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San Francisco Beat: Talking with the Poets

door David Meltzer

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San Francisco Beat is an essential archive of the Beat Generation, a rich moment in a fortunate place. America, somnolent, conformist, and paranoid in the 1950s, was changed forever by a handful of people who refused an existence of drudgery and enterprise, opting instead for a life of personal, spiritual, and artistic adventure. In these intimate, free-wheeling conversations, a baker's dozen of the poets of San Francisco talk about the scene then and now, the traditions of poetry, and about anarchism, globalism, Zen, the Bomb, the Kabbalah, and the Internet. Diane di Prima, William Everson, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Jack Hirschman, Joanne Kyger, Philip Lamantia, Michael McClure, David Meltzer, Jack Micheline, Kenneth Rexroth, Gary Snyder, Lew Welch, Philip Whalen ". . .as we begin to slip into a national slumber somewhat akin to that of the Eisenhower years, it's exhilarating to have this squall line of Beats pass through our consciousness." --Kirkus Reviews ". . .fierce engagement executed with humor and vernacular sensitivity." -- Dale Smith,Austin Chronicle David Meltzer (1937-2016) was the author of many books of poetry, includingTens, The Name, Arrows: Selected Poetry 1957-1992, andTwo-Way Mirror (City Lights). He was the editor ofBirth, The Secret Garden, Reading Jazz, andWriting Jazz, among other collections. His agit-smut fictions includeThe Agency Trilogy. Meltzer read poetry at the Jazz Cellar in the 1950s and in the 1960s fronted the band, "Serpent Power."… (meer)
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See pp. 184-185 for some brief but strong remarks from Michael McClure on 'Howl' in an interview from 1999. There is no index in this book, but you can use Google Books to search inside for the term 'Howl' [etc].
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San Francisco Beat is an essential archive of the Beat Generation, a rich moment in a fortunate place. America, somnolent, conformist, and paranoid in the 1950s, was changed forever by a handful of people who refused an existence of drudgery and enterprise, opting instead for a life of personal, spiritual, and artistic adventure. In these intimate, free-wheeling conversations, a baker's dozen of the poets of San Francisco talk about the scene then and now, the traditions of poetry, and about anarchism, globalism, Zen, the Bomb, the Kabbalah, and the Internet. Diane di Prima, William Everson, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Jack Hirschman, Joanne Kyger, Philip Lamantia, Michael McClure, David Meltzer, Jack Micheline, Kenneth Rexroth, Gary Snyder, Lew Welch, Philip Whalen ". . .as we begin to slip into a national slumber somewhat akin to that of the Eisenhower years, it's exhilarating to have this squall line of Beats pass through our consciousness." --Kirkus Reviews ". . .fierce engagement executed with humor and vernacular sensitivity." -- Dale Smith,Austin Chronicle David Meltzer (1937-2016) was the author of many books of poetry, includingTens, The Name, Arrows: Selected Poetry 1957-1992, andTwo-Way Mirror (City Lights). He was the editor ofBirth, The Secret Garden, Reading Jazz, andWriting Jazz, among other collections. His agit-smut fictions includeThe Agency Trilogy. Meltzer read poetry at the Jazz Cellar in the 1950s and in the 1960s fronted the band, "Serpent Power."

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