EBOOK

Girls on the Run

A Poem

John Ashbery
4
(1)
Pages
96
Year
2014
Language
English

About

John Ashbery's wild, deliriously inventive book-length poem, inspired by the adventures of Henry Darger's Vivian Girls Henry Darger, the prolific American outsider artist who died in 1973, leaving behind over twenty thousand pages of manuscripts and hundreds of artworks, is famous for the elaborate alternate universe he both constructed and inhabited, a "realm of the unreal" where a plucky band of young girls, the Vivians, helps lead an epic rebellion against dark forces of chaos. Darger's work is now renowned for its brilliant appropriation of cultural ephemera, its dense and otherworldly prose, and its utterly unique high-low juxtaposition of popular culture and the divine-some of the very same traits that decades of critics and readers have responded to in John Ashbery's many groundbreaking works of poetry.   In Girls on the Run, Ashbery's unmatched poetic inventiveness travels to new territory, inspired by the characters and cataclysms of Darger's imagined universe. Girls on the Run is a disquieting, gorgeous, and often hilarious mash-up that finds two radical American artists engaged in an unlikely conversation, a dialogue of reinvention and strange beauty.

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Reviews

"A terrifyingly accurate transcription of late twentieth-century ways of   communicating . . . It could only have been produced by someone who has this poet's astonishing command of the arcane as well as the classical, whether in literature, art, or music."
Marjorie Perloff, Stand
"As always, Ashbery's verse imparts the sense of a mind meandering with joyful abandon, but here a recurring cast of characters and a storybook syntax create the effect of an honest-to-goodness tale. . . . The poem runs rampant over its linguistic landscape, shifting situations with a dizzying dexterity."
Eric Lorberer, City Pages
"As vital, rambunctious, inventive, and outsiderish as ever."
Eric Lorberer, City Pages

Artists