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Lawrence Ferlinghetti : Starting from San Francisco.
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Author: Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Title: Starting from San Francisco.
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 64
Date: 1967-10-01
ISBN: 0811200469
Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
Weight: 0.17 pounds
Size: 5.2 x 0.2 x 7.83 inches
Edition: Enlarged
Previous givers: 1 kbuxton (USA: OR)
Previous moochers: 1 Anne A. (USA)
Wishlists:
1S*HINES (USA: OH).
Description: Product Description
Starting from San Francisco is a collection of poems by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, his third collection and fourth book, published in 1961. The hardcover edition included a short vinyl recording of Ferlinghetti reading some of his poems. The title is a reference to Walt Whitman's "Starting from Paumanok": Ferlinghetti numbered himself among Whitman's "wild children", and Whitman's influence is shown throughout the work.[ The poems are based mainly on a journey across the United States and a meditation on the Inca city of Machu Picchu, a photograph of which is shown on the cover. The poetry mingles tenderness with satire and hallucination. Scattered through the book is some of the better poetry generated by the San Francisco School. The poems are longer and more sustained than in his previous publications. They are more concerned with ideas than with verbal glitter, singing out boldly with great clarity. The poem "Euphoria" starts: As I approach the state of pure euphoria I find I need a large size typewriter case to carry my underwear in and scars on my conscience are wounds imbedded in the gum eraser of my skin which still erases itself... Perhaps the best known of the poems is "The Great Chinese Dragon", although one critic says that the Remedial-English style of this poem makes one doubt that Ferlinghetti would ever be able to write poetry again. Gregory Stephenson, incorporating quotes from "The Great Chinese Dragon", says the dragon "... represents 'the force and mystery of life,' the true sight that 'sees the spiritual everywhere translucent in the material world.'" Perhaps what Ferlinghetti wants his reader to do is to see the jazz music and the everyday images and the repetitive references to common culture found in his poems; and then see beyond them to "the spiritual everywhere translucent."
URL: http://bookmooch.com/0811200469
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