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From Sorrow's Well: The Poetry of Hayden Carruth
Shaun T. Griffin, editorHayden Carruth survived isolation, mental health problems, and long struggle with drink and smoke to produce a vision of modern poetry rooted in the New England tradition but entirely his own. Many feel his best poems emerged from the isolation of rural Vermont, and his poems often are concerned with rural images and metaphors reflecting the land and hardscrabble people around him. Together with his second love, jazz, Carruth's rural experiences infuse his poems with engaging and provocative ideas even as they present sometimes stark topics.
This volume collects essays and poems from such notable contributors as Donald Hall, Marilyn Hacker, Adrienne Rich, Philip Booth, Matthew Miller, and Sascha Feinstein, among many others. The book's sections concern the kinds of writings, and the values expressed in his writings, for which Carruth was most famous, including what editor Shaun T. Griffin calls "social utility," jazz, his impoverished rural environment, and "innovation" in poetic form.
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Cover
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Title
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Copyright
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Dedication
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Epigraph
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Acknowledgments
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Contents
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Introduction
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1. Realist—the social art of a solitary man
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Poem: Paragraph for Hayden
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An Interview with Hayden Carruth
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A Tool or a Weapon, a review of For You: Poems and The Clay Hill Anthology
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A Meaning of Hayden Carruth
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Elegiac Locales: The Anarchy of Hayden Carruth
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On Hayden Carruth: The Poetics of Social Utility
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The Real and Only Sanity, an Essay-Review of Brothers, I Loved You All
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From the Introduction to Working Papers: Selected Essays and Reviews
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2. Jazzman—a lifetime of devotion to jazz, blues, and improvisation in his poetry and essays
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Poem: Blues Sestina for Hayden Carruth
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A Love Supreme: Jazz and the Poetry of Hayden Carruth
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When You Use Your Head, Your Ears Fall Off: My Twenty Years of Listening to Music with the Supernumerary Cockroach
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Those Upward Leaps: An Interview with Hayden Carruth
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Freedom and Discipline: Hayden Carruth’s Blues
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Harmonic Hayden
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Listening In, an Essay-Review of The Sleeping Beauty
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3. Survivor—writing through poverty, personal chaos, and literary isolation
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Poem: Evening Star
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Text as Test, an Excerpt from an Essay-Review of The Sleeping Beauty and Galway Kinnell’s Selected Poems
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My Friend Hayden
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Selected Correspondence, from The Letters of Robert Duncan and Denise Levertov
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Thriving on Hardship
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Others Call It God
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4. Innovator—creator of multiple poetic forms like the “paragraphs,” the “georgics,” the Vermont poems, and the epic poems
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Poem: A Few Riffs for Hayden, Sitting in with His Horn
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Hayden Carruth
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Being Human, the Art of Hayden Carruth
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Beautiful Dreamers: Helen in Egypt and The Sleeping Beauty
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Poem: The Soft Time of the Year
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Contributors
- 978-0-472-11896-0 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-12117-5 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-03632-5 (paper)