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Georgia Voices V. 3; Poetry Vol. 3

Georgia Voices V. 3; Poetry( )
Editor: Ruppersburg, Hugh
Contribution by: Aiken, Conrad
Barks, Coleman
Blount, Roy
Bond, Adrienne
Bottoms, David
Byer, Kathryn
Cleage, Pearl
Cofer, Judith Ortiz
Corey, Stephen
Du Bois, W. E. B.
Johnson, Greg
Lanier, Sidney
Manley, Frank
Mitcham, Judson
Montgomery, Marion
Reece, Byron Herbert
Sellers, Bettie
Smith, Charlie
Toomer, Jean
Walker, Alice
Williams, Philip Lee
Bowers, Edgar
Brock, Van K.
Cassity, Turner
Corn, Alfred
Daniell, Rosemary
Dickey, James
Greenway, William
Griffin, Walter
Johnson, Georgia Douglas
Mayes, Frances
Mee, Susie
Nelson, Eric
Prunty, Wyatt
Rollings, Alane
Rubin, Larry
Smith, Ron
Stokesbury, Leon
Stone, John
ISBN:978-0-8203-2177-6
Publication Date:Mar 2000
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $32.95
Book Description:

The final anthology in a distinctive multivolume set of works by Georgia's most gifted writers. Offering selections from thirty-nine poets, Georgia Voices Volume 3 presents a variety of literary and cultural traditions. This work is characteristic of the South's blend of tradition and innovation.

Book Details
Pages:288
Detailed Subjects: Poetry / American / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6 x 9 x 0.62 Inches
Book Weight:0.85 Pounds
Author Biography
(Editor)
Conrad Potter Aiken was born on August 5, 1889 in Savannah, Georgia. He attended Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts, where he edited the school newspaper, played baseball, and won a tennis doubles championship. In 1907, he entered Harvard University and became friends with T.S. Eliot.

Knowing he was destined to be a poet from an early age, Aiken is paradoxically regarded by some critics as both a dazzling craftsman and by others as being long-winded and vague. However, many critics feel that he was central to American literature, a "literary period in himself."

Aiken is perhaps best known for his 1930 Pulitzer Prize-winning book Selected Poems (1929), but he regarded the poem "Ushant" as his most satisfying work. In almost all of Aiken's works, his overriding concern has been to resolve what might be called a personal identity crisis in terms of the cosmic evolution of consciousness and one's relationship to the world at large. In the 1920s Aiken turned to short story writing to supplement his income. Overall, he published more than 50 titles, including 35 collections of poetry, five novels, one autobiographical essay, and several collections of short stories and criticism.

Conrad Aiken died on August 17, 1973 at the age of 84.

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