02.29.2000
249(1)
Christus Apollo
250(2)
Crossing the Himalayas
252(2)
Half Life in a Myth
254(1)
Soliloquies to an Ode
255(2)
The Way of the Samurai
257(1)
From the Memoirs of Count Bechamel to His Beloved
258(1)
At the Bidding of the Muse
259(2)
Bright Blue Self-Portrait
261(1)
The Black Song of the Apple
262(2)
Pages of Night and Day
264(2)
Withered Invitations
266(1)
Swaying the Allure of Dreaming
267(2)
Questions and Answers
269(2)
Appendix
Frank Lima: The Poetry of Everyday Life and the Tradition of American Darkness by David Shapiro
271(8)
Index of Titles 279
Born in Spanish Harlem in 1939, Frank Lima endured a difficult and violent childhood, discovering poetry as an inmate of the juvenile drug treatment center on North Brother Island in the East River, under the tutelage of the painter, Sherman Drexler. Through Drexler, Lima met Kenneth Koch, Frank O'Hara, and other members of the New York School of poets, leading to his first book, Inventory (Tibor de Nagy Editions, 1964). After publishing two further volumes, Underground with the Oriole (Dutton, 1971) and Angel: New Poems (Liveright, 1976), and earning an MFA at Columbia University in 1976, Lima withdrew from the poetry world, pursuing a successful career as a professional chef. A new and selected poems, also called Inventory (Hard Press), edited by David Shapiro, appeared in 1997. He continued to write a poem a day, but seldom published, for the rest of his life. He died in 2013. Garrett Caples is a poet who lives in San Francisco. He is the author of two full-length poetry collections, The Garrett Caples Reader (Black Square, 1999) and Complications (Meritage, 2007), a pamphlet, Quintessence of the Minor: Symbolist Poetry in English (Wave, 2010), and a book of essays, Retrievals (Wave, 2014). He is the co-editor of The Collected Poems of Philip Lamantia (California, 2013) and Particulars of Place (Omnidawn, 2015) by Richard O. Moore. He has a Ph.D. in English from UC Berkeley. A freelance writer, he is also an editor at City Lights Books. Julien Poirier is the author of several poetry collections, including El Golpe Chileno (Ugly Duckling, 2010), Stained Glass Windows of California (Ugly Duckling, 2012), and the forthcoming Way Too West (Bootstrap) and Out of Print (City Lights). In 2005, he published an experimental newspaper novel, Living! Go and Dream (Ugly Duckling). He is also the editor of an anthology of writing by Jack Micheline, One of a Kind (Ugly Duckling, 2008), and a book of travel journals by Bill Berkson, Invisible Oligarchs (Ugly Duckling, 2015). A founding member of Ugly Duckling Presse Collective, Poirier edited the newspaper New York Nights from 2001 to 2006. He has taught poetry in New York City public schools and at San Quentin State Prison. He lives in Berkeley with his wife and two daughters.