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The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan
 
 
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The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan [Hardcover]

Ted Berrigan (Author), Alice Notley (Editor, Introduction), Anselm Berrigan (Editor), Edmund Berrigan (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0520239865 978-0520239869 November 14, 2005 1
This landmark collection brings Ted Berrigan's published and unpublished poetry together in a single authoritative volume for the first time. Edited by the poet Alice Notley, Berrigan's second wife, and their two sons, The Collected Poems demonstrates the remarkable range, power, and importance of Berrigan's work.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. More than 20 years in preparation, this is a major volume of 20th-century American poetry, bringing together everything that the Providence, R.I.–born Berrigan (1934–1983) would or could have published. Notley (Disobedience, etc.), Berrigan's second wife, and their two sons (both poets) have meticulously re-edited Berrigan's books—he took the book as a real unit of composition—incorporating late drafts and fixes, and carefully re-formatting his very intentionally spaced open field verse. Just as importantly, they have sifted out the chaff from the super-productive Berrigan's oeuvre. Most poetry readers know The Sonnets (1964), Berrigan's brilliant adaptation of Burroughsian cut-ups; they are as fresh, funny and targeted today as were 40 years ago. Fewer, though, know the 11 other books (and many more chapbooks) he published, each one deepening the addresses to friends, lovers, strangers and places (especially New York) around which he structured some very complex, very beautiful, often very delirious and very funny quarrels with people and language, with time and with space. Berrigan was a notoriously charismatic reader, teacher and participant in the community that developed around the Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church; his persona has been cited as often as his poems. This book closes the gap once and for all. (Nov. 14)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"In a life devoted to experimental art, Ted Berrigan shaped his poetry and the space he occupied with a bold artistry based on his playful but powerfully skeptical view of the world. He wondered what might actually be captured within the pages of a book, but

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 758 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; 1 edition (November 14, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520239865
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520239869
  • Product Dimensions: 8.1 x 6.4 x 2.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #427,050 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Berrigan's Best, December 7, 2005
This review is from: The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan (Hardcover)
For anyone who cares about American poetry after WWII, Berrigan's Collected is a major event and a must-have book. Kudos to UC Press for publishing this, and for allowing it to be such a family affair, co-edited by Alice Notley and two of Berrigan's sons, Anselm and Edmund. Berrigan gave to US poetry a breezy, off-the-cuff sense of mastery that seemed to say a poem could be about anything--kids, Pepsi, friends, fights, pills, other books, 3 a.m. walks, and whatever else happens to the poet (or to any of us) through the course of a day. This collects all of Berrigan's books in the order published, a huge feat given the patchwork of small presses that put out his work during his lifetime. It's hard to think of Berrigan without thinking of his time--New York, the `60s and `70s, the tight, fractious poetry underground that he was so large a part of--and I wonder how well some of the poems hold up outside the magic circle of his personality and scene. But I'm not sure the individual poems were as important to Berrigan as the adventure of writing poetry, which comes through in this collection as an act of pure joy, & a special way of being alive.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The speaking voice find's its subject, and everything else in between, July 21, 2008
It's not enough that we have the same first name and the same Irish second initial, my attraction to Berrigan's poems was the rather unbelligerent way he ignored the constricting formalities in poetry and rendered something of a record of his thoughts unspooling as he walked through the neighborhood or went about his tasks. "Where Will I Wander" is the title of a recent John Ashbery volume, and it might well be an apt description of Berrigan's style; shambling, personal, messy, yet able to draw out the sublime phrase or the extended insight from the myriad places his stanzas and line shifts would land on. The world radiated a magic and energy well enough without the poet's talents for making essences clear to an audience needing to know something more about what lies behind the veil, and Berrigan's gift were his personable conflations of cartoon logic, antic flights of lyric waxing, and darkest hour reflection , a poetry which, at it's best, seemed less a poem than it did a monologue from someone already aware that their world was extraordinary and that their task was to record one's ongoing imcomprehension of the why of the invisible world.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Voice That Changed American Poetry Forever, March 11, 2008
By 
Jason Lynn (Corona del Mar, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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Plan your orgy around this book: it deserves it, as it's about 20 years over-due,
and blazes as one of the greatest works of poetry in the late 20 century (Ted one T Rex's boys-of-bliss & juicy pleasure principle, who crafted philosophy into a poem, a poem into a joke & formalism perversely, lovingly, that evolved into a hit-song).

"Let none regret my end who called me friend."

O but we do regret your end, Ted, savagely too early at 48, you
sprightly and singing despite dying slowly and elegantly, and we
all DO think we're your friends because almost no other poet since
Catullus speaks to us as clearly, beautifully and naturally as you do,
NO-ONE else makes us think we're right there with you, sweating in July,
nodding out at a boring reading, getting a hand-job across from CBGBs,
crying at 4 am when no-one else will hear, enjoing a Coke on a train or
the old lady's puckish smirk, waiting at midnight for a friend, lying to bill-collectors and job-interviewers, living as best and beatitudinally we can among all that slams as worst we can. Ted, you take us everywhere.

Ted Berrigan made honesty sing and often dance, while perfecting new forms of poetry that will be a lighthouse for generations in a nation refusing to pay poets
a living for their work. Ted's voice dances sometimes all over the page, his chaos
going where it wants to, a charm-buzzed, self-conscious shuffle that says "what the hell am I doing out here anyway, this is stupid, really, really stupid... ahhhh what the hell, so make a fool of yourself, only the real fools would think so and the greatly living would just jump in...too...AND TURN UP THAT ROCK N ROLL").

Ted Berrigan is the greatest poet of the later 20th Century for the same reason that EZRA POUND was the greatest poet of the early 20 Century: Berrigan's voice is true, direct, philosophical; yet unlike Pound, totally stripped of pomp.

This edition does the near impossible task of collecting Berrigan's sprawling poems, some popped out of literary journals printed in only 100 copies, others hiding in meth & dope-powder'd drawers in NYC, and it has poems long thought extinct, though never in Darwin's sense as this is the prime of the species, but only in some philistine-JP Morgan-like sense in which only cash-value has value. Berrigan is the Tragic Hero of American Poetry, raging like Thomas Paine, and the Comic Relief of American Poetry, mocking like Lenny Bruce. He's just Berrigan, and you'll only understand once you've admitted he just wrote what you already thought before you thought it, "PEOPLE OF THE FUTURE."

"Things To Do In Providence" will one day serve socio-psychoanalysts and archeologists as to how anyone could try to live in 20th century America
and still retain a soul and perhaps even a body.

All that's left for poets to do is write what happens, A. B.,

AFTER BERRIGAN

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I heard Ted say more than once that his collected poems should be like a collected books. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
doan wanna hear, ten greatest books, poetry these days, early morning rain, personal poem, poetry project, morning land, morning line
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Frank O'Hara, Joe Brainard, Ron Padgett, The World Number, Ann Arbor, Tom Clark, Guillaume Apollinaire, William Carlos Williams, Allen Ginsberg, John Ashbery, Philip Whalen, Jesse James, First Avenue, Fred Astaire, Black Nausea, Chesterfield King, Francis Marion, Max Jacob, Memorial Day, Bette Davis, Bobby Dylan, Bowery Santa Clauses, Brooklyn Bridge, George Schneeman Cover
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