Description

Book Synopsis
I agree with that.... The poetry in the country has become sort of a company affair where support for the arts has just about ruined the arts and the system of bureaucrats managing the funds that are being developed here and there, is turning into trade unionism, which may be the best way to write poetry, but it is unfamiliar to me--A.R. Ammons, when asked if he agreed that the United States has not produced a major poet in the last 30 years. This comprehensive collection contains 31 interviews in which contemporary Southern writers talk about their craft, the trials and tribulations of writing, and about themselves. Poets, short story writers, and novelists are represented, including firmly established writers side by side with newly emerging talent--Lee Smith, James Dickey, A.R. Ammons, Harry Crews, Pat Conroy, Doris Bett, and Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Justice. Their discussions address what it means to be a Southern writer today, the current Southern literary scene, how one becom

Trade Review
readable, down-to-earth, revealing...the interviews make good reading and offer insight into the craft of writing. Recommended--Choice; ""a useful source for students writing about contemporary authors""--North Carolina Libraries; ""warmly human""--Atlanta Journal

Speak So I Shall Know Thee

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    £27.54

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    RRP £28.99 – you save £1.45 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by William J. Walsh

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      View other formats and editions of Speak So I Shall Know Thee by William J. Walsh

      Publisher: McFarland & Company
      Publication Date: 3/30/2012 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780786467495, 978-0786467495
      ISBN10: 0786467495

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      I agree with that.... The poetry in the country has become sort of a company affair where support for the arts has just about ruined the arts and the system of bureaucrats managing the funds that are being developed here and there, is turning into trade unionism, which may be the best way to write poetry, but it is unfamiliar to me--A.R. Ammons, when asked if he agreed that the United States has not produced a major poet in the last 30 years. This comprehensive collection contains 31 interviews in which contemporary Southern writers talk about their craft, the trials and tribulations of writing, and about themselves. Poets, short story writers, and novelists are represented, including firmly established writers side by side with newly emerging talent--Lee Smith, James Dickey, A.R. Ammons, Harry Crews, Pat Conroy, Doris Bett, and Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Justice. Their discussions address what it means to be a Southern writer today, the current Southern literary scene, how one becom

      Trade Review
      readable, down-to-earth, revealing...the interviews make good reading and offer insight into the craft of writing. Recommended--Choice; ""a useful source for students writing about contemporary authors""--North Carolina Libraries; ""warmly human""--Atlanta Journal

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