Picture of author.

About the Author

Daniel Halpern was born on September 11, 1945 in Syracuse, New York. He received a master of fine arts degree from Columbia University in 1972. He has been an instructor in poetry at Princeton University, New School of Social Research, and Columbia University. He began working at Ecco Press in New show more York City in 1969, and later became editor-in-chief. He has written several collections of poetry including Traveling on Credit, Tango and Something Shining: Poems. He has edited anthologies of both poetry and prose including Dante's Inferno: Translations by Twenty Contemporary Poets, The American Poetry Anthology, and The Art of the Tale: An International Anthology of Short Stories. He has won several awards and honors as an editor including the Jessie Rehder Poetry Award, YMHA Discovery Award, and the Great Lakes Colleges National Book Award. (Bowker Author Biography) Daniel Halpern is editorial director of The Ecco Press/HarperCollins & the author of seven previous books of poetry. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey, with his wife & daughter. (Publisher Provided) show less
Image credit: via Poetry Foundation

Series

Works by Daniel Halpern

The Art of the Tale: An International Anthology of Short Stories (1986) — Editor — 381 copies, 3 reviews
Plays in One Act (1991) — Editor — 250 copies, 1 review
The Nature Reader (1997) — Editor — 72 copies, 2 reviews
Writers on Artists (1988) 53 copies
American Poetry Anthology (1975) 50 copies
Antaeus No. 61, Autumn 1988 - Journals, Notebooks & Diaries (1988) — Editor — 38 copies, 2 reviews
Antaeus No. 75/76, Autumn 1994 - The Final Issue (1994) — Editor — 36 copies
Something Shining: Poems (1999) 27 copies, 1 review
Selected Poems (1994) 26 copies
Tango (1987) 23 copies
Foreign Neon (1991) 22 copies
The Antaeus Anthology (1986) 22 copies
Life Among Others (1978) 17 copies
Antaeus No. 68, Spring 1992 (1992) 16 copies, 1 review
Antaeus No. 63, Autumn 1989 (1989) 16 copies
Antaeus No. 62, Spring 1989 (1989) 14 copies
Seasonal Rights (1982) 13 copies
Antaeus No. 13/14, Spring/Summer 1974 - Special Fiction Issue (1974) — Editor — 13 copies, 1 review
Antaeus No. 59, Autumn 1987 (1987) 12 copies
Antaeus No. 57, Autumn 1986 (1986) 12 copies
Traveling on Credit (1972) 10 copies
Antaeus No. 69, Fall 1992 (1992) — Editor — 6 copies
Antaeus No. 67, Fall 1991 (1991) — Editor — 6 copies
Street Fire (1975) 6 copies
Antaeus on Nature (1989) 5 copies
Antaeus No. 58, Spring 1987 (1987) — Editor — 4 copies
Air (2026) 3 copies
Antaeus No. 15, Autumn 1974 - Special Translation Issue (1974) — Editor; Translator — 2 copies
Antaeus No. 47, Autumn 1982 (1982) — Editor — 2 copies
ANTAEUS - Literary Magazine — Editor — 2 copies
Antaeus No. 29, Spring 1978 — Editor — 2 copies
Antaeus No. 34, Summer 1979 — Editor — 1 copy
Antaeus No. 23, Autumn 1976 — Editor — 1 copy
Antaeus No. 35, Autumn 1979 — Editor — 1 copy
Antaeus No. 44 (1982) 1 copy

Associated Works

Inferno (1308) — Editor, some editions — 27,614 copies, 229 reviews
The Sheltering Sky / Let It Come Down / The Spider's House (2002) — Editor — 401 copies, 3 reviews
Collected Stories and Later Writings (2002) — Editor — 365 copies, 2 reviews
The Best American Poetry 1997 (1997) — Contributor — 176 copies
The Best American Poetry 1993 (1993) — Contributor — 137 copies, 1 review
The Best American Poetry 1992 (1992) — Contributor — 107 copies
The Prolific and the Devourer (1981) — Editor, some editions — 104 copies, 1 review
The Best American Poetry 1990 (1990) — Contributor — 82 copies
The Paris Review 84 1982 Summer (1982) — Contributor — 6 copies, 1 review
Antaeus No. 11, Autumn 1973 — Editor — 3 copies
Oui Magazine | July 1973 (1973) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

20th century (22) American literature (14) anthologies (21) anthology (163) art (11) cats (26) collection (12) diary (14) drama (25) essays (40) fiction (143) journal (12) literary journal (13) literature (62) memoir (13) natural history (20) nature (23) nature writing (11) non-fiction (28) plays (20) poetry (147) poetry journal (12) short stories (162) short story (19) stories (18) theatre (11) to-read (33) unread (10) world literature (10) writing (27)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1945-09-11
Gender
male
Occupations
author
editor
poet
Organizations
The Ecco Press
Columbia University
Antaeus
Awards and honors
Guggenheim Fellowship
National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
Short biography
Daniel Halpern was born in Syracuse, New York, in 1945 and has lived in Los Angeles, Seattle, New York City, and Tangier, Morocco. The author of seven previous collections of poems, Halpern is editorial director of The Ecco Press, an imprint of HarperCollins. He has received many grants and awards, including fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Halpern divides his time between New York City and Princeton, New Jersey, where he lives with his wife and daughter.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Syracuse, New York, USA
Places of residence
Los Angeles, California, USA
Seattle, Washington, USA
New York, New York, USA
Tangier, Morocco
Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

21 reviews
“The Life of the Imagination,” by Nadine Gordimer (1967): 6.75
- I’d be tempted to downplay the Apartheid angles here — to look past the petty, constant liberal racialism — if it wasn’t so cheaply invoked it as a bridge towards the story’s central emotional revelation. In many ways, we otherwise have a quintessential little piece of mid century bourgeois ennui here — replete with unexamined opulence and ambiguous infidelity and transposed only to South Africa and the female show more psyche. It’s a tightrope tone and theme to take up — you either succeed or die. Here, by the end, I think we’ve fallen off.

"I Look Out for Ed Wolfe," by Stanley Elkin (1962): 7.25
- well, genres might be elastic, but you do know when you've stepped in one from another, for sure, esp. when it's from a certain type of sci-fi to a certain type of mid century literary posturing, replete with a Bellow-esque mordant humor interspersing an otherwise straight wrenching narrative of personal delusion, degradation, and self-destruction. What is more, there's the very NY-liberal racialism (which might actually verge on racism here), in which "negros" are not only gawked at, but also introduced as sort of Big Point dei-ex-machinae in and of themselves, their very presence a crucible through which the Point of the story is thrown into sharpest relief, or, as the Most Apotheositically Other possible, the greatest possible mirror to reflect the truth of the decisions our protagonist is making - here, for convoluted, psychological, experiential reasons, the Orphan casting all away with no (visible) care for world or health or future. In that downward spiral, there's good stuff--most notably, the line about his confusion at having been given severance pay -- "he imagined a headline: Orphan Receives Check from Local Businessman".

"The Communist," by Richard Ford (1987): 8.25
- A quiet story, this one--of a taciturn 16 yr. old kid, his 31 yr. old mother, and her “communist” boyfriend, going to see and hunt some geese in Montana in 1961--the kind that say more, quite consciously, in their spaces and silences, than in their words. The prose was deep restraint and blunt pronouncement, which worked well here and didn't hide the characters so much as gesture at something ineffable in the scene, in them, and in their reactions to each other. About those silences, they're pregnant, and we can largely only guess, sometimes more confidently and sometimes less, about what they held. For example, that the boy will end up fighting in Vietnam--Glenn's allusions to it and his cryptic note that he has, since, seen grown men scared. And the small touches, given almost as an aside, but important to the whole thing: the death of the father, being from California, and how kind of dumb Glenn is too. Nonetheless, does this really add up to so much more than the sum of its duller points? Hard to tell how much is actually behind the curtain and how much is empty hand-waving.

"The Chosen Husband," by Mavis Gallant (1985): 8.75
- Again, maybe it’s the story or maybe it’s the sheer diversion of coming back to lit fic after so much short sff, but there’s something especially life-affirming in these small literary fictions. Something that reiterates the vitality and beauty of literature itself, rather than the vitality and beauty of imagination and expansion that the best sff fic can do. They’re different creatures as much as they’re the same. The piece: small-means widower in Montreal works to marry off her youngest to a bore, as her wiser, worldlier older daughter looks upon knowingly. That’s it. Yet, it’s filled with such precise analysis of place and the limits of social comprehension — but those enforced by others and ourselves — that so much is there. Grazia Merler observes in her book, Mavis Gallant: Narrative Patterns and Devices, that "Psychological character development is not the heart of Mavis Gallant’s stories, nor is plot. Specific situation development and reconstruction of the state of mind or of heart is, however, the main objective." There it is.

"The Mother," by Natalia Ginzburg (1961): 9.5
- A deep, smooth look at a sad life—told, I’d say, not dispassionately, not without judgment, but with acute awareness of the ways we do and do not love those we’re otherwise meant to. A “What Maisie Knew” but for a disintegrating life, rather than marriage. And, like MAISIE, it’s sensitivity works in the way it leaves us to fill in specific details. A great final line—one sentence, in which, after this close observation of a few months in these young boys lives, we move suddenly through the rest of their lives and see, in flash, how this Maternal Nothing works itself out.

"Order of Insects," by William Gass (1968): 9
- “The picture didn’t need to show me there were two, adult and nymph, for by that time I’d seen the bodies of both kind. Nymph. My god the words we use.” Gass is doing all but trying to hide his Point, and thank god for that, thank god for that in-obtuseness, that strange push to direct the story certainly and push towards that as best he can. And how it can. The story: a housewife finds, and becomes increasingly obsessed with (unconsciously [?] in tune with — see that wonderful drop that she lies in bed “shell-like”) some small dead insects she finds daily during her cleaning runs, and we gradually understand the ways in which her domestic boredom and confinement are driving her to instability. She yells at the kids and chafes at her husband and the only thing eventually real, eventually “ordered”are those dead bugs themselves (see the nice gaspy moment when we realize she's actually been picking them up now). “And then I want to cry, O husband, I am ill, for I have seen what I have seen.”
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The poems here are graceful and accessable, exploring the day to day emotions of relationships and incorporating images of nature and night, particularly with attention to light and passing time. Each poem has an intimate feel, even when given in third person, and the collection as a whole comes together as both complete and quietly accomplished. The problem is, for me at least, the poems are so quiet and so calm that they often come across as passionless, as simple narratives that have show more clear meaning, but little emotional ring or import. While reading them, they were enjoyable enough, but there just wasn't enough of anything to draw me back to the collection or the poet.

Certainly, these are quiet poems worth sinking into for an evening, and enjoyable enough for what they are. As a lasting collection worth returning to, though, I'm afraid they fell somewhat flat.
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Good thing I got through this relatively quickly (I still have Penguin's "The Art of the Story" to trudge through - a more current companion piece of international short stories).

So, out of eighty-one stories, I was almost always approving, somewhat floored, and rarely disappointed. I already know I plan on using this for many future references. Sometimes a flailing read, though rarely, most of the best compilation short story books always eventually pick up their pace. Obviously, this one show more is no exception.

But the biggest thing I probably learned here is that I've been missing out on some Mishima, which I immediately remedied by putting all of his books on my "to read" list.

Top Ten:
01. Hair Jewellery - Atwood
02. Spring in Fialta - Nabokov
03. Pariotism - Mishima
04. A Set of Variations on a Borrowed Theme - O'Conner
05. The Country Husband - Cheever
06. Children of Their Birthdays - Capote
07. This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen - Borowski
08. First Love, Last Rites - McEwan
09. The Tryst - Oates
10. Little Whale, Varnisher of Reality - Aksenov
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As any anthology, there're some really good stories, and then we big flops. Some were so bad, I turned down the pages of the whole story, to show my disdain. I owned this book, so I could get away with it. Here are the stories that rated 4 Stars:
"Going to Meet the Man," James Baldwin
"Greasy Lake," T. Coraghessan Boyle
"The Adulterous Woman," Albert Camus
"Order of Insects," William Gass
"The Mother," Natalia Ginsburg
"The Habit of Loving," Doris Lessing
"The Last Mohican," Bernard show more Malamud
"Patriotism," Yukio Mishima
"Talpa," Juan Rulfo

AND here's some meaningful quotes I liked:

From "Everything," Ingeborg Bachmann:
"I once read in a book the sentence: 'it is not heaven's way to raise its head.' It would be a good thing if everyone knew of this sentence that speaks of the hardness of heaven. Oh no, it really isn't heaven's way to look down, to give signs to the bewildered people below it. At least not where such a somber drama takes place in which it too, this fabricated 'above,' plays a part."

From "Why I Transformed Myself Into a Nightingale," by Wolfgang Hildesheimer:
"I might mention here that I did not arrive at the decision I made during the next year because I wanted to appear eccentric or unique in the eyes of others. It was more my growing awareness that I couldn't select a conventional, bourgeois profession without in some way interfering with other people's lives. The career of a bureaucrat seemed particularly immoral to me, but I rejected other, more accepted humanitarian careers as well. To me, the work of a doctor who could save human life through his interference was highly suspect, because it might be that the person he saved was an out-and-out scoundrel whose life hundreds of oppressed people fervently wished would end."

From "A Friend and Protector," by Peter Taylor:
"That was the end of it for Jesse. And this is where I would like to leave off. It is the next part that is hardest for me to tell. But the whole truth is that my aunt did more than just show herself to Jesse through the glass door. While she remained there her behavior was such that it made me understand for the first time that this was not merely the story of that purplish black, kinky headed Jesse's ruined life. It is the story of my aunt's pathetically Unruined life, and my uncle's too, and even my own. I mean to say that at this moment I understood that Jesse's outside activities had been not only his, but ours too. My Uncle Andrew, with his double standard or triple standard - whichever it was - had most certainly forced Jesse's destruction upon him, and Aunt Margaret had made the complete destruction possible and desirable to him with her censorious words and looks. But they did it because they had to, because they were so dissatisfied with the pale unruin of their own lives. They did it because something would not let them ruin their own lives as they wanted and felt a need to do – as I have often felt a need to do, myself. As who does not sometimes feel a need to do? Without knowing it, I think, Aunt Margaret wanted to see Jesse as he was that morning. And it occurs to me now that dr. Morley understood this at the time."
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