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Letters to Yesenin (Copper Canyon Classics)

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Book Details

Author(s)Jim Harrison
ISBN / ASIN1556592655
ISBN-139781556592652
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank896,661
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

The way Harrison has embedded his entire vision of our predicament implicitly in the particulars of two poetic lives, his own and Yesenin s, is what makes the poem not only his best but one of the best in the past twenty-five years of American writing. Hayden Carruth, Sulfur

Harrison inhabits the problems of our age as if they were beasts into which he had crawled, and Letters to Yesenin is a kind of imaginative taxidermy that refuses to stay in place up on the trophy room wall, but insists on walking into the dining room. The American Poetry Review

Jim Harrison s gorgeous, desperate, and harrowing correspondence with Sergei Yesenin a Russian poet who committed suicide after writing his final poem in his own blood is considered an American masterwork.

In the early 1970s, Harrison was living in poverty on a hardscrabble farm, suffering from depression and suicidal tendencies. In response he began to write daily prose-poem letters to Yesenin. Through this one-sided correspondence, Harrison unloads to this unlikely hero, ranting and raving about politics, drinking problems, family concerns, farm life, and a full range of daily occurrences. The rope remains ever present.

Yet sometime through these letters there is a significant shift. Rather than feeling inextricably linked to Yesenin s inevitable path, Harrison becomes furious, arguing about their imagined relationship: I m beginning to doubt whether we ever would have been friends.

In the end, Harrison listened to his own poems: My year-old daughter s red robe hangs from the doorknob shouting Stop.

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