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- Exquisite Corpse

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Average customer rating:
- Stephen King Can't Beat This
- Disappointing and Disgusting
- Read it. Read it now.
- Visceral and Sensual Bloodbath
- I was expecting gore and over-the-top torture
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Exquisite Corpse
Poppy Z. Brite
Manufacturer: Touchstone
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Brite, Poppy Z.
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ASIN: 0684836270 |
Amazon.com
You've probably heard that this love story about two cannibalistic serial killers (loosely modeled after Dennis Nilsen and Jeffrey Dahmer) is over the top. You've been warned about the lovingly meticulous descriptions of murder and necrophilia. But the novel also features a keen look at the AIDS plague, in a setting almost worth dying for: Brite's doomed aesthetes dance in a sweet, heady New Orleans of milky coffee and beignets, alligators, Billy Holiday tunes, scented candles, pirate radio, swamp French, andouille sausage and one bar for every 175 people. And the structure is the tightest of Brite's books so far.
Book Description
To serial slayer Andrew Compton, murder is an art, the most intimate art. After feigning his own death to escape from prison, Compton makes his way to the United States with the sole ambition of bringing his "art" to new heights. Tortured by his own perverse desires, and drawn to possess and destroy young boys, Compton inadvertently joins forces with Jay Byrne, a dissolute playboy who has pushed his "art" to limits even Compton hadn't previously imagined. Together, Compton and Byrne set their sights on an exquisite young Vietnamese-American runaway, Tran, whom they deem to be the perfect victim.
Swiftly moving from the grimy streets of London's Piccadilly Circus to the decadence of the New Orleans French Quarter, and punctuated by rants from radio talk show host Lush Rimbaud, a.k.a. Luke Ransom, Tran's ex-lover, who is dying of AIDS and who intends to wreak ultimate havoc before leaving this world, Exquisite Corpse unfolds into a labyrinth of murder and love. Ultimately all four characters converge on a singular bloody night after which their lives will be irrevocably changed -- or terminated.
Poppy Z. Brite dissects the landscape of torture and invites us into the mind of a killer. Exquisite Corpse confirms Brite as a writer who defies categorization. It is a novel for those who dare trespass where the sacred and profane become one.
Customer Reviews:
Stephen King Can't Beat This.......2007-05-11
This was an amazing read. I haven't read a Poppy Z. Brite book in ages and, frankly, I hadn't even known that this one existed. This is strikingly different from anything she has done. I discovered it quite accidentally and, judging by the brief summary on the back, I was instantly intrigued. I loved every sentence of every page. Even when describing something as horrible as disemboweling a human being, she manages to write with such love and care. This is a very twisted story, one where love seems to be high on the morbid scale. And, in a way, you could even make the arguement that it is a love story; love, if you can call it that, between two killers and their victims as well as love between the main victim, Tran, and his ex, Louis. The length of the book, although I wouldn't have been opposed to it being longer, is perfect for those who like quick reads. Wonderful novel. I haven't found another yet to meet its caliber.
As a friendly warning though, to people who abhore alternative forms of sex and/or alternative lifestyles, this is NOT the book for you.
Disappointing and Disgusting.......2007-05-04
The story starts off great with a fast paced escape of one of the main characters. At times there were some well-written dramatic scenes, but too often the book descends into describing gay sex in graphic detail to a degree that approaches gay porn. For many (if not most) straight people, you will likely find yourself sickened, for the sex acts described were as disturbing to me as the murders. I think she went a little too far in this regard, although it will certainly make her more popular in the gay community.
That having been said, the girl can sure write. I just hope she picks better subjects in the future.
Read it. Read it now. .......2006-11-09
I got this book and felt like a child on Christmas eve, instantly curling into my futon to read it and hours went by without me even noticing it.
This book, although it's about a vicious killer (two, really), will make you WANT the bad guys to win it all. You'll want them to take all the boys they want for slaughter, and to never get caught; to live forever, really.
And this book has enough twist that after you're done reading it you'll keep holding it and just stare at the last page before you in bewilderement, sadness and fufillment.
Like watching "The Notebook" another time; You'll tell yourself that when you re-read it you won't get teary-eyed in the end but each and every time it hits you with the same amount of force as the first.
Poppy's writing style also eases the book along, it's very fluid and instantly paints gruesome and yet wholesome images throughout your head while you read.
This is a MUST BUY for any person with an open mind and a taste for blood, and I promise that dissapointment won't ever cross your mind when enjoying "Exquisite Corpse" to it's fullest.
Visceral and Sensual Bloodbath.......2006-10-14
The pages of Exquisite Corpse, virtually drip with blood in this offering from horror writer Poppy Z. Brite. Her story of two cold-blooded sadists who come together for a bloodbath in New Orleans pulses with foreboding from the opening page. Violence, killing, torture, sex: all are described with the same unflinching intensity and visceral detail, keeping the reader glued to the gruesome events unfolding. Character personalities are explored fully, with their competing identities foretelling disaster. Such an ending is developed through the exploration of the morbid homoerotic love between the two serial killers at the heart of the story, resulting in an exquisitely deadly crescendo. A fantastic read, if you have the intestinal fortitude for it!
I was expecting gore and over-the-top torture.......2006-09-21
I was not expecting to have my heart broken. PZB's characters are so multifaceted that their pain and loss felt like watching a close friend suffer these horrors.
On a more fun side, it was pretty nifty reading her descriptions of food. Makes me wonder why some people were surprised by her so-called 'genre shift.'
Average customer rating:
- Strange, Yet Convincing
- SURREALIST SIGNATURES
- Amazing, actually
- Rotten
- Life imitating art imitating death.
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Exquisite Corpse: Surrealism and the Black Dahlia Murder
Mark Nelson , and Sarah Hudson Bayliss
Manufacturer: Bulfinch
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 0821258192 |
Book Description
Bridging the worlds of high art and true crime, Exquisite Corpse presents a unique perspective on the most notorious unsolved murder case of the twentieth century--the bizarre 1947 killing of Elizabeth Short, better known as the Black Dahlia murder.
Unlike previous books on the Black Dahlia, Exquisite Corpse provides a detailed and compelling explanation for the unusual nature of this gruesome killing. Exquisite Corpse reveals, through visual comparisons and historical research, what seem to be profound connections between surrealist art and the Black Dahlia caseÑ-both before and after the murder. The evidence includes startling crime-scene and autopsy photographs of Elizabeth Short, rarely seen photographs by Man Ray, and surprising comparisons with a wide range of surrealist artworks. A Òweb of connectionsÓ indicates a direct link or one degree of separation between the alleged killer and a host of influential people in the arts and film industry in Los Angeles in the 1930s and 40s. A timeline provides a revealing chronology of events surrounding the murder.
Exquisite Corpse is a must-read for anyone interested in true crime, art history, Hollywood noir, and the infamous Black Dahlia case.
Customer Reviews:
Strange, Yet Convincing.......2007-01-15
This unusual book argues that the killer of Elizabeth Short aka the Black Dahlia was a Surrealist who worked on the Hollywood scene. It does provide a surprisingly convincing case that the killer was a member of a particular artistic school that had a particularly strong influence on the movies of the time.
The book is very well illustrated with ghastly photos from the crime scene and is recommended to all true crime buffs.
SURREALIST SIGNATURES.......2006-11-12
KUDOS TO MARK AND SARAH. As relates to the Nelson/Bayliss EXQUISITE CORPSE: SURREALISM AND THE BLACK DAHLIA MURDER, I would like to add my heartfelt appreciation and high praise for their outstanding research, dedication and documentation. I believe their independent and academic investigation, adds mountains of evidence to my original lay/foundational thesis that suggested surrealism and its art were the key to the DAHLIA crime signatures. Mark Nelson and Sarah Hudson Bayliss have connected the dots and the people and presented them for all of us to see. They have taken the long silent voices of those who knew (or suspected) and by holding up their works (riddles wrapped in mysteries)--HAVE MADE THEM SPEAK!
Steve Hodel
Los Angeles
Amazing, actually.......2006-11-11
I was aware of the Black Dahlia murder as one of those notorious, super-mediafied events that was big enough to sorta stay in the public conciousness through the years. It's incredible to me that, after all this time, there is still stuff to discover about the murder. And one might be inclined to say why bother dwelling on it? And, for me, the answer is that this book is about something much more interesting than just the murder: it's about the connection between the murder, the murderer, surrealist art, and some of the major artists of the 20th century. The author's arguments are convincing and the connections they surface are -- to me -- amazing. It says a lot about art and the culture of artists. As an artist myself, I find this particularly interesting.
I read some of the other reviews of this book. I think it'd be best if people who review a book have actually READ the book. Nobody would read this book and give it only 1 star. Even if you don't like the subject, you can't deny that the authors have approached the subject soberly, argue their points well, and that the research/images/writing are good. This is no shrill, sensational supermarket pulp product. It's a good read and an *interesting* read on many levels.
I learned some new things about art, artists, culture and the experience was wrapped in a remarkable bit of art-historian sleuthing about one of the most grisly, notorious murders ever. The fact that one of the most horrific murders in US history was actually part of a dialogue with a major movement in 20th century art is, well, amazing...
I recommend the book. Read it and you'll know what i mean.
Rotten.......2006-10-16
I can't see anyone finding much value in this book except the kind of people who enjoy looking at pictures of mutilated dead bodies. Even that group ought to save their money, as the photos here have probably already been scanned and posted all over the internet by now, thanks to the more industrious members of that particular club. What little else there is of this book hardly bears mentioning. It amounts to little more than a poorly organized magazine article attempting to connect an almost random selection of art works to the crime. Sort of throw back to the old-time practice of dressing up prurient material as "educational," I suppose.
Life imitating art imitating death........2006-10-03
The book attempts tie together surrealistic art and the death of Elizabeth Short. It does an ok job of that. The book seems to be more about the art work created by people like Man Ray then it is about the murder of Elizabeth Short. It offers loose comparisons of death portrayed in art. The book gives examples of many Surrealistic artists of the day and a short biography of their work for those who aren't familiar with their work. It also attempts to familiarize people with the idea of surrealistic art. The book is less about the details of the murder and more about the theory of surrealism in the thought process of the murderer and the possible artistic motivational factors behind it.
The mystery's behind the death of Elizabeth Short have been who killed her and why was she posed in that position, was it to imitate art perhaps so otherwise why cut the body the way it was and position it in that manor. The book does go into some detail about the art Scene in Los Angeles at the time of the murder and it's influence on the art scene afterwards. It asks questions like why was the body cut in half, perhaps to imitate existing pieces of art work including Man Rays Minotaur.
The book is nicely put together there are a lot of photos that I had not seen before and a lot of comparison artwork to support the books theory. It's a quick read but interesting read if you buy into the theory that Elizabeth Short died so that a macabre art work could be created.
If you like Crime scene photography or photos of the Elizabeth Short murder then this is a 4 star book. It you are looking for the facts behind the murder then this is about a 2 start book. If you are looking for surrealistic art then it's also about a 4 star book.
Average customer rating:
- "Beauty must be convulsive or not at all" - Breton
- Extreme Reactions
- Exquisite
- Exquisitely surreal and filled with art!
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Exquisite Corpse
Robert Irwin
Manufacturer: Overlook TP
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
British
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ASIN: 1585673862
Release Date: 2003-04-29 |
Amazon.com
Exquisite Corpse is a novel, a survey of World War II history, and a commentary on surrealist art, all in one; and due to author Robert Irwin's immense skill, it does a crackerjack job with all three. The story opens in 1930s England, where Caspar, an ardent devotee of surrealism, leads a happily bohemian life. He paints his mediocre pictures, meets with his fellow surrealists in the Serapion Brotherhood, and generally subscribes to the belief that the anarchy of surrealism will lead to liberation of the imagination. Then he meets Caroline, a woman so relentlessly ordinary that she is nothing short of exotic to Caspar. He falls instantly in love with her and for a time revels in her middle-class life: her job as a secretary, her passion for amateur theatricals, her shopping excursions into department stores. When Caroline disappears from Caspar's life, he is thrown into--dare we say it?--a surreal search for her that will take him to Nazi Germany, into a mental hospital, through the war years, and eventually into the concentration camps and out again.
Journeys such as Caspar's are often labeled picaresque, and indeed, if Don Quixote had been a surrealist, his adventures might have resembled these. What makes Exquisite Corpse so enjoyable is the confidence with which Irwin threads history and art criticism through this comic romp.
Book Description
Set in London, Paris, and Munich in the 1940s and 1950s, Exquisite Corpse is, like Irwin's cult classic, The Arabian Nightmare, a novel about the strange and ever-morphing powers of the imagination. At once a love story, a mystery, and an investigation into the ideas of absurdist art, "Irwin's novel about English surrealism is funny and profound and hugely satisfying" (A. S. Byatt, Sunday Times.
Customer Reviews:
"Beauty must be convulsive or not at all" - Breton.......2001-08-03
Irwin's Exquisite Corpse captures the spirit and verve of the Surrealist Revolution more comprehensively than any since Artaud or Lautremont. Those well-versed in Surrealist literature will not only appreciate the nudges, winks, and deftly dropped names, but also appreciate the taste of Surrealism in the 30s as tensions within the camp as well as with former allies such as the Trotskyists, French Communists, and Psychoanalysts are represented within the narrative. As a piece of historical fiction the power of this novel lies in Irwin's ability to take the constellation of events and tensions within Surrealism and with the world at large and internalize them in the character of Caspar. Those unfamiliar with Surrealism or the period may need to do some homework before approaching the novel, though. However, the extra work will be well worth the effort.
Extreme Reactions.......2001-07-22
I think most people will have an extreme reaction to this book. You will really like it; you will really dislike it; or you will be really confused as to whether or not you like it. With a story that can evoke such strongly varied reactions, it is worthy of praise no matter what the result.
Exquisite.......2000-08-03
This is my favourite book, but i dont expect it to be great for everyone. You need to be in a certain mind set for it, although it's not incomrehendable. If you like surrealism, or odd love srories, you'll most likely enjoy this book. Although Casper is a surrealist, he is not annoying and does not dwell on boring topics. The book is not depressing either. The last chapter is also on of the best. I recomend this book to everyone whose favourite movie is Harold and Maude BTW (as is mine)
Exquisitely surreal and filled with art!.......1999-06-02
Robert Irwin's literary masterpiece, Exquisite Corpse sends the reader into a surrealist world of deception and dreams. His use of informal language captures the tone of the novel completely and adds to the sincerity of the work. The creation process of art correlates with the progress of Exquisite Corpse as Caspar discovers his muse of inspiration, Caroline. The novel is a first person account of Caspar's life, sort of a journal kept through his most intruiging portions of life. As interpreted by Caspar, the reader is often challenged with the thought that perhaps Caspar is making up the story as he goes along. That perhaps none of his experiences are true and that he is a pathetic drunk trying to make some sense of his life through broken memories. Irwin's use of words and imagery create a new universe as seen through Caspar's eyes. His quirky friends and enemies all have the feel of opera characters--highly overexaggerated and overdramatic. As for Caroline, she has the feeling of a non-existent dream. Did Caspar dream her up or was she real? Was Caroline the embodiment of all of his desires and fears in life, the fear of rejection and the loss of love? Or was she a human being? Only the author knows the truth and we are left to figure out this mystery ourselves. Yet, what Irwin creates is a man, lost of all reason, lost in his thoughts and dreams, making up the perfect ending to his tired life of love lost and turmoil. All in all, Exquisite Corpse is a trip through the mind of a surrealist, mind you, it's not a smooth running course, but a course that has no boundaries whatsoever.
Average customer rating:
- Exquisite Writing: Chester's weird and wonderful voice
- Must Read
- Great writing, but..
- Every book called Exquisite Corpse has to be good
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The Exquisite Corpse
Alfred Chester
Manufacturer: David R Godine
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary
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ASIN: 1574231979 |
Product Description
Lyric and tender one moment, cruel and dizzying the next, The Exquisite Corpse neither celebrates perversity nor laments it; rather it projects it as part of man's never-ending search for a true self and for transcendent communion with others.
In forty-nine brief, highly cinematic chapters, we meet a series of twisted but sincere searches Tomtom Jim and his naked, hungry family; Mary Poorpoor and her utterly "otherly" baby; angry John Doe and his sex slave, James Madison each in flight from despair. As one surreal episode morphs into the next, these searchers change shape and their journeys change direction; names and identities come and go, storylines collide, and desires intertwine, all with the lightning-quick illogic of a dream. The result is a tragicomic tour de force, an upside-down roadmap to everyone's inner Sodom, a perversely moral (and morally perverse) masterpiece by a modern-day Marquis de Sade.
Customer Reviews:
Exquisite Writing: Chester's weird and wonderful voice.......2004-05-07
I'm so happy to see this book reissued. Alfred Chester is one of the most unappreciated and underrated writers of the twentieth century. At his best, Chester is up there with the best. Like much of his other writing, "The Exquisite Corpse" is filled with startling images and strange and unforgettable characters. His weird and wonderful voice is an inspiration. Chester was able to look unflinchingly at his own unhappy life (and mental illness) and use it to spin literary gold. He captures pain, loneliness, and sexual confusion on a page like few writers. Any serious writer should read him for his mastery of language and word play. Any serious reader should read him for sheer enjoyment.
Must Read.......2004-04-30
Read the first 100 pages through in one shot and am enjoying it immensely. That book has been on my must-read list for many years, but I was never able to find a copy. I mainly wanted to read it because of its cultural/historical relevance, having also read everything by Bowles (both Jane and Paul) and Burroughs, etc. But Chester's writing is exceeding my expectations in a big way. Part of his problem might have been that he was just way ahead of his time.
Great writing, but.........2003-02-17
Weaving the variegated stories of a cast of characters, "The Exquisite Corpse" is a surreal tale of loneliness that paints vivid episodes, but doesn't seem to give a sense of wholeness, of completion to its tapestry. It's a bit like the energetic style of William Burroughs, but without the cohesion (for lack of a better term) his books contain. Yes, "The Exquisite Corpse" is quite fascinating and compels the reader on, but by the final page, the reader watches as the story flits away without leaving any imprint in the reader's mind. The novel is #78 of the 100 Best Gay and Lesbian Novels.
Every book called Exquisite Corpse has to be good.......2000-11-02
I've read three books called Exquisite Corpse and they have all been excellent. This one was a little wierd and slightly hard to follow but it was an incredibly creative yet somehow realistic portrayal of the life some of the less fortunate in fates tend to lead. I intend to read every book called Exquisite Corpse that I can find.
Average customer rating:
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Surrealist Collage in Text and Image: Dissecting the Exquisite Corpse (Cambridge Studies in French)
Elza Adamowicz
Manufacturer: Cambridge University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Surrealism
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ASIN: 0521619874 |
Book Description
Elza Adamowicz presents an analysis of surrealist collage, both as a technique of cutting and pasting ready made material, and as a subversive and creative strategy. She considers verbal collage, pictorial collage, and the hybrids they generate, and discusses the works of Max Ernst and André Breton, as well as those of Aragon, Brunius, Eluard, Hugnet, Magritte, Péret, Styrsky and others. Focusing on the recycling of art-historical icons, the parodic reworking of narrative clichés, the concept of defamiliarisation of the banal, or the relations between part bodies and totalities, she offers close readings of individual collages, and links specific aspects of collage practice to central issues of surrealist aesthetic and political thought. Throughout this well illustrated study Adamowicz confronts the ‘monstrous’ nature of collage, grounded on excess and composed of irretrievable fragments and hovering signs.
Average customer rating:
- A varied collection of insightful criticism
- The Exquisite Corpse : Writing on Buildings
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Exquisite Corpse: Writing on Buildings
Michael Sorkin
Manufacturer: Verso
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Criticism
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ASIN: 0860916871 |
Customer Reviews:
A varied collection of insightful criticism.......2003-01-26
Exquisite Corpse compiles Michael Sorkin's earlier works of criticism, mostly published during his time as architectural critic for The Village Voice (his latter writings were later compiled in "Some Assembly Required"). Sorkin's writing is entertaining and intelligent, and Sorkin's attacks on Philip Johnson, Donald Trump, and former New York Times Architectural Critic Paul Goldberger are particularly amusing. The book is an overall enjoyable read, if one is able to jump between the varied subject matter.
The Exquisite Corpse : Writing on Buildings.......2000-06-29
The Exquisite Corpse : Writing on Buildings by Michael Sorkin
Average customer rating:
- Wicked fun reading
- The wittiest, brightest writing of the last decade.
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Thus Spake the Corpse : An Exquisite Corpse Reader 1988-1998 : Volume 1, Poetry & Essays
Manufacturer: Black Sparrow Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
20th Century
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ASIN: 1574231006 |
Product Description
From 1983 to 1998, Exquisite Corpse: A Journal of Books & Ideas delighted the indignant and the sophisticated and gave heartburn to the fearful and the tenured. A thorn in the side of the Literary Establishment, it attracted a cadre of contributors united by a kind of suicidal fearlessness against The Way We Think Now. Here, in two generous volumes, the editors choose some of their favorite items from an over-rich decade. These are the pieces that set the standard, enraged some people, and made the magazine necessary to those readers who, in the words of the editors, "banged their fists on unread stacks of New Yorkers and cried out as one, 'Where were you when we were dying for lack of real poetry and speculation?' "
Highlights: Poetry by Antler, James Broughton, Hayden Carruth, Tom Clark, Robert Creeley, John Giorno, Anselm Hollo, David Ignatow, James Laughlin, Gerard Malanga, Joel Oppenheimer, James Purdy, Carl Rakosi, Ed Sanders, and ninety (90!) others. Three dozen essays, including "Is Literature Useful?" by Georges Bataille, "The American Male," by Kay Boyle, "The Sur(region)alist Manifesto," by Max Cafard, "My Abortion," by Deborah Salazar, and "Letters from the Proud Highway," by Hunter S. Thompson. The best of Laura Rosenthal's column "The Body Bag," which responded to would-be contributors with witty encouragement and, occasionally, devastating criticism. And letters from Clayton Eshleman, Edward Field, Ishmael Reed, and others.
Customer Reviews:
Wicked fun reading.......1999-10-15
I miss the now-defunct "Exquisite Corpse," the most original and maybe the best American literary magazine of the 1990s. This greatest hits collection from the Corpse is a pleasure to read. Until I discovered the Corpse, I thought American literature had become the moribound property of academics and the Iowa Writers Finishing School. These essays and poems are wicked fun and thought-provoking.
By the way, the Exquisite Corpse has now become a cyber-publication.
The wittiest, brightest writing of the last decade........1999-09-24
I generally avoid poetry and literary essays, but a friend passed this along to me--and thank heavens she did. If you despair that dead academic writing and predictable journalistic writing represents the best that's out there, despair no more and buy a copy of this witty & bright anthology. Great fun & deeply thought-provoking.
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Thus Spake the Corpse : An Exquisite Corpse Reader, 1988-1998 : Volume 2, Fictions Travels & Translations (Thus Spake the Corpse Vol 2)
Manufacturer: Black Sparrow Press
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Binding: Paperback
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Codrescu, Andrei
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- Thus Spake the Corpse : An Exquisite Corpse Reader 1988-1998 : Volume 1, Poetry & Essays
ASIN: 1574231413 |
Product Description
From 1983 to 1998, Exquisite Corpse: A Journal of Books & Ideas delighted the indignant and the sophisticated and gave heartburn to the fearful and the tenured. A thorn in the side of the Literary Establishment, it attracted a cadre of contributors united by a kind of suicidal fearlessness against The Way We Think Now. Here, in two generous volumes, the editors choose some of their favorite items from an over-rich decade. These are the pieces that set the standard, enraged some peoplef, and made the magazine necessary to those readers who, in the words of the editors, "banged their fists on unread stacks of New Yorkers and cried out as one, 'Where were you when we were dying for lack of real poetry and speculation?' "
Highlights: "Lives of the Poets," including Pete Seeger on Charles Olson; Jan Kerouac on her father, Jack; John Kehoe on Charles Bukowski; Keith Abbott on Ted Berrigan; Edward Field on Alfred Chester; and (notoriously) Mark Spitzer on Ed Dorn. Fiction by Maxine Chernoff, Maggie Dubris, Barry Gifford, Eric Kraft, and twenty-three others. Travel notes (very loosely construed) by Hakim Bey, Andrei Codrescu, Pat Nolan, and Anne Waldman, And translations of Boris Vian by Julia Older, of Vladimir Pistalo by Charles Simic, of Attila Jozsef by John Batki, and of the Romanian poets of the 60's generation by several accomplished hands.
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Thus Spake the Corpse : An Exquisite Corpse Reader 1988-1998 : Volume 2, Fictions, Travels & Translations
Manufacturer: Black Sparrow Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Anthologies
| Horror
| Genre Fiction
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Codrescu, Andrei
| ( C )
| Authors, A-Z
| Horror
| Genre Fiction
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Horror
| Genre Fiction
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
20th Century
| British
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Collections & Readers
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Essays
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Contemporary
| General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Horror Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
ASIN: 1574231421 |
Product Description
From 1983 to 1998, Exquisite Corpse: A Journal of Books & Ideas delighted the indignant and the sophisticated and gave heartburn to the fearful and the tenured. A thorn in the side of the Literary Establishment, it attracted a cadre of contributors united by a kind of suicidal fearlessness against The Way We Think Now. Here, in two generous volumes, the editors choose some of their favorite items from an over-rich decade. These are the pieces that set the standard, enraged some people, and made the magazine necessary to those readers who, in the words of the editors, "banged their fists on unread stacks of New Yorkers and cried out as one, 'Where were you when we were dying for lack of real poetry and speculation?' "
Highlights: Poetry by Antler, James Broughton, Hayden Carruth, Tom Clark, Robert Creeley, John Giorno, Anselm Hollo, David Ignatow, James Laughlin, Gerard Malanga, Joel Oppenheimer, James Purdy, Carl Rakosi, Ed Sanders, and ninety (90!) others. Three dozen essays, including "Is Literature Useful?" by Georges Bataille, "The American Male," by Kay Boyle, "The Sur(region)alist Manifesto," by Max Cafard, "My Abortion," by Deborah Salazar, and "Letters from the Proud Highway," by Hunter S. Thompson. The best of Laura Rosenthal's column "The Body Bag," which responded to would-be contributors with witty encouragement and, occasionally, devastating criticism. And letters from Clayton Eshleman, Edward Field, Ishmael Reed, and others.
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