<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Eco-poetic innovations and ecstatic meditations from a founding member of the Beat Generation, Michael McClure.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>A landmark work of bio-romanticism, <em>Mephistos and Other Poems </em>is the first completely new collection in five years from legendary Beat and SF Renaissance poet Michael McClure, reflecting his interests in mammal consciousness and ecological survival. The title sequence stems from McClure's ongoing grafting experiment, growing new poems from fragments of previously ones. Some Fringes is a series of haiku-like nature poems, while the seventeen-part Rose Breaths derives from the poet's practice of meditation. The freestanding poems grouped under the title Being pay homage to many of McClure's collaborators and fellow travelers like Bruce Conner, Terry Riley, and Dave Haselwood. The book climaxes with Song Heavy, recounting McClure's recent encounter with a beached whale in Rockport, Massachusetts, and recalling his classic For the Death of 100 Whales, which he read at the Six Gallery in 1955--the inaugural moment of American eco-poetics.</p> <p><strong>Michael McClure </strong>is an award-winning American poet, playwright, songwriter, and novelist. After moving from Kansas to San Francisco as a young man, he was one of the five poets who participated in the Six Gallery reading that featured the public debut of Allen Ginsberg's landmark poem Howl. A key figure of the Beat Generation, McClure is immortalized as Pat McLear in Jack Kerouac's novels <em>The Dharma Bums </em>and <em>Big Sur</em>. He also participated in the sixties counterculture alongside musicians like Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison. McClure remains active as a poet, essayist, and playwright and lives with his second wife, Amy, in the San Francisco Bay Area.</p> <p>Michael and I have been twisting the Dharma for twenty years now. He reads his poetry like a mad lion or a hummingbird or a soft evening tidal pool or a wild California thunderstorm. . . . His words are of a new realm of love and joy and terror. What a pleasure to play with such a perceptive artist. It's always been my great joy to make music to his words.--Ray Manzarek</p> <p>[C]ertainly a genius in thought and writing it out . . . McClure is one of the few contemporaries to have understood Kerouac as a literary poet--and learned some joyous classic invention therefrom . . . Thus we have a McClure poet, a McClure natural philosopher, and a McClure prosateur and novelist. Hardly anyone in America with equal range and sharpness, liveness. What more?--Allen Ginsberg</p> <p>Praise for <em>Mephistos: </em></p> <p>In <em>Mephistos</em> we are again thrown into Michael McClure's lavish lair of forceful magic. Its actions are literal ones, handfuls of jewels disintegrate as a firewall rises to a solid prism. There is no poet more adept at calling forth the elements, only to fashion them later as eternal amulets for his readers. 'NEW MOON ((BLACK!)) /STAR CLOUDS/ HALOES/ Flashlight reflects/ into two small eyes.' You will find your body changed through the labyrinth these poems initiate.--Cedar Sigo</p> <p>Close attention will be rewarded in kind. Keep <em>Mephisto</em> near at hand, read only a poem or two at a time, let the imagery possess you. It's okay, you can trust it. It's McClure: he'll never steer you wrong.--Robert Hunter, lyricist, poet, songwriter</p> <p>He is such a sweet paradox!</p> <p>Like most of Shelley and the late poems of D.H. Lawrence, McClure turns the phenomenal world inside out, seeking Mind within mind.--Diane di Prima, poet</p> <p>If you've enjoyed McClure's writings in the past, this volume ought to recapture your poetic heart and rekindle your imagination.--Jonah Raskin, <em>New York Journal of Books</em></p> <p>Mephistos is perhaps an open love letter to all of McClure's many fans who have followed him ever since he arrived in San Francisco from Kansas City more than half a century ago.--<em>San Francisco Chronicle</em></p> <p>This is poetry for seekers, those interested in developing their inner lives. This is the essence of 'soul-science' and there is no 20th/21st century poet more adept at this than McClure. 'If poetry and science cannot change one's life they're meaningless' he states in the preface to his book 'Three Poems' and his spontaneous technique allows him access to realms that can be seen as outside himself, or as the highest aspects of his self, the noble self, noble human life force.--Paul Nelson</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>McClure's observations and most importantly his feelings about the universe are uncannily explicit, palpable in their expression. A reading of one or two poems brings you deeper into a sense of being, an exquisite immediacy to everything in you and above you and around you that is so sudden in its effect it's almost startling."-- Tillala Chronicles</p><p>Michael McClure rides a spirit wind through meat flower breath. For six decades, he has honed a sentient sensibility that conveys ease, peace and wisdom. Shamanistic riffs and Zen zingers ring out among haiku phrasings and Beat chantings in these gemlike verses.--Jeffrey Cyphers Wright, <i>American Book Review</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Michael McClure is an American poet, playwright, songwriter, and novelist. After moving from Kansas to San Francisco as a young man, he was one of the five poets who participated in the legendary 1955 Six Gallery reading that featured the public debut of Allen Ginsberg's landmark poem <i>Howl</i>. McClure remains a key figure of the Beat Generation and is immortalized as Pat McLear in Jack Kerouac's novel <i>Big Sur</i>. A central figure in the Beat Movement and the San Francisco Renaissance, his poetry is heavily infused with an awareness of nature, especially in the animal consciousness that often lies dormant in mankind. He has received numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Obie Award for Best Play, an NEA grant, the Alfred Jarry Award and a Rockefeller grant for playwriting. McClure is still active as a poet, essayist and playwright and lives with his second wife, Amy, in the San Francisco Bay Area. McClure continues to reach new audiences through his poetry, plays, and performance.
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