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         Mcclatchy J D:     more books (100)
  1. Stars Principal by J. D. McClatchy, 1986
  2. Four Seasons by J. D. McClatchy, 2008-05-01
  3. THE VINTAGE BOOK OF CONTEMPORY AMERICAN POETRY. by J.D. (editor). Mcclatchy, 2003
  4. Love Speaks Its Name (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets)
  5. OUIJA.(Poem): An article from: Poetry by J.D. McCLATCHY, 1999-09-01
  6. The Yale Review Volume 80 Number 1 and 2: Double Issue April 1992 by J.D. (editor) McClatchy, 1992
  7. Voices of Love / Voices of Marriage by J. D. McClatchy, 2008-11
  8. The Collected novels and plays; edited by J. D. McClatchy and Stephen Yenser. by James Merrill, 2002-01-01
  9. New Yorker February 25 2008 Salman Rushdie Fiction, The First Torture Debate, Louis Auchincloss, The Coen Brothers, Crimes of the Heart, Cai Guo-Qiang at the Guggenheim, Carl Nielsen's Symphonies, Poems by Rae Armantrout & J.D. McClatchy
  10. The Collected Poems; Edited By J. D. McClatchy and Stephen Yenser by James Merrill, 2002-01-01
  11. The Collected novels and plays; edited by J. D. McClatchy and StephenYenser.
  12. Recitative. [Subtitle]: Edited and with an introduction by J.D. McClatchy. by James. Merrill, 1986-01-01
  13. People From Stonington, Connecticut: Chip Kidd, J. D. Mcclatchy, Thomas Stanton, Gilbert Collins, Samuel Prentiss, William Chesebrough
  14. New Yorker June 23 2008 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Fiction, John Updike Reviews Ethan Canin, Cassandra Wilson, Hugo Chavez, Poems by J.D. McClatchy & Kevin Young

81. Alphamusic - Suchergebnisse Für 'Library Of America'
Translate this page Sortieren nach Interpret Datum Preis. Seite 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. Millay, Edna StVincent mcclatchy, JD - Selected Poems Einband Gebunden 225 Seiten
http://www.alphamusic.de/cgi-bin/suche.pl?fastsearch=Library of America

82. Voice Of The Poet: Auden
the 23 selections. The handsome booklet also includes a substantialintroduction by editor JD mcclatchy. Highlights from Voice of
http://hallaudiobook.com/literature_fiction/241.shtml
Voice of the Poet: Auden
Home Audiobooks
by W. H. Auden (Reader), J.D. McClatchy (Editor)
See More Details

Random House (Audio); ISBN: 0375405925 ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.16 x 7.21 x 4.53
Other Editions: Audio Cassette Reviews
Amazon.com Audiobook Review
W.H. Auden describes the experience of poems read aloud: The formal structure of a poem is not something distinct from its meaning but as intimately bound up with the latter as the body is with the soul. When one reads a poem in a book one grasps the form immediately, but when one listens to a recitation, it is sometimes very difficult to "hear" the structure. Thankfully, the throaty growlings unearthed on this rare audio collection are accompanied by text for each of the 23 selections. The handsome booklet also includes a substantial introduction by editor J.D. McClatchy. Highlights from Voice of the Poet which is being released along with works by Sylvia Plath and James Merrill include three sonnets from Auden's judicial "In Time of War," "The Wanderer," the elegy "In Memory of W.B. Yeats," and the ballad "As I Walked out One Evening." Listen to Auden read from " As I Walked out One Evening ." Visit our audio help page for more information.

83. Voice Of The Poet: Plath
their separation in 1962, The Voice of the Poet includes a companion book containingthe text of each poem, as well as an introduction by editor JD mcclatchy.
http://hallaudiobook.com/literature_fiction/223.shtml
Voice of the Poet: Plath
Home Audiobooks
by Sylvia Plath (Reader), J.D. McClatchy (Editor)
See More Details

Random House (Audio); ISBN: 0375405992 ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.15 x 7.20 x 4.52
Reviews
Amazon.com Audiobook Review
Before committing suicide in 1963 at the age of 31, Sylvia Plath wrote a bounty of work, including the final eight poems included in this self-read collectiondescribed by Robert Lowell as her "appalling and triumphant fulfillment." This later work, as well as 13 additional recordings gathered here from Plath's short but significant career, are certainly triumphant: her prose is precise, scathing, utterly original, and mature beyond her years. Fortunately for listeners, Plath's voice mirrors her writing. She delivers "Lady Lazarus"a piece about suicide, self-loathing, and her hatred for menwith a dagger-like cadence and clear, confident pitch. She describes a suicide attempt: It's easy enough to do it in a cell.
It's easy enough to do it and stay put.
It's the theatrical Comeback in broad day
To the same place, the same face, the same brute

84. McClatchy, J. D. (Joseph Donald, Jr.) My Mammogram
Literature Annotations. mcclatchy, J. D. (Joseph Donald, Jr.) My Mammogram.
http://endeavor.med.nyu.edu/lit-med/lit-med-db/webdocs/webdescrips/mcclatchy830-
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McClatchy, J. D. (Joseph Donald, Jr.) My Mammogram
Genre Poem Poems (Sequence) Keywords Aging Alcoholism Body Self-Image Cancer ... Technology Summary A poem of five sonnets reflecting on the poet's discovery of an asymmetry in his breasts requiring a mammogram. The resultant diagnosis, gynecomastia, is the source of flippant "nervous humor," as McClatchy describes it in a section on the authors and their poems at the end of this anthology (pg. 265), followed at the end of the poem by a "darker, more serious meditation" (again in the poet's own words). The meditation is not so dark or abrupt that it undermines the poem's integrity. Commentary This poem affords an interesting change in viewpoint on a mammogram.

85. Record Article
Scheduled events include a lecture by Timothy Materer and a discussion of Merrill'swork by panelists Jack Hagstrom, JD mcclatchy and Stephen Yenser.
http://wupa.wustl.edu/record/archive/2001/03-09-01/articles/merrill.html
University Libraries to host 'James Merrill: A Celebration'
March 9, 2001 Washington University Libraries will host a symposium titled "James Merrill: A Celebration" on March 22. James Merrill (1925-1995) has been called "the leading lyric poet of his generation." A prolific writer of poetry, fiction and drama, Merrill won a Pulitzer Prize for "Divine Comedies" and two National Book Awards for "Nights and Days" and "Mirabell: Books of Number." Merrill also received the Bollingen Prize in Poetry, a National Book Critics Circle Award for "The Changing Light at Sandover" and the Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry. He served as Connecticut's poet laureate. Merrill had a long association with the University Libraries. As the primary repository for his papers, the libraries' Special Collections department houses a nearly comprehensive collection of works by or about Merrill, as well as most of his manuscripts and a wide array of photographs, interviews and ephemera. This symposium marks the release of Merrill's "Collected Poems" (Knopf, February 2001) and recognizes the passage of what would have been his 75th birthday March 3.

86. Directory :: Look.com
mcclatchy, JD (1) Sites. JD mcclatchy The Academy of American Poetspresents a biography, photograph, and selected poems. ,
http://www.look.com/searchroute/directorysearch.asp?p=84984

87. James Merril
Last Poems By James Merrill With an introduction by JD mcclatchy anda photogravure portrait by Mariana Cook, Although we wish these
http://www.thornwillow.com/Books/merril.html
Last Poems
By James Merrill
With an introduction by
J. D. McClatchy
and a photogravure portrait by
Mariana Cook
Although we wish these were his latest poems rather than his last, Thornwillow Press is honored to announce the publication of the final works of James Merrill, one of the few acknowledged masters of 20th-century American poetry.
Yale Review , a distinguished poet and critic, remarked in his lengthy New Yorker memoir: "James Merrill gave his lifetime to language, and to the ways its hard truths and mysterious graces come to constitute our lives."
In his New York Times obituary Mel Gussow declared Merrill’s collective achievement to have established him "as heir to the lyrical legacy of W. H. Auden and Wallace Stevens..."
Mr. McClatchy’s introduction to the last poems offers knowing insights into Merrill’s poetry and to the circumstances surrounding the creation of these, his final works. McClatchy reminds us that each of these seven poems "begin[s] with a sensation - a color, say, or a glimpse of weather...a sense of possibility" that moves the reader through a "collage of circumstances" and "towards some larger idea of itself." Concise yet absolutely at home with his subject, mcClatchy offers us a remarkable introduction to these glowing works.
In 1967, when he was 40, Merrill won the first of his two National Book Awards in poetry for

88. Last Poems
As JD mcclatchy, one of Merrill’s close friends and himself the editor of theYale Review, a distinguished poet and critic, remarked in his lengthy New
http://www.thornwillow.com/CPublications/Publications/Book Prospecti copy/Merril
Tan morocco and green paste-paper
Although we wish these were his latest poems rather than his last, Thornwillow Press is honored to offer the final works of James Merrill, one of the few acknowledged masters of 20th-century American poetry.
As J. D. McClatchy, one of Merrill’s close friends and himself the editor of the Yale Review, a distinguished poet and critic, remarked in his lengthy New Yorker memoir: "James Merrill gave his lifetime to language, and to the ways its hard truths and mysterious graces come to constitute our lives."
In his New York Times obituary Mel Gussow declared Merrill’s collective achievement to have established him "as heir to the lyrical legacy of W. H. Auden and Wallace Stevens..." Mr. McClatchy’s introduction to the last poems offers knowing insights into Merrill’s poetry and to the circumstances surrounding the creation of these, his final works. McClatchy reminds us that each of these seven poems "begin[s] with a sensation - a color, say, or a glimpse of weather...a sense of possibility" that moves the reader through a "collage of circumstances" and "towards some larger idea of itself." Concise yet absolutely at home with his subject, mcClatchy offers us a remarkable introduction to these glowing works.
Last Poems is further confirmation of Merrill’s genius, and the first collection of them under a single cover. Two poems, Minotaur and Oranges, appear here in their first publication anywhere and Christmas Tree appears for the first time in its intended configuration - "as if the reader were in an adjacent room whose doorway blocked his view of the decorated tree."

89. NYSL Library Notes: Volume 10, Number 2: March 2003
May 20, 2003 600 pm JD mcclatchy Horace the Odes. LIBRARY LECTURE. JD mcclatchyHorace the Odes Tuesday, May 20, 2003 600 pm, Members' Room.
http://www.nysoclib.org/notes.html
NOTES
Volume 10, Number 2: March 2003
ARCHIVED NOTES
THE NEW YORK CITY BOOK AWARDS 2002
BOOK AWARDS CEREMONY
Thursday, May 1, 2003
5:30 p.m., Members’ Room
The New York City Book Awards, established in 1996, honor current authors who have captured the essence of New York City. This year’s jury members are Constance Rogers Roosevelt, chair; Barbara Cohen, Jules Cohn, Hope Cooke, Joan K. Davidson, Joshua B. Freeman, Christopher Gray, Roger Pasquier, Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, Jonathan Rosen, Daniel M. Rossner, and Wendy Wasserstein. The ceremony and reception honors the award-winning authors and their publishers. Library members are cordially invited, but space is limited. Contact the Events Office at 212-288-6900 x230 or sholliday@nysoclib.org by April 24 to place a reservation. BOOK OF THE YEAR
Coney Island Lost and Found
Charles Denson

Ten Speed Press
AWARD FOR JOURNALISM
American Ground: Unbuilding the World Trade Center
William Langewiesche
North Point Press AWARD FOR LANDSCAPE HISTORY A Modern Arcadia: Frederick Law Olmstead Jr. and the Plan for Forest Hills Gardens Susan L. Klaus

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