The Pocket Poets Anthology

by Lawrence Ferlinghetti (Editor)

Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

PN6101 .C57

Publication

City Lights Books (1996), Edition: First Printing, 259 pages

Description

"Printer's ink is the greater explosive."--Lawrence Ferlinghetti Lawrence Ferlinghetti founded the City Lights publishing house sixty years ago in 1955, launching the press with his now legendary Pocket Poets Series. First in the series wasPictures of the Gone World--and within a year, he had brought out two more volumes, translations by Kenneth Rexroth and then, poems by Kenneth Patchen. But it was the success and scandal of Number Four,Howl & Other Poems by Allen Ginsberg (1956), that put City Lights on the map, positioning the Pocket Poets Series at the forefront of the literary counterculture. A landmark sixtieth retrospective celebrating 60 years of publishing and cultural history, this edition provides an invaluable distillation of the energetic, iconoclastic and still fresh body of work represented in the ongoing series. Ferlinghetti has selected a handful of poems from each of the sixty volumes, including the work of Ginsberg, Kerouac, Corso, Pasolini, Voznesensky, Prévert, Mayakovsky, Cortázar, O'Hara, Ponsot, Levertov, di Prima, Duncan, Lamantia, Lowry, and more, all of the Pocket Poets Series' innovative, influential, and often ground-breaking American and international poets.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member GypsyJon
Great little anthology of poems by Ferlinghettis friends. Bought it at his book store, City Lights, in San Francisco. The book store is a a must see if you visit there.
LibraryThing member cschack
Granted, this probably gets an extra star on account of added sentimental value, but still: A magnificent reader from City Lights.
LibraryThing member Richj
Great selection of really good poets. Maybe less Kerouac and more Ferlinghetti would be better but that's just my taste. A great place to jump into poets from the 50s (and earlier) to the 90s.
LibraryThing member AliceAnna
99% pure crap with 1% inspiration.
LibraryThing member DanielSTJ
This was a very interesting, influential (for the movement), and inspiring collection of writings from various people that associated themselves with Ferlinghetti's press and the Beat Generation. I was especially enamored with the non-fiction pieces, particularly towards the end, that had been
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assembled. The poetry was a mosh-mash and much of it, I found, hung down the wayside and left me with a feeling of incompleteness. However, there were also portions of extracts from Rimbaud that brought up the value of the collection- as well as an account of experiences between Ginsberg and Ezra Pound near the beginning of the book that were riveting and revealing in nature (about the type of people the two poets were.)

Overall- a good anthology. I appreciated what it was aiming for and, even if it fell apart a little in parts, it was still worth reading.

3.25 stars.
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Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0872863115 / 9780872863118
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