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Verlag: Coffee House Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 1566892562ISBN 13: 9781566892568
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New. Padgett s witty poems ache to save the world surpassing moral superiority and infusing light, energy, and humor into everyday life.Über den AutorrnrnRon Padgett is a celebrated translator, memoirist, and, a thoroughly American poe.
Verlag: Lovebooks Ltd, London, 1965
Anbieter: Brian Cassidy Books at Type Punch Matrix, Silver Spring, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Very good +. First Edition. Short-lived mag founded by Barry Miles (with Berrigan listed as the New York editor), later published as the LONG HAIR TIMES. With poetry and prose from a stellar roster of contributors, including Ginsberg who "declined payment" for his work (which was thus distributed among the others, as Miles writes on inside front cover). Interestingly includes a poem from the free jazz musician Archie Shepp. An imporant document of the transatlantic 1960s literary counterculture. [Morgan C235 & C236]. Wraps. Small 8vo. Perfect bound pictorial wraps. A very good plus copy. Small chip to spine. Mild toning to wraps. Interior clean, bright throughought. Good and sound. 80pp.
First printing. 80 pp., 6.5 x 8 inches. Perfect-bound in printed card covers. Edited by Barry Miles, with Ted Berrigan as New York editor. Minor toning and creasing to covers; title written neatly on unprinted spine, otherwise a very good, sound copy. An incredible transatlantic assemblage (a "North Atlantic turn-on," per the cover), beginning with 26 pages of compositions from Ginsberg's journals ("Ankor-Wat"), and including, along with the more familiar names listed above, such interesting and under-attended writers as Paul Ableman, Christopher Perret, and musician Archie Shepp. Per the editor's prefatory notes, Ginsberg "declined payment for ëAnkor Wat' and his money has been divided between the other contributors." There appears to have been no second issue of Long Hair proper, which was succeeded by Long Hair Times (also one issue? which included issues of The Gate, published by the London Free School, and Ed Sanders Newsletter), and eventually the International Times.Worth the price of admission for the ads, contributors' notes, and breathless insurrectionary editorial alone!.