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Stephen Burt

Stephen Burt’s The Forms of Youth: Twentieth-Century Poetry and Adolescence came out last year; he teaches at Harvard. A collection of his essays on contemporary poets will appear next year.

From the London Review dated 21 February 2008

What Life Says to Us

For a spell during the 1960s, Robert Creeley’s ‘I Know a Man’ may have been the most often quoted, even the most widely known, short poem by a living American. Written around 1954, the poem got wide notice after For Love (1962), Creeley’s first trade collection, and it is not hard to see why. Sad and funny at once, with a trick ending, it undercuts the pretensions of high culture: what earlier poet would admit ‘I am/always talking,’ or suggest that his own verse exemplified mere ‘talk’? Better yet, ‘I Know a Man’ undercuts hip counterculture too: old and new art, Romantic despair and groovy enthusiasm, seem comically and equally irrelevant to the hurried American who just wants to get safely down the road. [ read more . . . ]

Selected bibliography

  • The Forms of Youth: Twentieth-Century Poetry and Adolescence (2007)
  • Parallel Play (2007)
  • Randall Jarrell and His Age (2003)
  • Popular Music (2000)

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In the LRB archive

Kick over the Scenery · 3 July 2008

  • Four Novels of the 1960s: ‘The Man in the High Castle’, ‘The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch’, ‘Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?’, ‘Ubik’ by Philip K. Dick  Buy this book
  • Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s: ‘Martian Time-Slip’, ‘Dr Bloodmoney’, ‘Now Wait for Last Year’, ‘Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said’, ‘A Scanner Darkly’ by Philip K. Dick  Buy this book

subscriber-only content Poem: ‘Peonies’ · 10 April 2008

What Life Says to Us · 21 February 2008

Chicory and Daisies · 7 March 2002

  • Collected Poems: Volume I by William Carlos Williams, edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan
  • Collected Poems: Volume II by William Carlos Williams, edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan

Not currently in the LRB archive

 not available in archive Hi, Louise! · 20 July 2000

  • In Memory of My Feelings: Frank O’Hara and American Art by Russell Ferguson
  • The Last Avant-Garde: The Making of the New York School of Poets by David Lehman
  • Frank O’Hara: Poet among Painters by Marjorie Perloff

 not available in archive Now for the Hills · 16 March 2000

From the LRB letters page