14,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Mass market, second and posthumous edition of the original debut limited-run, saddle-stitched poetry chapbook by Brant Lyon published by Poets Wear Prada in October of 2006. The original chapbook launched the Hoboken-based small independent literary press. This second special "tin" anniversary edition celebrates Poets Wear Prada's 10th year in operation. The new expanded volume includes three additional poems selected by Lyon for inclusion prior to his death.

Produktbeschreibung
Mass market, second and posthumous edition of the original debut limited-run, saddle-stitched poetry chapbook by Brant Lyon published by Poets Wear Prada in October of 2006. The original chapbook launched the Hoboken-based small independent literary press. This second special "tin" anniversary edition celebrates Poets Wear Prada's 10th year in operation. The new expanded volume includes three additional poems selected by Lyon for inclusion prior to his death.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Not to be confused for the championship-winning bicycle racer from Canada with the same name, Brant Lyon has for more than a decade tirelessly pedaled his words and music throughout New York City's poetry circuit and beyond. He has performed at Carnegie Hall, Bowery Poetry Club, The Cornelia Street Café, Galapagos Art Space, and elsewhere in New York City; in the Catskills; as well as in his native New Jersey. Brant currently curates Hydrogen Jukebox, a "jazzoetry" series where the recombinant DNA of word, rhythm, and tone metamorphoses in improvisatory chrysalises and re-emerges as musical logo-imagoes. His poetry has most recently appeared in print and online in "Rattle," "Big City Lit," "Lullwater Review," "The Long Islander," "Medicinal Purposes," "Rogue Scholars Collective" and one cheesy anthology best forgotten. Once a clinical social worker and an administrator of juvenile justice, for now, he leaves it to others to work out their problems, as he frequently bounds out the door for adventure in far-flung places. For the past eight years he has tracked the digital revolution in Egypt, where he and his partner have just opened an internet café in a neighborhood of greater Cairo so obscure only a homing pigeon could find. He otherwise resides in Brooklyn, New York.