August Kleinzahler

August Kleinzahler
Born August Kleinzahler
(1949-12-10) December 10, 1949
Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.
Occupation Poet
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Wisconsin–Madison
University of Victoria

August Kleinzahler (born December 10, 1949 in Jersey City, New Jersey) is an American poet.[1]

Life and career

Until he was 11, he went to school in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where he grew up. He then commuted to the Horace Mann School in the Bronx, graduating in 1967.[2] He wrote poetry from this time, inspired by Keats and Kenneth Rexroth translations, among other works.[2] He started college at the University of Wisconsin–Madison but dropped out and after taking a year out of school, he ended up, 1971, at the University of Victoria on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.[2] Drawn to the New York poets, including Frank O’Hara, Kleinzahler then discovered the work of Basil Bunting, who had a major influence on Kleinzahler's search for his own voice in poetry. He described Bunting's 1966 long poem Briggflatts (which its author described as "an autobiography, but not a statement of fact")[3] as "everything I wanted in poetry.”[2] Bunting taught a creative writing course at Victoria: "He began with some poems by Hardy and Hopkins, The Wreck of the Deutschland, and went up to Yeats and Pound, then David Jones, Williams, the poets who were important to Bunting, Hugh MacDiarmid, Lorine Niedecker, and H.D. All he did was smoke unfiltered Player’s and read to us". The Anglo-American poet Thom Gunn (1929–2004) was also a major influence: "the honest treatment of the poetic material at hand, not slipping into rhetorical or poetic postures, inflating subject matter or dodging difficulty," Kleinzahler explained in an interview in The Paris Review in the fall of 2007. Gunn would become a close friend.[2] William Carlos Williams was also an important source of inspiration.

Amassing gambling debts and wanted by the police, Kleinzahler's brother committed suicide in 1971, when the poet was 21. They were very close and Kleinzahler was devastated by the death. The book Storm over Hackensack is dedicated to him and Cutty, One Rock is about him. Kleinzahler commented "he remains a sort of lodestar for me, encouraging my better, braver self." [2]

After college, Kleinzahler spent a year in Alaska working in "manpower jobs: hard labor" and then got a job at the Alaska State Museum. He got his teaching credentials and then lived in Montreal for two and a half years. A passionate blues lover, Kleinzahler wrote a music column for the San Diego Reader for many years.[2] He has lived in the Haight Ashbury neighborhood in San Francisco but has retained strong ties to his old home base in New Jersey. In 2005 he was named the first poet laureate of Fort Lee.

Kleinzahler is the author of ten books of poetry, including The Strange Hours Travelers Keep and Sleeping It Off in Rapid City. He has also published a non-fiction work, Cutty, One Rock (Low Characters and Strange Places, Gently Explained). Allen Ginsberg commented: "August Kleinzahler's verse line is always precise, concrete, intelligent and rare - that quality of 'chiseled' verse memorable in Basil Bunting's and Ezra Pound's work. A loner, a genius."[1]

Awards

Bibliography

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Poetry collections

Prose

Critical studies and reviews of Kleinzahler

References

  1. 1 2 "August Kleinzahler | Academy of American Poets". Poets.org. Retrieved January 2016. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 William Corbett (Fall 2007). "August Kleinzahler, The Art of Poetry No. 93". The Paris Review.
  3. Bunting, B. 1968. Collected Poems. London, Fulcrum Press
  4. "Berlin Prize Fellow, Class of Fall 2000". American Academy in Berlin. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  5. August Kleinzahler. "Sleeping It Off in Rapid City | August Kleinzahler | Macmillan". Us.macmillan.com. Retrieved January 2016. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)

External links

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