Books for Independent Thinkers

Availability: In stock

£9.99
You will earn 9 Inpress Points for buying this product

Want to pay by post? Print out the order form

Book Details

  • Paperback
  • 144 pages
  • ISBN 978-1-901927-25-2
  • Publisher Route

Details

Authors: Simon Warner, David Meltzer, Steven Taylor, Ronald Nameth, George Rodosthenous, Bill Nelson

A Celebration of Allen Ginsberg’s Epic Protest Poem

On October 7th, 1955, a little known poet called Allen Ginsberg premiered a new long poem in the Six Gallery in San Francisco. 'Howl', penned in the shadow of the Cold War, would cause a sensation among the crowd that gathered that evening. It would not be long before the poem’s impact spread far beyond the confines of the Bay Area literary scene to a national and international readership. Within a year, 'Howl' would be published by famed independent publisher City Lights. In the decades that followed, the piece would become possibly the most influential poem in American culture, certainly the most widely read.

Ginsberg’s masterpiece is a cornerstone of the dynamic and radical literature produced by the so-called Beat Generation and its resonance is still felt today. In Howl for Now, academics, commentators and practitioners reflect on the power of 'Howl', half a century on from Ginsberg’s historic first reading, through a series of essays and interviews. Poet David Meltzer reflects on the San Francisco scene in the mid-1950s, Ginsberg collaborator Steven Taylor offers a personal memoir, film director Ronald Nameth and rock composer Bill Nelson contemplate a documentary version of 'Howl', and members of the University of Leeds, in the UK, consider the political, cultural and aesthetic place of the poem as both a social document and a point of contemporary inspiration.

"It certainly inspired me to reconsider the poem and it throws up some interesting connections between Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, Bill Haley and the 1950's roots of 1960's counterculture"
Scotland on Sunday

"Howl for Now adds to our understanding of a great poem, a poem as influential in its own way as 'The Waste Land' was on an earlier generation"
Brian Patten

Write Your Own Review

Only registered users can write reviews. Please, log in or register

Howl for Now