Amazon.com Review
Anyone who thinks that avant-garde movements can flourish only in Left Bank cafés would do well to read David Lehman's superb new book. Lehman, an editor, essayist, and poet, zeroes in on four extraordinary poets--John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch, and James Schuyler--who were friends, rivals, sometime collaborators, and passionate appreciators of each other's work from the late 1940s through the mid 1960s. This "remarkable gang of four" was, in Lehman's opinion, not only a true avant-garde--collective creators of new, subversive, nonmainstream art--but also "the last authentic avant-garde movement that we have had in American poetry." It's an ambitious thesis, but Lehman pulls it off in a narrative compounded of cultural history, biography, literary analysis, and great gossip.
Most fascinating are Lehman's insights into the inspiration that the poets found in the lives and works of contemporary painters--waggering abstract expressionist artists like Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning and the gentler figurative painters Fairfield Porter, Larry Rivers, and Jane Freilicher, who came after them. As Ashbery put it, "The artists liked us and bought us drinks and we ... felt that they ... were free to be free in their painting in a way that most people felt was impossible for poetry." But each poet made it possible in his own way--Ashbery through surreal word collages, Koch through the pursuit of happiness in verse, O'Hara in witty telephonic stream of consciousness, and Schuyler by treating his feelings as objects. Lehman calls his book a study of "the bliss of being alive and young at a moment of maximum creative ferment," and that bliss fairly shimmers on the page. The Last Avant-Garde, a remarkable hybrid, succeeds in being both critically acute and luminously exciting. --David Laskin
The overseeing editor of the annual
Best American Poetry regards four poets who were young together in New York in the 1950s and whose verbal experimentation was inspired by the abstract expressionist painters of the just-previous generation as the last revolutionaries in U.S. literature. In the big first part of his splendidly lucid, keenly sympathetic book (
this is how to write about poetry), Lehman profiles and analyzes the four--John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch, and James Schuyler--and their context. In the second, he discusses what an avant-garde is, how the New York quartet constituted one, and, without delving too much into the reasons, why they were the last avant-garde. Lehman basically sees the four as new Romantics, determined to again integrate the hoi polloi into literature as Wordsworth had and, like the earlier twentieth-century avant-gardist William Carlos Williams, to use life as they lived it and language as they spoke it to revitalize poetry--to, as Pound challenged, "make it new." Superb popular cultural history.
Ray Olson