About the Author:
W. D. Snodgrass is author of over twenty books of poetry, two books of literary criticism, and six volumes of translation. Honors include an Ingram Merrill Foundation award, Harold Morton Landon Translation Award, and fellowships from The Academy of American Poets, Ford Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation, and National Endownment for the Arts. He retired from teaching in 1994.
From Kirkus Reviews:
paper 1-880238-76-4 Enjoyable and important reading on the life of the Pulitzer-winning poet (for Hearts Needle) who made autobiography an art form by founding the ``confessional'' school. This collection of thematic more than chronological autobiographical pieces demonstrates that Snodgrass can turn his problematic interior life into enduring prose as well as poetry. In a hilarious opening chapter entitled ``Good Housekeeping,'' he explains how a large, wealthy home in industrial Beaver Falls, Penn., could have created so much craziness and creativity. His mother ``could keep a grudge better than anyone I've ever known,'' but she couldn't keep house. She crammed every cranny with soon broken cheap furniture and collectibles, noisy TVs and radios, filthy cats and dogs, and years of old newspapers and magazines. The pollution inside and out (``balls of greasy soot and grit, like peppercorns, had settled on the sills') becomes more serious when his sister dies of asthma at 25. The authors mother taught classics and belonged to Daughters of the American Revolution, while his father was a CPA whose womanizing fanned conflicts at home and who wanted his son to give up poetry. Dont you see that youll never amount to a hill of beans with this sort of thing, he asks. Weeks later, Snodgrass wins the 1960 Pulitzer and is suddenly in demand by schools and even by women. While he goes from marriage to divorce (losing his daughter was the catalyst for his first acclaimed book of poetry) to writer's block and psychoanalysis, the author is keenly aware of his colleagues' similar weaknesses. Randall Jarrell is ``one poet of that generation I'd thought might escape madness.'' At the Univ. of Iowa, he meets many of those troubled geniuses, like Berryman, and goes from writing ``the very best second-rate Lowell'' to having Robert Lowell emulate his work in popularizing ``confessional'' poetry. Eloquent autobiography, and for those interested in the inner life of modern American poetry or creativity, essential reading. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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