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Paper Trail: Selected Prose, 1965-2003

AUTHOR: Richard Howard
ISBN: 0374258856

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Here, for the first time, is a wide-ranging selection of Howard's finest essays, including some never before published in book form, on a splendid array of subjects--from American poets and French artists to modern sculpture and the photography of...

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Paper Trail: Selected Prose, 1965-2003
- Book Review,
by Richard Howard

From Booklist
Howard is a formidable man of letters: a brilliant poet, pioneering translator, revered champion of emerging poets, and learned, far-ranging critic. In this dazzling essay collection, a true landmark volume, Howard exemplifies the benefits of the life of the mind, which for him is a veritable fountain of youth. Over the course of nearly four decades, he has never lost the intellectual vivaciousness of his earlier works even as experience and growing knowledge have deepened his perspective. Howard writes with equal zest and insight about the minutiae of grammar and the grandness of worldviews, the eccentricities of writers and the great sweep of literature. Naturally, given his style and taste, he dissects Henry James and Marianne Moore, but he has also penned clarion and seminal essays on diverse contemporary poets. His meditations on French literature include keen discussions of Gide, Yourcenar, and Proust, and he evinces a sharp eye for the art of the nude in essays on Rodin and Mapplethorpe. Drolly witty, discerning, and wielding a vocabulary and syntax to die for, Howard makes each of his chosen subjects worthy of the reader's most avid attention. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Howard, with a text, is like the boyfriend everyone wants: he sees you for who you really are, and still loves you. His sympathy, like his culture, is immense. At the same time, because of his Stradivarian attunement to language (no surprise in a distinguished poet and translator), he sees what is actually there, the words, and from them alone extracts the meaning. His own use of language is an added gift: high, mandarin, but with pauses and dashes and side thoughts--the movements of a happy mind." --Joan Acocella, author of Willa Cather and the Politics of Criticism

Praise for Richard Howard's Prose:

"[Howard brings] a vocabulary of praise far larger, less inhibited, and more illuminating than any we have had from a critic of contemporary poetry."--Hilton Kramer, The New Republic


Book Description
Richard Howard has been writing stylish, deeply informed commentary on modern culture and literature for more than four decades. Here is a selection of his finest essays, including some never before published in book form, on a splendid range of subjects--from American poets like Emily Dickinson and Marianne Moore to French artists such as Rodin and Michel Delacroix. Also included are considerations of modern sculpture and of the photography of the human body. Howard's intense familiarity with modern poetry is seen to excellent effect in essays on the "poetry of forgetting," on the causes and effects of experimental poetry, and on the first books of poets whose work he helped introduce--among them, J. D. McClatchy, Frank Bidart, and Cynthia MacDonald. Of course, Howard brings to his consideration of French literature a rare wisdom drawn from his celebrated work as a translator of Stendhal and Gide, Barthes and Cocteau, Yourcenar and Gracq.

Hilton Kramer once wrote that Richard Howard "performs the essential critical service. He shows us the extent of the terrain. He points out its essential features. And he gives us a very vivid sense of its ethos as well as of its esthetics." Howard, now in his seventy-fifth year, continues his adroit, inventive commentary, which enriches us all.


About the Author
Richard Howard is a poet, scholar, teacher, critic, and translator. Paper Trail is published simultaneously by FSG with Howard's Inner Voices: Selected Poems, 1963-2003. He teaches at Columbia University and is poetry editor of The Paris Review.



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         Book Review

Paper Trail: Selected Prose, 1965-2003
- Book Reviews,
by Richard Howard

Paper Trail: Selected Prose, 1965-2003

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Richard Howard has been writing stylish, deeply informed commentary on modern culture and literature for more than four decades. His earlier work Alone With America: Essays on the Art of Poetry in the United States Since 1950 has long been hailed as a landmark in literary criticism. Paper Trail is a selection of his finest essays, including some never before published in book form, on a splendid range of subjects - from American poets such as Emily Dickinson and Marianne Moore to French artists such as Rodin and Michel Delacroix. Also included are considerations of modern sculpture and of the photography of the human body.

FROM THE CRITICS

Brad Leithauser - The New York Times

… Howard's essays, more than most, are about process -- the wayward, spontaneous flux of a lively mind in headlong literary discourse, often interrupting itself. They have the authentic feel of a speaking voice -- even if it is impossible to imagine anybody else speaking quite this way.

Library Journal

Howard, a noted poet, translator, scholar, and critic, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1970 and was more recently poet laureate of New York State (1994-96). Published simultaneously with Inner Voices: Selected Poems, 1963-2003, this work focuses on his efforts as a scholar of literary criticism in the areas of modern poetry and French literature over the past 40 years, with essays also covering prose, contemporary poetry, and the visual arts. Insightful and easily accessible, the essays are organized chronologically under broad categories (e.g., new poets) and include some unpublished work. The only thing missing is an introduction. Recommended for all academic collections.-Paolina Taglienti, Las Vegas Coll., North Las Vegas Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Well-crafted essays, forewords, and afterwords on poets and poetry by the critic, translator, editor, and poet. Howard brings sterling credentials to bear; as he writes in an lecture from 1996, with a mixture of irony and pride: "I am not merely a poet, though I am that, and I am not merely a critic of poetry, though I am that. . . . I address you now as a man who has scrutinized the current product (product!-I use the word with a certain compliant twinge) in extenso for thirty dutifully attentive years." So he has. But not just the current product: the collection opens with a sparking essay, from 1973, on Emily Dickinson, who was just then being rediscovered and needed her champions in a rhymeless time. Howard's consideration is highly illuminating, and it well illustrates his magpie technique of turning up glittering oddments: here, for instance, he stops briefly to ponder Dickinson's evident discomfort with the letter n, "as they have always seemed unfinished M's," closing that essay with a modest plea to allow a writer idiosyncrasies and tics that might otherwise bore or provoke us, for these may well "turn out to be that writer's solution to his own problems of composition and utterance." Elsewhere the noted translator of Baudelaire and other French writers turns his attention to Francophone literature, and especially on writers who are not much read today, such as Marguerite Yourcenar (Howard's magpie finding: she irritated Virginia Woolf), Claude Simon, and even the irreplaceable Stendhal. These admiring pieces, for those who care about such things, constitute a welcome antidote to John Miller and Mark Molesky's wooly anti-French screed Our Oldest Enemy (see below), and in anyevent they ought to awaken interest in those writers, which would be a grand service to them. Elsewhere still Howard praises then-new poets such as J.D. McClatchy, the writings of Brassai, the power of storytelling, and kindred matters, giving variety to an altogether satisfactory collection. Of interest to Howard's admirers and students-and anyone with patience for formal concerns, close reading, and "alien eloquence."

AUTHOR DESCRIPTION

Richard Howard is a poet, scholar, teacher, critic, and translator. Paper Trail is published simultaneously by FSG with Howard's Inner Voices: Selected Poems, 1963-2003. He teaches at Columbia University and is poetry editor of The Paris Review.


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