Acclaimed essayist and poet Wendell Berry was born and has always lived in a “provincial” part of the country without an established literary culture. In an effort to adapt his poetry to his place of Henry County, Kentucky, Berry discovered an enduringly useful example in the work of William Carlos Williams. In Williams’ commitment to his place of Rutherford, New Jersey, Berry found an inspiration that inevitably influenced the direction of his own writing.
Both men would go on to establish themselves as respected American poets, and here Berry sets forth his understanding of that evolution for Williams, who in the course of his local membership and service, became a poet indispensable to us all.
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From Booklist It isn’t surprising that farmer-poet Berry reports ever-increasing affinity with physician-poet Williams, the single first-generation American modernist who took his home ground and people as his prime subject and audience respectively and, so doing, spoke to the world. He is indisputably Berry’s great model, though Berry is a rural, Williams an urban, poet, as Berry verifies in his thorough discussion of Williams’ poetic practice. Williams formulated his own poetics in his poetry, and through his conceptions of the imagination and its work (which Berry saliently compares to Coleridge’s much more famous ones), he honored the great modernist injunction to “make it new”; that is, Berry understands Williams to be saying, to participate in the original work of creation. Generously quoting many of Williams’ best lines, tenderly confessing when he doesn’t understand Williams (e.g., Williams’ elusive “variable foot”), and referring to his own life and work to clarify what he thinks about Williams, Berry produces a work of aesthetics more than evaluation, of love more than critique. --Ray Olson
Review Praise for The Poetry of William Carlos Williams
"Generously quoting many of Williams’ best lines, tenderly confessing when he doesn’t understand Williams (e.g., Williams’ elusive “variable foot”), and referring to his own life and work to clarify what he thinks about Williams, Berry produces a work of aesthetics more than evaluation, of love more than critique." — Booklist
"Berry's superb study reminds us that Williams remains our contemporary not only for the lively cadences and fresh imagery that animate his poems, but for the ethical imperative of his example: to know ourselves as creatures of a particular place and, through that grounded knowledge, to develop the arts that will enable us to live in it over the long haul." — The Sewanee Review
Praise for Wendell Berry
"Generously quoting many of Williams’ best lines, tenderly confessing when he doesn’t understand Williams (e.g., Williams’ elusive “variable foot”), and referring to his own life and work to clarify what he thinks about Williams, Berry produces a work of aesthetics more than evaluation, of love more than critique." — Booklist
“He can be said to have returned American poetry to a Wordsworthian clarity of purpose.” — The New York Times Book Review
“Berry’s nonfiction soars because its language is guided by thrift and propriety, a literary illustration of just the values that his words espouse.” — San Francisco Chronicle
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