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Alice Notley on Joanne Kyger
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Jane Falk’s interview with Alice Notley presents a personal view of Kyger from the poets’ first meeting in Bolinas in 1969 to their relationship over the years, addressing her estimation of Kyger’s position in the poetry pantheon and their shared lineage. Notley notes the importance of Kyger’s voice and the vocally sculpted nature of her poetry, points to her uniqueness as a poet, and discusses their mutual connection with figures such as Philip Whalen, Robert Creeley, William Carlos Williams, and Ted Berrigan. The interview serves as a bookend to Notley’s masterful essay on Kyger, “Joanne Kyger’s Poetry,” in her collection Coming After: Essays on Poetry.
Title: Alice Notley on Joanne Kyger
Description:
Jane Falk’s interview with Alice Notley presents a personal view of Kyger from the poets’ first meeting in Bolinas in 1969 to their relationship over the years, addressing her estimation of Kyger’s position in the poetry pantheon and their shared lineage.
Notley notes the importance of Kyger’s voice and the vocally sculpted nature of her poetry, points to her uniqueness as a poet, and discusses their mutual connection with figures such as Philip Whalen, Robert Creeley, William Carlos Williams, and Ted Berrigan.
The interview serves as a bookend to Notley’s masterful essay on Kyger, “Joanne Kyger’s Poetry,” in her collection Coming After: Essays on Poetry.
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