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Kenneth Rexroth & James Laughlin: Selected Letters Collection - Correspondence Between Two Literary Giants for Book Clubs & Literature Enthusiasts
Kenneth Rexroth & James Laughlin: Selected Letters Collection - Correspondence Between Two Literary Giants for Book Clubs & Literature Enthusiasts
Kenneth Rexroth & James Laughlin: Selected Letters Collection - Correspondence Between Two Literary Giants for Book Clubs & Literature Enthusiasts

Kenneth Rexroth & James Laughlin: Selected Letters Collection - Correspondence Between Two Literary Giants for Book Clubs & Literature Enthusiasts

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Description

Frankly―H. Miller was defended by me only because he spoke against the War, and I think that was the main reason for his fame. Now―I do not believe, what with Palmistry, Chirography, Phrenology, and the Great Cryptogram, he will survive the retooling period. I honestly think he is the most insufferable snob I have ever met―but all reformed pandhandlers are like that.… in a letter from Kenneth Rexroth to James Laughlin Correspondence between author Rexroth, a "presiding figure of the San Francisco Renaissance," and publisher Laughlin, spanning forty years. Introduction, notes on the text, select bibliography, index. Errata sheet laid in.

Reviews

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I like the genre of collected letters, so I tackled this book even though I don't like Rexroth's poetry nor do I think he's a reliable literary critic. Laughlin owned New Directions, a very important publishing house, without which innumerable avant-garde writers would have been unpublished. This is a selection of their correspondence from 1937 to 1981, with an emphasis on what Rexroth had to say. The letters are heavily annotated and would be of great use to anyone interested in obscure writers, poets, translators, and various artistic figures of that time. Laughlin was an heir to the Jones-Laughlin steel fortune, and his generosity made a big difference in supporting the avant-garde of that era. Rexroth was older than most of the Beat generation and was sort of the paterfamilias of that crowd. I have never thought the San Francisco Renaissance to have much artistic merit but you be your own judge.