The Junk Drawer

A junkie runs on junk time. When his junk is cut off, the clock runs down and stops. [William Burroughs, Junkie]

Our New Poet Laureate

Filed under: Newspaper Clippings — Matthew at 7:21 am on Wednesday, June 14, 2006

The Librarian of Congress has appointed a new poet laureate, Donald Hall.  I was hoping there would be some sort of official appointment ceremony today, which I could attend, but I can’t find any information about it.

Here is the Washington Post story on the poet, Set to Verse: Donald Hall is New Poet Laureate.  And here is the Library of Congress official announcement, Librarian of Congress Appoints Donald Hall New Poet Laureate.

Here’s a clip from the Post story:

Other poets and critics cite a complex, book-length poem called “The One Day” — published in 1988 but composed over 17 years — as Hall’s greatest achievement.

“In a sense, it is the last masterpiece of American modernism,” said National Endowment for the Arts Chairman Dana Gioia, noting that as such, it is unlike the bulk of Hall’s generally more accessible work. David Lehman, reviewing “The One Day” in The Washington Post, called it “loud, sweeping, multitudinous, an act of the imperial imagination,” and cited a climactic line suggestive of the poet’s fundamental take on life:

“Work, love, build a house and die. But build a house.”

I’m going to check out this book-length poem, The One Day it’s only 67 pages long, which technically, I think, means that it is novella length rather than book length…but who’s counting pages?  Oh, I guess I am…

5 Comments »

194

Comment by dhalgren

June 14, 2006 @ 10:53 am

Thanks for this. I have something, a book, by him somewhere. I’ll look for it.

196

Comment by Mel B.

June 15, 2006 @ 1:42 am

When are you going to pick your story back up, the one about the curmudgeonly old poet laureate?

198

Comment by Matthew

June 15, 2006 @ 7:37 am

Somehow, I knew that subject was going to come up. I don’t know. I have a few chapters written that I never published, and I have been developing a website/blog especially for that piece of fiction. I had hoped that by designing a thematically consistent “look” for the story presentation, I might re-energize my writing. But it hasn’t happened yet. I still think about Crabbe pretty frequently, however “thinking about” never translates into writing. I am an abject failure in terms of ever seeing anything through to completion, so probably “never” is the true answer to your question.

200

Comment by dhalgren

June 15, 2006 @ 11:58 pm

I think it’s his book Life Work we have a copy of. I’ve picked it up, looked at it, put it down before but never read it. Maybe I should…someday…

I liked Crabbe…and if you write more, I’ll read it. Promise :)

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