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The Leafless American and Other Writings
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Rabble articles and labor squandered in creating them hardens the heart. Nations that are rich in parasitic goods are poor in spirit. Thus Edward Dahlberg in one of these essays. Praised for developing a prose style that is, in Paul Carroll's words, "a weapon of rage and authority. . . monumental and astonishing," his work is unsettling as he confronts the American psyche and morality, its declivities and hollow ambitions. This book is an excellent introduction to Dahlberg's enduring vision and exemplifies the several modes in which he excelled: autobiography, literary sketch, principled diatribe, poetry of conscience.
"These twelve essays and two long poems are typical of Dahlberg's work. . . . Without question, the chief work here is the magnificent long poem, 'The Garment of Ra,' which embodies a lifetime of reading in simple diction and cadences." — Kirkus Reviews
Paperback, sewn, jacketed, 128 pages, 5.5 x 8.5", 1991, 0-914232-80-0
For the hardcover edition go here.
Edited with an Introduction by Harold Billings.
Preface by Robert Creely.
Afterword by Gerald Burns.
"These twelve essays and two long poems are typical of Dahlberg's work. . . . Without question, the chief work here is the magnificent long poem, 'The Garment of Ra,' which embodies a lifetime of reading in simple diction and cadences." — Kirkus Reviews
Paperback, sewn, jacketed, 128 pages, 5.5 x 8.5", 1991, 0-914232-80-0
For the hardcover edition go here.
Edited with an Introduction by Harold Billings.
Preface by Robert Creely.
Afterword by Gerald Burns.
Edward Dahlberg (1900-1977) spent his early years in Kansas City, Missouri. Later he attended the University of California at Berkeley and Columbia University. A "proletarian" novelist in the 30's (who experienced Kristalnacht first hand in Berlin), after From Flushing to Calvary he went into a period of seclusion. Thereafter, his writings were primarily autobiographical, including the famous Because I Was Flesh.