Centuries ago, when books were rare, those who owned them would lend
them to friends, who in turn would copy out passages they especially
liked before returning the precious book to its owner. These
anthologies came to be known as Commonplace Books, and modern writers
as different as W. H. Auden and Alec Guinness have kept them as well,
recording phrases or passages that struck them as wise or witty or
quirky. The result is as much the self–portrait of a sensibility as
it is a collection of miscellaneous delights. Renowned poet J. D.
McClatchy has been keeping such a book for three decades now. This
selection from it offers a unique look into what strange facts, what
turns of mind or phrase, what glorious feats of language and nature
can attract the attention of a poet. The great and the obscure are
gathered around the same table, exchanging remarkable opinions. Henry
James is speaking of Venice: "The deposed, the defeated, the
disenchanted, the wounded, or even only the bored, have seemed to find
there something that no other place could give." At the other end of
the table, Groucho Marx is playing drama critic: "I didn't like the
play, but then I saw it under adverse circumstances—the curtain was
up." Nietzsche and Flaubert, Dizzy Gillespie and Marianne
Moore—dozens of unexpected and timeless aphorisms and anecdotes that
pierce and provoke. Many of McClatchy's own observations about the art
and prowess of writing are included as well. This is a book meant to
be sipped, not gulped; meant to be read at leisure and pondered on at
length.
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A Poet's Commonplace Book
Product details
ISBN
9781619027602
Published
2016
Publisher
Random House Publishing Services
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author