HIDDEN LIGHT
Book of poems by this Minnesota native, with a nice inscription.
Book of poems by this Minnesota native, with a nice inscription.
Anthology of poetry performances at the Troubadour, important venue for the midcentury folk revival and host to poetry readings since the late 1960s. WIth work by Eva Fry, Hume Cronyn, Patrick Mayo, Jean-Paul Dionysus, Nick 'The Plumber', and numerous others.
Preface by Gary Snyder. Contains poetry, drama, and drawings by Sanaki.
Collection of poems by Salerno. With praise from Anselm Hollo, Lewis MacAdams, and John Ashbery on back cover.
A meditation in poem form on the Beat poet and cultural icon from Ed Sanders, who was close to Ginsberg.
An early small-run book of verse from Santos, with a nice association.
Self-published continuation of the Coleridge original by Sarason, an actuary and amateur poet. Includes the original text of Kubla Khan, followed by Sarason's own efforts, with titles including "Empire Duties," "Kubla Doubts," "Northwest or West?" and others.
A collection of short works that "transgress..
Schuchat's second book, published just two years after graduating high school. (Diggory 428).
Collects poems originally published in Dodgems, Brilliant Corners, 432 Review and similar magazines. Includes a poem composed as a birthday gift for Ted Berrigan, Alice Notley, and Helena Hughes.
A collection of poems which originally appeared in other publications, including Salt Lick, Buffalo Stamps, Planet News, and Two Feet of Poetry.
OCLC does not locate the title.
From an edition of 285 copies, printed on handmade Van Gelder paper.
A single poem by Shapiro with several accompanying photographs.
Seventh collection of Shapiro's work, inscribed to fellow poet Harry Smith.
Sixth collection of Shapiro's work, inscribed to fellow poet Harry Smith.
Shapiro's final collection of verse, published posthumously. Edited by Norman Finkelstein.
From an edition of 250 copies, printed by Peter Koch of Black Stone Press as a New Year's greeting. Prints three poems by Silberg.
Second edition, one of 1000, by John Sinclair, poet, legendary manager of MC5 and founder of The White Panther Party. A poem written in response to Sinclair's arrest for Marijuana posession.
An early title from Smith, with a frontis and colophon by Moser. A lovely production.
Collection by the founder of Pulpsmith, in which many of these poems were previously published. A vital figure in the small press movement, Smith was also awarded PEN International's Lucille Medwick Award in 1976, "for his poetry, his commitment to human values, and his achievements as an editor."
Sonnets "Written to Phoebe Lou Adams of the Atlantic Monthly as Responses to Rejections Circa 1966-68." This book constitutes issue 7 of Nostoc magazine.
Poetry collection by Smith, poet, editor, and major figure in the underground and small press movements.
From an edition of 200 copies. Poems by Smith.
Early sections from Snyder's life-long project. Mountains and Rivers Without End would be published in its entirety in 1996.