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Review Summary: John Berryman: selected poems
Review: A good introduction to Berryman's work, especially strong on the early work, under-represented in other selections I have seen. The later work is less comprehensive: 34 out of "77 dream songs" (44%) is fine; but only 27 out of 308 dream songs in the subsequent "His toy, his dream, his rest" (9%)? That tiny representation must indicate that the editor, Kevin Young, believes that Berryman declined spectacularly as a poet in the late 60s, despite winning the National Book Award for "His toy, his dream, his rest"; and I cannot accept this. My small complaint about this volume really boils down to the imposition of a 200-page upper limit to the volumes in the American poets project. Some poets could be happily represented by 150 pages. Berryman needs 250. However, given this limitation, the editor has done well in presenting a rounded picture of Berryman's achievement, with a short but helpful introdution, and ten pages of notes and background material.
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Review Summary: Well-selected poems of an uneven poet.
Review: I thoroughly enjoyed reading the editor's introduction and these poems of a Pulitzer-Prize-winning poet. They are well selected and represent the entire span of Berryman's work unlike some other collections that lack some of the author's books. My favorite poems are his early poems up to his famous "Homage to Mistress Bradstreet" and his late poems that have lost much of his egotism and drip with regret, humility, and hope of a better life.
A knowledge of Berryman's life is requisite to understand most of his poetry. His father committed suicide when the author was just a boy. Berryman was promptly adopted, given a new last name - Berryman, and sent to a boarding school by his mother and new stepfather - the man with whom his mother was having an affair at the time of his father's suicide. Berryman himself committed suicide at age 57 after years of problems from divorce to alcholism. The editor, Kevin Young, gives a great overview of Berryman's life and allows the reader of these poems the knowledge necessary to enjoy them fully. I think a reader would be lost much of the time without the introduction, so I definitely recommend this particular edition.
His early poems are about the struggle for adulthood. Here is a representative excerpt.
"He is learning, well behind his deperate eyes,
The epistemology of loss, how to stand up
Knowing what every man must one day know
And most know many days, how to stand up"
The influence of Auden, Yeats, Eliot and others are evident. Take these lines:
"The time is coming near
When none shall have books or music, none his dear,
And only a fool will speak aloud his mind.
History is approaching a speechless end"
You could easily place these lines in the middle of Yeats' Second Coming.
There is an undeniable religiosity in Berryman's work from the earliest to the latest poems. Lines like "Finish, Lord, in me this work thou hast begun" are as autobiographical as they are biographical. In one of his last poems he notes, "I do not understand; but I believe".
His middle poems are wildly unpredictable and unconventional. Some are pithy, others whimsical, and still others offensive. Who can not be charmed by a poet who notes, "Life, friends, is boring."
All in all, a great American poet, in a great collection with a great foreword and editor. Four stars.
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Review Summary: Will serve to introduce a whole new generation to his work
Review: John Berryman: Selected Poems is the latest addition to the outstanding "American Poets Project" series from The Library of America. Deftly edited for the reader by poet and essayist Kevin Young, this is the the showcase collection of poetry by the Pulitzer Prize winning John Berryman and will aptly serve to introduce a whole new generation to his work that ranges from wrenching religious poems to verse that is characterized with a mesmerizing diction. King David Dances: Aware to the dry throat of the wide hell in the world,/O trampling empires, and mine one of them,/and mine one gross desire against His sight,/slaughter devising there,/some good behind, ambiguous ahead,/revolted sons, a pierced son, bound to bear,/mid hypocrites amongst idolaters,/mockt in abysm by one shallow wife,/with the ponder both of priesthood & of State/heavy upon me, yea,/all the black same I dance my blue head off! Also very highly recommended as newly released titles in of the "American Poets Project" series are William Carlos Williams: Selected Poems (1931082-715, $20.00) and Amy Lowell: Selected Poems (1931082707, $20.00).