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The Broken TowerThe Broken Tower

The Broken Tower1999

Paul L. Mariani

About this book

Few poets have lived as extraordinary and fascinating a life as Hart Crane, the American poet who made his meteoric rise in the late 1920s and then as suddenly flamed out, killing himself at the age of thirty-two and thus turning his life and poetry into the stuff of myth. A midwesterner who came to New York to remake not only the face of the city but also American poetry, this young visionary in the tradition of Whitman and Rimbaud insisted on walking always on the edge. Part of the New York gay scene of his time, Crane also played a central part in the contemporary avant-garde New York literary world, along with Cummings, Moore, Toomer, and Williams. Most of all, he gave us a singular poetry, capped by The Bridge (his extraordinary epic celebrating the fabled Brooklyn Bridge), as well as a splendid, polyphonic poetic cadence that has never been duplicated. The first biography of Crane to appear in thirty years, The Brown Tower includes major new discoveries about Crane's life that have surfaced since the 1960s, many culled from previously suppressed letters and other manuscripts, as well as new photographs.

Details

First published
1999
OL Work ID
OL1955251W

Subjects

American PoetsBiographyIn literaturePoets, AmericanPennsylvania, biographyPoets, biographyCrane, hart, 1899-1932New york (n.y.), in literatureNew York Times reviewedPoètes américainsBiographiesLiterature

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.