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Anthony Hecht (1923-2004) was one of America's greatest poets,
winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and widely recognized as a master of
formal verse that drew on wide-ranging cultural and literary
sources, as well as Hecht's experiences as a soldier during World
War II, during which he fought in Germany and Czechoslovakia and
helped to liberate the Flossenburg concentration camp. In Late
Romance, David Yezzi--himself a renowned poet and critic--reveals
the depths that informed the meticulous surfaces of Hecht's poems.
Born to a wealthy German-Jewish family in Manhattan, Hecht saw his
father lose nearly everything during the stock market crash of
1929. He grew into an accomplished athlete, actor, writer, and
eventually a soldier in the crucible that consumed the world.
Returning from the war, Hecht struggled to reconcile what he had
witnessed and experienced, suffering from mental illness that
required hospitalization. But he found the means to channel his
emotions into poetry of lasting meaning, control, and depth; along
with Robert Lowell, James Merrill, Theodore Roethke, and Elizabeth
Bishop, Hecht remains a vital presence in letters. Published to
celebrate the 100th year of his birth, and to coincide with an
edition of his collected poems (to be published by Knopf), Late
Romance is the definitive, dramatic biography of a uniquely-gifted
writer.
Like Robert Frost's North of Boston, David Yezzi's Birds of the Air
intersperses charged lyrics with longer dramatic narratives. His
monologues explore the frenetic pressures of urban life, as a
number of memorable characters take stage: the guy who is hired to
clear out a dying man's apartment; the actor stuck in an
inadvertently hilarious production of Macbeth and his estranged
girlfriend's tragic end; and the short-order cook who elevates his
work to an art form. Like the birds of the air described by St.
Matthew, these threadbare denizens of the modern city subsist on
the few scraps that fall to them.
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