Lorine Niedecker: Collected Works
G**E
Beyond What
Lorine Niedecker was a really underappreciated poet during her lifetime but that has changed over the last twenty years or so. My favorites are the early, self styled surrealist works which she later abandoned because of discouragement she got from Louis Zukofsky and Ezra Pound. Her relationship with Zukofsky was a double edged sword. On the one hand he helped her get published and put her in touch with the world of avant-garde poetry. On the other I think he had a kind of stifling influence on her own poetry. Now if she had hooked up with Gertrude Stein or someone like that things might have turned out differently. Still she wrote some fantastic stuff throughout her career with very vivid imagery and she never completely lost touch with her own surrealistic tendencies. I checked this book out of the library first and read through it along with a biography. I decided that I wanted it for my collection as she was one of the great modern poets.
P**P
Wonderful minimal poetry
Lorine Niedecker was virtually unknown in her lifetime. She died in 1970, leaving a body of work of which only a portion was published. She has been compared to Emily Dickinson because of the brevity and clarity of her poems. There are very few long ones. But there is an undercurrent of dry humour and a feeling for rhyme and assonance that is quite different to Dickinson. These poems are wonderfully compressed-every word is loaded with intent. To quote: "it took me a lifetime/to weep/a deep/trickle". She fills them with the kind of domestic detail you don't usually find in poems - cupboards, plumbing and oil stoves, as well as her proximity to nature (she lived in a cabin on a marshy island that for a long time had no running water or electricity). Most of her life's work is collected here - a life compressed, a fascinating life and personality. I didn't put it down.
H**S
a quiet and enduring pleasure
It is an enduring pleasure to read this collected volume by a major 20th c. poet whose voices feels so original, so purely her own. These poems--these utterances--emerge from relative isolation, despite correspondences with other poets, such that one feels the solitary poet alive and alert in a landscape of birds, plants, water and the rhythms of nature, rather than the cacophony of the city and people and professions and egos. I've read this so many times already, and will return to it again and again.
B**R
Must-Read Poetry
Lorine Niedecker is an amazing poet whose relatively limited fame matches in no way the extent of her talent.
R**N
An Objectivist Poet from Wisconsin
I first learned of Lorine Niedecker (1903 -- 1970) from reading a selection of her poetry in Volume 2 of the Library of America's Anthology of American Poetry of the Twentieth Century. I was intrigued by the restrained, simple, and succinct character of the poems for two reasons. First, they reminded me opf poetry I knew: of the work of Charles Reznikoff, in particular, and of his fellow-objectivist poets, Louis Zukofsky, George Oppen, and W.C. Williams. I later learned, of course, that Niedecker knew these writers, and was close to them. She was particularly close to Louis Zukofsky, with whom she carried on a forty year correspondence and had a brief affair.I was also intrigued when I learned that Lorine Niedecker spent most of her life in the small town of Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, which is approximately mid-way between Milwaukee and Madison. She lived on a small island called Black Hawk Island outside the town where her family rented cabins and fished. Much of her life was spent in poverty and for several years she was employed scrubbing floors in the local hospital. Most of the poets with whom Niedecker was associated lived in New York City. Although she visited New York City and spent time with Zukofsky, for the most part she learned and practiced her art by herself.I was familiar with Fort Atkinson because I lived for a short time in my early 20's in Jefferson, Wisconsin, an even smaller town just adjacent to Fort Atkinson. I was there briefly in the early 1970's, just after Niedecker's death (She lived in Milwaukee at the time.) and I don't remember hearing anything about her. Today the town of Fort Atkinson and the local library where Niedecker worked for a time are active in preserving her memory. I was moved to discover the work of this outstanding modernist poet who lived in obsurity in an area with which I was familiar.I was grateful to find this collected edition of Niedecker's works edited by Jenny Penberthy, Professor of English at Capilano College, Vancouver. Ms. Penberthy has also edited a recently-published collection of letters between Niedecker and Zukofsky together with a book of critical essays: "Lorine Niedecker: Woman and Poet". This collected edition of Niedecker's poetry is attractively put togther, includes good notes and a listing of Niedecker's published volumes, and begins with an informative introduction by Ms. Penberthy to Niedecker's life and work. The poems are arranged chronologically. The book includes Niedecker's early efforts and also includes some important prose and radio pieces, including the short work "Switchboard Girl" and a radio adaption of Faulkner's "As I lay dying." Ms. Penberthy has done a great service in making Niedecker's work available.Much of Niedecker's early work was as a folk-poet. In 1946, she published a collection of 80 short poems called "New Goose", which was based on the rhythms of the Mother Goose nursery rhymes. These poems describe life in rural Wisconsin and show a strong sense of political activism -- in common with Zukofsky. They point to the injustices and hardships Niedecker found in war, the Depression, and a capitalist economy. A subsequent collection of early poems was titled "For Paul", named after Zukofsky's young son, and featuring meditations on music, art, and the world of nature.Niedecker's later poetry becomes much more spare and formal. She tended to write short poems, in five lines with irregular feet. She was influenced by Haiku and by Chinese poetry aw well as by her fellow-objectivists. These poems are autobiographical, and include many scenes of life on Black Hawk Island. The longest of these poems is titled "Paean to Place". Later poems also describe the Lake Superior area around Sault Ste. Marie which Niedecker visited with her husband whom she married late in life. She also grew increasingly interested in historical themes and wrote poetry about Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Adlai Stevenson, and Charles Darwin, among others. These poems integrate extensively quotations from their subjects into the text of the poems.Niedecker's poems include irony, reflection, and a deep sense of place. They show a person who had learned to be alone with herself. Here is a short untitled poem by Niedecker (p. 157) which I hope will encourage you to read more."The death of my poor fatherleaves debtsand two small houses.To settle this estatea thousand fees arise--I enrich the law.Before my own death is certified,recorded, final judgementjudgedTaxes taxedI shall own a bookof old Chinese poemsand binocularsto probe the rivertrees."This is a collection of the works of an American poet who deserves to be read and remembered.
R**H
just doesn't get any more real
The other reviews here are better, but I just needed to tell you how much this book changed my view of words, writing... all that stuff. Or even more than that. After reading her poems, I went outside and things just looked different. Don't worry about what you do or don't know, these are really worth reading.
W**)
It is solid work. It is always true.
Let me tell you about Lorine Niedecker. She did not apologize for being born. This volume--far exceeding the much derided previous collected "From This Condensery"--represents the very best of Twentieth Century American poetry, let there be no doubt. More than just poems that echo Dickinson, Zukovsky, Williams, and who else, "Collected Works" will now surely stand as one of the cornerstones of American poetry, thanks to the hard work of editor Jenny Penberthy. The best of these poems--"Darwin" and "Paen to Place", among others--are beautiful distillations of the real. And other pieces, such as the radio plays, show great, surreal humor. Lorine from Ft. Atkinson is one the best.
C**E
A Baedecker of Niedecker
This is the definitive Niedecker. If you love poetry, you owe it to yourself to read Niedecker. Her influences run from surrealism, to Objectivism, to Haiku. Niedecker is an American original as distinctive in her way as Dickinson was in hers. We are in Jenny Penberthy's debt for bringing Niedecker's work to the attention of 21st Century readers.
B**D
WISCONSIN'S EMILY D
Niedecker,a 'poetic princess'in verse,austere free of ornament often concise,bare yet in effective short form poetics,a mixture of Dickinson's enigmatic untitled style,and akin to Moore's open format.Over half a century(1920 thru 1970)Lorine's develpment moved from the surreal through folk poetry, to her minimalist distinctive 5 line stanza (tanka type)of her last two decades.Penberthy's thoughtful,chronologically structured book,together with exhaustive,and easy accessed notes enable the reader to quickly grasp the 'essential' Niedecker! Thus her book is the definitive guide to what might be described as the most 'invisible' US poet of the late 20th century modern poetic genre.
S**E
good service
It was a Christmas present so very pleased it came quickly
S**E
Five Stars
Thank you
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