The Happy Birthday of Death

Gregory Corso
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The Happy Birthday of Death

Gregory Corso
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Trouvé dans : Arts & Letters, General Poetry

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92 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : Jan 17, 1960
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 92
  • Éditeur : New Directions Publishing
  • ISBN : 9780811200271
  • Dimensions : 5.2" W x 0.3" L x 8.1" H
Gregory Corso (1930-2001) was abandoned by his mother a month after his birth at St. Vincent's Hospital in New York. Growing up in foster care and on the streets of Little Italy, Corso was a juvenile delinquent who spent time in Clinton Correctional Facility, in the cell recently vacated by gangster Lucky" Luciano. An aspiring poet, Corso was taken under the wing of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, and became the youngest member of the Beat Generation's inner circle, with whom he lived and work inthe Beat Hotel, a lodging house in Paris, during the late fifties. There he created one of his signature works, "Bomb", a poem composed of typewritten strips of paper arranged in the shape of a mushroom cloud. Late in life, Corso became reunited with his mother and maintained a close relationship with her until his death."
In terms of language Corso always seems to me the most interesting of the Beats . . . extracting all the power from standard syntax and rhetoric, maintaining the Beat anti-academicism. . . Put this together with the experimentalism and relevance of the Beat outlook, and you have poetry that not only shares our experience but creates it.

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