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The Years of Our Friendship: Robert Lowell and Allen Tate by William Doreski This well-informed study examines the complexly faceted and often troubled friendship of two poets united by the bonds of imagination and mutual needs. Drawing upon both published and unpublished correspondence as well as upon their individual works, the author gives fresh insight into the lives and poetry of Robert Lowell and Allen Tate through the special nature of their friendship. Here is a book that shows how Lowell was both a charismatic figure and a trial to his friends. His relationships were tense, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Years of Our Friendship: Robert Lowell and Allen Tate by William Doreski This well-informed study examines the complexly faceted and often troubled friendship of two poets united by the bonds of imagination and mutual needs. Drawing upon both published and unpublished correspondence as well as upon their individual works, the author gives fresh insight into the lives and poetry of Robert Lowell and Allen Tate through the special nature of their friendship. Here is a book that shows how Lowell was both a charismatic figure and a trial to his friends. His relationships were tense, and although the friends he made in school remained consistently loyal through his bouts of madness, and although his wives repeatedly forgave seemingly unforgivable acts, not all, including Lowell himself, were aware that his behavior often bordered on outrage. His forty-year friendship with Tate, perhaps more than any other, exemplifies the tension that was generated by a close friendship with Lowell. The varied strands of this relationship constitute the substance of this compelling book as it exposes and explores the complex psychological and literary bonds that linked Lowell and Tate. It assesses an ambivalent friendship beginning with Lowell as student and younger friend of Tate, as well as Tate as literary mentor who considered the younger poet to be his protegé even when Lowell was fifty-three. It shows also their mutual love of the formal aspects of poetry and a faith in inspiration that, for Lowell, not only bordered on but sometimes crossed the line into madness. It shows, as well, a Tate sometimes hostile to Lowell's shifting poetics. Certain aspects of their relationship, particularly Lowell's attempt to find in Tate an intellectual and literary father figure, are of less interest to the author of this study than the powerful impact Tate's poetry and literary example exerted upon Lowell's life and work. In The Years of Our Friendship he focuses chiefly upon this result of their intense literary bond. William Doreski is a professor of English at Keene State College in New Hampshire.
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Autorenporträt
William Doreski grew up in Connecticut and lived in Boston, Cambridge, and Arlington (MA) for many years before moving to the wilds of New Hampshire. He attended various colleges, and after a certain amount of angst received a Ph.D. from Boston University. He has published several collections of poetry, and three critical studies - The Years of Our Friendship: Robert Lowell and Allen Tate (University Press of Mississippi, 1990), The Modern Voice in American Poetry (University Press of Florida, 1995), and Robert Lowell's Shifting Colors (Ohio University Press, 1999) - and a textbook, How to Read and Interpret Poetry (Prentice-Hall). His critical essays, poetry, and reviews have appeared in many academic and literary journals, including Massachusetts Review, Yale Review Notre Dame Review, The Alembic, New England Quarterly, Harvard Review, Modern Philology, Antioch Review, Natural Bridge, and many others.