My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer
Jack Spicer, , edited by Peter Gizzi and Kevin Killian. . Wesleyan, $35 (496pp) ISBN 978-0-8195-6887-8
The Los Angeles–born Spicer died young, at age 40 in 1965, of acute alcoholism. In his lifetime, he published six books of poems with tiny presses. Though he was influential, he operated in a small circle, mostly in Berkeley. It was at the Six Gallery he cofounded that Ginsberg gave the first reading of “Howl” in 1955; he was very close to the poets Robert Duncan and Robin Blaser, but as the editors of this extraordinary collection point out, “Spicer was never fully embraced within the official culture or counter-culture of the period.” This remarkably fresh assemblage, which gathers from two earlier posthumous (and now out-of-print) collections and adds many unpublished poems and sequences, will dramatically expand Spicer's influence. Like the work of Emily Dickinson and W.B. Yeats, Spicer's poems still seem to come from somewhere else (in fact, Spicer claimed he received Martian signals). But what a reader finds here is a poet deeply engaged with language, a gay man consumed by desperate affairs of the heart and flesh, a lover of jazz and baseball and weather, and possessed of the tenderest lyricisms and biting wit. His
Reviewed on: 10/20/2008
Genre: Fiction
Open Ebook - 508 pages - 978-0-8195-7109-0
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