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D**R
Line breaks are not accurate
This edition is worthless because the line breaks are not reproduced accurately.
I**E
Ight
I do feel guilty leaving such a respected poet with duo stars. but I think he'll live, proverbially, of course. if you happen to land here, I must add, do yourself the favor of schooling yourself.O'Hara is a must for any lower east side poet still scratching his itch sole with a pencil
J**.
The book itself is an adorable and convenient size and was in pristine condition when ...
Frank O'Hara is my kind of poet. If you believe that poetry should be ardous and verbose with exquisite similes and hidden meanings, he might not be for you. He's the sort of poet who proves that sometimes simplicity can be the trick.The book itself is an adorable and convenient size and was in pristine condition when I received it.
M**R
"Now when I walk around at lunchtime I have only two charms in my pocket"
Frank O'Hara's reputation seems caught in a holding period, an awkward stage preliminary to his work becoming universal and timeless.Consider, for example, the final scene in the opening episode of the second season of "Mad Men," the cable TV series set in the world of advertising as practiced in New York in the early 1960s. We see the show's protagonist, Don Draper, picking up a slim volume of O'Hara's poems ("Meditations in an Emergency," 1957). He recites the final lines from "Mayakovsky." There is an ambivalence to the scene. Was the O'Hara poem chosen for its intrinsic merit, or was the O'Hara name used as an easy marker for the zeitgeist (the same way the show's producers highlight the period-specific cut of Draper's suit and hair and attitudes)? With friends like these, when will O'Hara escape his confinement to the mannerist ghetto of the "New York School"?And so some readers may pick up "Lunch Poems" (first published in 1964) after seeing it praised as an emblematic cultural document of mid-twentieth century America. Yet even if the time-bound aura of O'Hara is the come-on, what makes you stay enthralled is his voice -- a "thinking" voice as vitally American as Whitman or Frost.There are 37 poems in "Lunch Poems" and their quality as well as their accessibility varies. The poems span a period from 1953 to 1964. This book is not a "best of" O'Hara collection, yet it does contain what may be his most durable poem.A few of these short pieces are so recondite that they lose me. In a few others O'Hara raises an opaque scrim to suggest beauty beckoning from the other side, and these poems begin to "click" only after multiple readings. But the majority of the poems are freshly-minted coins granting immediate access to a lively, urbane worldview. While general knowledge of the New York cultural scene in the '50s and early '60s is helpful, these poems, at their best, easily communicate to us in a way undimmed by the passage of time.The poems are populated with the poet's friends and lovers, with artists and musicians, and with the conversation of meals and parties. Here are O'Hara's travel experiences and his love of foreign languages (you could write an essay on the myriad uses of French in O'Hara's poetry). The man wears his erudition lightly on his sleeve. He's enamored of both high and low American culture: "I am ashamed of my century for being so entertaining but I have to smile" ("Naphtha", 1959). Another poem from the same year, "Rhapsody," contains a premonition of O'Hara's early death a few years later: "I historically belong to the enormous bliss of American death."Most delightful is his man-on-the-street reportage that spins off in all directions. A typical bout of intense observation occurs in "A Step Away From Them," which begins: "It's my lunch hour, so I go for a walk among the hum-colored cabs."In what I think are the best of the poems, the cityscape serves as a platform for accessible philosophizing. An enduring example is "The Day Lady Died." Is there another poem where so much meaning resides in its title? At first glance the title rattled me. In it I heard a rhythm, but an uncertain one. Then I hit upon the answer: simply reverse "Day Lady" to reveal "Lady Day," the nickname of blues singer Billy Holiday whose dark night of the soul ended in 1959. The displaced "day" (her missing day) had to be displaced (had to go missing) from O'Hara's title. The text of the poem recounts the day the poet walked the streets and avenues of Manhattan attending to errands. These everyday pleasures come to a halt when O'Hara spies a tabloid newspaper's front page announcing Holiday's death at age 44. It is the day after death, the first of many days fate denied her.In the poem's final stanza O'Hara recalls once hearing Holiday perform at the Five Spot Café, and here the poet accomplishes a wonder. He turns death into something other than displacement and omission. Memory overpowers death, conjoining time present and time past.
M**E
Nifty
Nifty little volume. Truly made for reading at lunch. O’Hara of course is the best. Just gets better as the years pass along.
A**.
Delightful!
I agree, Frank O'Hara's Lunch Poems are delicious! A fine and proper introduction to his work spanning the years of 1953-1964. They include my (and other's) favorites, "The Day Lady Died," "Ave Maria," and "Poem (Lana Turner has collapsed!)". Each poem is worth the price of the collection. Excellent poetry!Allen Hagar
J**T
as advertised.
thank you
J**D
Ashbery's preface and Ferlinghetti's introduction to the letters O'Hara and Ferlinghetti exchanged in 1964—all a delight. And no
There have been some lovely additions to the original edition: Ashbery's preface and Ferlinghetti's introduction to the letters O'Hara and Ferlinghetti exchanged in 1964—all a delight. And now on page 21 "The Day Lady Died"— always hauntingly beautiful. If you love O'Hara, you should have it!
S**L
O'Hara is my favourite poet and this book is great in size
O'Hara is my favourite poet and this book is great in size, meaning I can take it wherever and includes some of his most famous poems
M**S
I bought this
Nice book, good size...steps is where it's at
M**C
Five Stars
Gorgeous words in a gorgeous edition.
J**N
Five Stars
Great book and well written.
F**N
Five Stars
Absolutely thrilling
A**R
Five Stars
Nice book of poems
N**R
Thank God, boring literature year saved by this man.
Last year was the first year of my undergraduate in Literature and I was so, unbelievably, relieved when this book was introduced to me. Frank O'Hara is touching, funny and unusual in style and I fell in love with some of his pieces, would recommend to anyone. They're not just appropriate for a literature student either as his style sets him apart from the other, in my opinion quite stuffy and regimented, poets I've come across. He abolishes rhyme and often has a very un-regular schema in place (yes, I lack the words to describe him- just try it!).Above all the simple, un-pretentious, title 'Lunch Poems' reflects well his character and writing style- he wrote these poems whilst on his lunchs breaks (during his job as an art curator) in New York. He likes to tell it as it is.
G**O
Ótimo
Edição simples e bonita. Ótimos poemas e boas reflexões vida de Frank O'Hara. Uma pena que quase não foi traduzido no Brasil.
A**R
to my mind this small book is the best book of American poetry in the twentieth century (with ...
Pound per pound, to my mind this small book is the best book of American poetry in the twentieth century (with many close seconds).
H**E
Thin, plastic, and cheap
Just like me! You get what you pay for here. Content is still great.
P**A
Rápido e em perfeitas condições
Muito obrigada!
B**N
Five Stars
Simply one of the best short collections anyone could ask for. These poems speak to anyone.
A**R
Five Stars
Great!
C**C
Four Stars
A modern classic.
T**S
Five Stars
Great book
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