Immagine dell'autore.

James Merrill (1926–1995)

Autore di The Changing Light at Sandover

59+ opere 1,858 membri 17 recensioni 12 preferito

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Courtesy of University of Arizona Poetry Center

Serie

Opere di James Merrill

Collected Poems (2001) 320 copie
Selected Poems, 1946-1985 (1992) 149 copie
A Scattering of Salts (1995) 97 copie
The (Diblos) Notebook (1965) 73 copie
Divine Comedies (1976) 67 copie
Inner Room (1988) 53 copie
Recitative: Prose (1986) 41 copie
Mirabell: Books of Number (1978) 39 copie
Scripts for the Pageant (1980) 39 copie
Collected Prose (2004) 38 copie
Nights and Days (1963) 37 copie
Late Settings (1985) 30 copie
The Fire Screen (1969) 27 copie
Water Street (1962) 22 copie
The seraglio (1957) 16 copie
The Book of Ephraim (2018) 12 copie
Voices From Sandover (1982) 5 copie
FIRST POEMS (1951) 3 copie
Log {poem} 1 copia
Samos 1 copia
Marbled Paper (SC) (1982) 1 copia
Three Poems (1988) 1 copia
Nine Lives 1 copia
Souvenirs (SC) (1984) 1 copia
Peter (1982) 1 copia
Wybor poezji (1990) 1 copia

Opere correlate

The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms (2000) — Collaboratore — 1,261 copie
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Collaboratore, alcune edizioni917 copie
The Vintage Book of Contemporary American Poetry (1990) — Collaboratore — 753 copie
A Pocket Book of Modern Verse (1954) — Collaboratore, alcune edizioni443 copie
Contemporary American Poetry (1962) — Collaboratore, alcune edizioni384 copie
Writing New York: A Literary Anthology (1998) — Collaboratore — 278 copie
The Art of Losing (2010) — Collaboratore — 199 copie
Gay and Lesbian Poetry in Our Time (Stonewall Inn Editions) (1836) — Collaboratore — 179 copie
The Best American Poetry 1994 (1994) — Collaboratore — 172 copie
The Best American Poetry 1996 (1996) — Collaboratore — 170 copie
American Religious Poems: An Anthology (2006) — Collaboratore — 162 copie
The Faber Book of Beasts (1997) — Collaboratore — 141 copie
American Wits: An Anthology of Light Verse (2003) — Collaboratore — 135 copie
Becoming a Poet: Elizabeth Bishop with Marianne Moore and Robert Lowell (1938) — Postfazione, alcune edizioni86 copie
Selected Poems (1965) — Traduttore, alcune edizioni81 copie
Man of My Dreams: Provocative Writing on Men Loving Men (1996) — Collaboratore — 76 copie
American Sonnets: An Anthology (2007) — Collaboratore — 66 copie
The Grim Reader: Writings on Death, Dying, and Living On (1997) — Collaboratore — 60 copie
Lament for the Makers: A Memorial Anthology (1996) — Collaboratore — 49 copie
Antaeus No. 75/76, Autumn 1994 - The Final Issue (1994) — Collaboratore — 32 copie
Persistent Voices: Poetry by Writers Lost to AIDS (2010) — Collaboratore — 32 copie
60 Years of American Poetry (1996) — Collaboratore — 28 copie
Queer Nature: A Poetry Anthology (2022) — Collaboratore — 15 copie
New World Writing: Second Mentor Selection (1952) — Collaboratore — 12 copie
The Paris Review 84 1982 Summer (1982) — Collaboratore — 6 copie
Playbook: Five Plays for a New Theater — Collaboratore — 5 copie
Locus Solus III-IV, New Poetry, A Special Double Issue (1962) — Collaboratore — 2 copie
Antaeus No. 18, Summer 1975 — Collaboratore — 2 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

Europe in the 1950s from the vantage point of a young gay man, this very personal memoir recounts a short period in the life of one of our finest poets. I would recommend it both to fans of James Merrill and American poetry.
 
Segnalato
jwhenderson | 1 altra recensione | May 13, 2023 |
Anyone who’s played with Ouija (rhymes with “squeegee”) boards knows how much good clean fun they are. There’s something wholesome, as well as thrilling, about producing text collectively — that is, if you don’t think you’re actually in touch with the beyond. But in my experience, if you look around the table, there are generally one or two people who’d be much more likely to come up with those cryptic memoranda on their own than the one or two others.

The more you think about the squeegee board, the less fun it is. And I think that’s true of The Book of Ephraim, too.

Merrill is a wonderful formal poet, in his element in the terza rima section or any of the casual dives into sonnets, couplets — or some gorgeous weighty hendecs in a late section. The problem is that so much of the subject matter is diaristic, to be charitable — navel-gazing, to be mean. Much of it revolves around the loss of a novel on the same subject (whatever that is) — I found myself wishing the novel had remained intact. Most of this long poem is just a couple of guys arsing around with a Ouija board. There are exceptions: I loved section P, which spirals from power in general to a full-on cold-war nightmare. But the panoply of characters come and go (talking of Michaelangelo). Half of them are just ghosts symbolic to Merrill and half are real (Maya Deren e.g.) but never really realized. The title fellow is the prime example of the former. The more I read of Eph’s all-caps, the more it sounded very much like a couple of well-educated aesthetes harmonizing. And not at all ancient. That’s the squeegee for you. Lots of fun at the time, best if you don’t write it down.

The only phrase I remember from my ouija days is “wend your way to Damascus, jaded though you are”.

My enjoyment of the poem was lessened by Yenser’s lickspittle annotations which frequently call our attention to how subtle, pertinent, or wonderful some vague reference or pretty construction is. But I want to end positively — JM is a god at putting words in the right order. If you like long poems with masterful metre, little connection to the world, absurdly arbitrary structures and no real sense of purpose, you’ll dig The Book of Ephraim.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
yarb | Jan 25, 2022 |
An odd novel, probably of enduring interest mostly because it is semi-autobiographical, and the author is a famous poet. It was panned by the TLS when originally released, and it's not really difficult to see why. In the afterword accompanying the book's republication thirty years later, Merrill acknowledges that he basically patched the novel together from a set of loosely connected fragments, an admission of laziness apt to make many readers feel ill used. I had trouble keeping track of the many minor characters, and it seems that other reviewers did as well. I think the novel's strengths are Merrill's descriptions of things and places--he has a lovely talent for using color in his prose. Recommend for readers interested in the lives of the extremely rich, and who have exhausted all other options. Also, of course, for Merrill fans.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
gtross | Apr 18, 2020 |
A minor poet of the 1960'sJames Merrill ventures into novel writing. This un-inspired book is presented as a "Work in Progress" manuscript, with the dashes, underscores, and interpolations that word processing has happily rendered unnecessary for modern manuscriptions.
 
Segnalato
DinadansFriend | 2 altre recensioni | Oct 23, 2019 |

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Statistiche

Opere
59
Opere correlate
31
Utenti
1,858
Popolarità
#13,852
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
17
ISBN
73
Lingue
2
Preferito da
12

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