EBOOK

Some Trees

Poems

John Ashbery
5
(1)
Pages
87
Year
2014
Language
English

About

John Ashbery's first published book of poems, handpicked from the slush pile by none other than W. H. Auden Ashbery's Some Trees narrowly beat out a manuscript by fellow New York poet Frank O'Hara to win the renowned Yale Series of Younger Poets prize in 1955-after the book had been rejected in an early screening round. Competition judge W. H. Auden was perhaps the first to note, in his original preface to Some Trees, the meditative polyphony that decades of readers have come to identify as Ashbery's unique style: "If he is to be true to nature in this world, he must accept strange juxtapositions of imagery, singular associations of ideas."   But not all is strange and associative here: Some Trees includes "The Instruction Manual," one of Ashbery's most conversational and perhaps most quoted poems, as well as a number of poems that display his casually masterful handling of such traditional forms as the sonnet, the pantoum, the Italian canzone, and even, with "The Painter," the odd tricky sestina. Some Trees, an essential collection for Ashbery scholars and newbies alike, introduced one of postwar America's most enduring and provocative poetic voices, by turns conversational, discordant, haunting, and wise.

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Reviews

"In his examinations of how it feels to think, and of how thought and feeling interact with the world to make art, Ashbery is an heir of Wallace Stevens."
Reginald Shepherd, Conjunctions
"By reading Ashbery, I step into a delicious, endless party, a bizarre and towering table-talker at the head of the table. His brilliance is not merely that he can swoop from high to low diction, but that his method provides the illusion of intimacy, all the while holding back, just so."
Randall Mann, Poets.org

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