Skip to content

Beat Writers at Work (Modern Library (Paperback))
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Beat Writers at Work (Modern Library (Paperback)) Paperback - 1999

by Review, Paris; Moody, Rick; Plimpton, George [Editor]; Moody, Richard [Introduction];

  • Used
  • Paperback

Collected here are interviews with the great Beat and Black Mountain writers from the pages of "The Paris Review". In this new compendium, the writers describe their art and lives, creating a unique and fascinating record of their inspirations.

Drop Ship Order

Description

Modern Library, 1999-02-16. Paperback. Like New.
New
NZ$25.01
NZ$6.64 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 4 to 14 days
More Shipping Options
Ships from Mediaoutletdeal1 (Virginia, United States)

Details

About Mediaoutletdeal1 Virginia, United States

Biblio member since 2014
Seller rating: This seller has earned a 2 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.

Terms of Sale:

30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

Browse books from Mediaoutletdeal1

Categories

Media reviews

From the pages of The Paris Review and
edited by George Plimpton, the "Writers at Work" interviews, with the great figures of the Beat
and Black Mountain movements

"        Mr. Plimpton and his able cohorts at The Paris Review have cannily chosen this historical moment for the retrieval of this archive, viz., the fortieth anniversary of Kerouac's masterpiece, and also the recent departures of Ginsberg and Burroughs to celestial addresses, and thus we have a real warts-and-all retrospective, ex post facto, Kerouac in the late sixties, Ginsberg (in one of two pieces here) in the late seventies, Bowles in the eighties, Snyder in the nineties, so that the high period of Beat style is well past at the time of these conversations; Plimpton's wisdom here amounts to permitting the language and form of these interviews to persist over the years and thereby accrue historical context, in which we are enabled to see how the Beat praxis (or Black Mountain praxis) is reactive when faced with such forces as Vietnam, hippie culture, eighties consumerism, neglect by literary history, and so forth."
--from the Introduction by Rick MoodyIntroduction by Rick Moody  ¸  William Burroughs (1965)

Allen Ginsberg (1966)  ¸  Robert Creely (1968)  ¸  Jack Kerouac (1968)
Charles Olson (1970)  ¸  Voznesensky, Ginsberg, Orlovsky (1980)
Paul Bowles (1981)  ¸  Ken Kesey (1994)
A Semester with Allen Ginsberg (1995)  ¸  Gary Snyder (1996)
Barney Rosset (1997)  ¸  Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1998)

Read Women Writers at Work in the same series