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Corn is also a polymath---even describing himself as "globocentric" in an interview at the end of the book---with knowledge and interests extending to languages, theology, music, theater, and the graphic arts. Even though the essays gathered here are all literary in nature, a knowledge of history, of religion, and of the arts underpins every piece, producing a breadth of scope that is refreshing and unpredictable.
The title of the collection, Atlas, is apt in the sense of travel, both physical and abstract. Corn's essays range from a reminiscence of a journey to Elizabeth Bishop's birthplace; to his exchange as a college student of letters with Flannery O'Connor, in which the renowned author writes to Corn about the nature of faith; to his reassessment of Auden's Christmas Oratorio; to his lively look at the "Canterbury Tales"; to Corn's retrospective consideration of Wordsworth. While many such essay collections limit themselves to the modern and contemporary periods, Corn's enthusiasm for Chaucer and Keats is as fresh and inquisitive as that which he holds for Bishop, Thom Gunn, or Derek Mahon.
These engaging pieces from one of our finest poets and essayists will send the reader back to the original texts with new insights and new questions.
Alfred Corn is the author of twelve books of poems, including "Stake: Selected Poems, 1972-1992," and "Contradictions," He has also published a novel and fourworks of literary criticism, including "The Metamorphoses of Metaphor," Corn has received fellowships and prizes from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and the Academy of American Poets. He lives in Hudson, New York.
Visit the author's blog at: http: //alfredcornsweblog.blogspot.com/
A master of the lyric, Alfred Corn is also adept at working in forms, and has published several books featuring long poetic sequences, including a book-length narrative poem modeled on Dante's "Divine Comedy,"
Alfred Corn is at once one of the most learned and the most accessible of contemporary poets, whose work demonstrates a Whitman-esque inclusiveness of myriad aspects of contemporary life, while deploying a formidable prosodic expertise in received and invented forms and meters. Corn is also a polymath, with knowledge and interests extending to music, theater, and the graphic arts. Even though the essays gathered here are all literary in nature, a knowledge of history, of religion, and of the arts underpins every piece, producing a breadth of scope that is refreshing and unpredictable. Essays range from the poet/critic's personal, epistolary encounter with Flannery O'Connor, to his reassessment of Auden's "Christmas" oratorio, to his lively look at the "Canterbury Tales" and his retrospective consideration of Wordsworth. While many such essay collections limit themselves to the modern and contemporary periods, Corn's enthusiasm for Chaucer and Keats is as fresh and inquisitive as that which he holds for Bishop, Thomas Gunn, or Derek Mahon. Corn's engaging, probing pieces will have the inevitable effect of sending the reader back to the original texts with new insights and new questions.
Praise for Alfred Corn:
"A distinguished poet himself, Mr. Corn is especially alert to the influence of the past on poets, how poems speak to other poems in a continuing conversation. . . . He is at his best on the modern American poets Wallace Stevens, John Ashbery, Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, John Hollander, and Hart Crane. . . . Like the best literary essays, these send one back to the originals."
---"The New York Times Sunday Book Review"
Alfred Corn is the author of twelve books of poems, including "Stake: Selected Poems, 1972-1992," and "Contradictions," He has also published a novel and four works of literary criticism, including "The Metamorphoses of Metaphor," Corn has received fellowships and prizes from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and the Academy of American Poets. He lives in Hudson, New York.
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