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The Complete Poems of Hart Crane by Hart Crane
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The Complete Poems of Hart Crane (Centennial Edition)

by Hart Crane

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319217,022 (4.42)5
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Liveright Publishing Corporation (2001), Edition: Centennial, Paperback

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An optimistic Waste Land? Who would have thought it could work. The shorter poems were a delight to discover as well. A must read for anyone interested in modernist American poetry. ( )
  bjza | Apr 27, 2008 |
Note the typography by Edward Gorey.
  Larxol | Mar 17, 2007 |
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The Bridge (long poem)

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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0871401789, Paperback)

This edition features a new introduction by Harold Bloom as a centenary tribute to the visionary of White Buildings (1926) and The Bridge (1930). Hart Crane, prodigiously gifted and tragically doom-eager, was the American peer of Shelley, Rimbaud, and Lorca. Born in Garrettsville, Ohio, on July 21, 1899, Crane died at sea on April 27, 1932, an apparent suicide. A born poet, totally devoted to his art, Crane suffered his warring parents as well as long periods of a hand-to-mouth existence. He suffered also from his honesty as a homosexual poet and lover during a period in American life unsympathetic to his sexual orientation. Despite much critical misunderstanding and neglect, in his own time and in ours, Crane achieved a superb poetic style, idiosyncratic yet central to American tradition. His visionary epic, The Bridge, is the most ambitious and accomplished long poem since Walt Whitman's Song of Myself. Marc Simon's text is accepted as the most authoritative presentation of Hart Crane's work available to us. For this centennial edition, Harold Bloom, who was introduced to poetry by falling in love with Crane's work while still a child, has contributed a new introduction.

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 22:11:31 -0500)

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