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         Guest Barbara:     more books (100)
  1. Miniatures and Other Poems. by Barbara. GUEST, 2002
  2. Durer in the Window: Reflexions on Art by Barbara Guest, 2003-01-01
  3. Herself Defined by Barbara Guest, 1984
  4. The Location Of Things by Barbara Guest, 1960
  5. Biography. by Barbara. GUEST, 1980
  6. Miniatures and Other Poems (Wesleyan Poetry Series) by Barbara Guest, 2002-09-24
  7. Sesheta #2 Spring 1972 Issue by Joe, Guest, Barbara, Baxter, Glen, Bockris, Victor, Schuyler, James et al Brainard, 1972
  8. Moscow Mansions: Poems by Barbara Guest, 1973-01-01
  9. Herself Defined, H. D. and Her World by Barbara Guest, 2003
  10. UNITED ARTISTS TEN - April 1980 by Bernadette and Lewis Warsh (Editors); Bill Berkson, Cark Coolidge, Barbara Guest, Russell Banks, Carl Solomon, Fanny Howe, Allen Ginsberg, et al (Contributors) MAYER, 1980
  11. Reader VI. by Robin; Guest, Barbara; Harwood, Lee. BLASER, 1998
  12. If So, Tell Me. by Barbara. GUEST, 2001
  13. Between Worlds Number Two by Mina, Guest, Barbara, Hirschman, Jack, Porter, Bern et al Loy, 1961
  14. Fay Lansner by Barbara & Irving Sandler Guest, 1976-01-01

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Photo listings of apartments, houses, condos, guest houses and studio rentals in Santa barbara.
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42. Jacket Magazine Redirection Page
Jacket 10.
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/jacket10/index.html
Jacket magazine has moved to its own new, permanent Internet site.
You will be taken there in 30 seconds.
Please make a note of the new address:
(you can click on it to go there now)
http://jacketmagazine.com/
Each page of magazine now has a new, simpler address.
For a start, those horrible www s are gone. And the base address is simpler:
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/
is now
http://jacketmagazine.com/
and each issue's address is shorter: is now
For example, this old address:
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/jacket16/index.html is now this address: http://jacketmagazine.com/16/index.html And some pages with long filenames have had their names shortened. So please change your bookmarked pages. Sorry for the bother, and thanks for reading Jacket.

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Santa barbara lodging facility guide to guest rooms, amenities, private heated pool, and reservations.
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44. Alphamusic - The Confetti
Translate this page Sonntag, den 09. Februar 2003. guest, barbara The Confetti Trees Buch SUN+ MOON PR VÖ-Datum 9/1999 Bestell-Nr. 1-55713-390-5 11.98 EUR. 72.
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45. Barbara Guest/Anne Dunn, Stripped Tales
Book review by Kevin Killian.
http://www.poetry.org/issues/issue1/alltext/rvkil.htm
Kevin Killian
    Barbara Guest/Anne Dunn, Stripped Tales
    Kelsey St. Press, 1995. $14.00.

    In the hoopla surrounding the recent publication of Guest's Selected Poems I hope this book does not go unnoticed. What is it with Barbara Guest? Can't she just do the same thing over and over again? Stripped Tales
poetry interview table of contents essay ...
Electronic Poetry Review
Hosted by Jeonet

46. Jacket 10 Charles Bernstein Introduces Barbara Guest
Charles Bernstein Introducing barbara guest Frost Medal, Poetry Society of Americaat the Celeste Bartos Forum of the New York Public Library, April 23, 1999.
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/jacket10/bernstein-on-guest.html

C O N T E N T S
H O M E P A G E T E N
Charles Bernstein
Introducing Barbara Guest
Frost Medal, Poetry Society of America
at the Celeste Bartos Forum of the New York Public Library, April 23, 1999
I T IS MY EXTRAORDINARY HONOR to say a few words about a poet whom I admire enormously and whose work has been an abiding presence for me throughout my writing life. A writer's achievement is not only measured in books but also in performances, encounters, exchanges, and in that hard-to-track aura that shapes our perception of the author's work as well as the literature of her time. In any case, a starting point for any response to Barbara Guest's work would have to start with this list: The Location of Things (Tibor de Nagy, 1960)
The Open Skies (1962)
The Blue Stairs (Corinth Books, 1968)
Moscow Mansions (Viking, 1973)
The Countess from Minneapolis (Burning Deck, 1976) Seeking Air (fiction) (Black Sparrow, 1977) Biography (Burning Deck, 1980) Quilts (Vehicle Edition, 1981) Musicality (1988) Quill Solitary, Apparition (The Post-Apollo Press, 1996) Etruscan Reader VI (with Robin Blaser and Lee Harwood)(1998) Rocks on a Platter (Wesleyan, 1999)

47. Thomas Gray - The Academy Of American Poets
The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selected poems, and links as part of its online poetry exhibits.
http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=734

48. Jacket 10 Marjorie Welish (on Barbara Guest) I The Lyric
CONTENTS HOMEPAGE JACKET TEN OCTOBER 1 9 9 9. Marjorie Welish(on barbara guest) The Lyric Lately (a workin-progress) . . .
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/jacket10/welish-on-guest.html

C O N T E N T S
H O M E P A G E T E N
The Lyric Lately (a work-in-progress)
. . . a paper delivered at the conference "Where Lyric Tradition Meets Language Poetry: Innovation in Contemporary American Poetry by Women," Barnard College, New York, April 8-10, 1999
L ET US TAKE the lyric to be non-imitative, verbal music. Let us take the language of reference in decomposition. Let us examine the residuum. In the poetry of Barbara Guest, language stains the page with language: words, material yet not literal. The poet talking to herself is not at issue, given that, in her lyrics, indirect fragment re-cognizes the direct statement of intimate self- revelation. The impersonal, not the personal, is valid. The idiom is not that of speech but that of writing.
Mellifluous? Very. In Guest's recent lyric - in part through rhythmic regularities and the marked privileging of assonance - musicality prevails. Indeed, in Quill, Solitary APPARITION (The Post-Apollo Press, 1996) verbal music points to itself self-referentially. More than once in conversation, furthermore, Guest has said: I heard it first and wrote it afterwards. By this, I take it she means that the formal and material stuff of composition set the terms of the poetics and determined the practice. And that from the outset her text comes about by way of syllabic acoustic relations which phase in and out of associations at the expense of given subject matter.
Marjorie Welish
Let us further notice the literariness through which the classical legend, the medieval quest, and the gothic manse, are the sites of romance that float in mention yet are ultimately resisted. With diction from romance, and events from biography made opaque through suppression of fact (to rid biography of positivism), Guest decomposes reference, re-composes the modem fragment in a-syntactic arrays on the pages given over to the poem. In

49. The Gendered Marvelous: Barbara Guest By Rachel Blau DuPlessis
Selections from the essay by Rachel Blau DuPlessis.
http://www.scc.rutgers.edu/however/v1_1_1999/rbgendered.html
Selections from
The gendered marvelous: Barbara Guest, surrealism, and feminist reception
by Rachel Blau DuPlessis
In her writing, Barbara Guest commemorates an artist's longing for that "tinge on her left retina something like tequila, a rough peppery hotness she called it the 'flavor of eyes.'" (Guest SP, 76) These aspects of her range of pleasures and intelligence, her "painterly witness" (in Kathleen Fraser's words) combined with "her skeptical wariness of language's confinement and oversimplification" ( Fraser 1993, 56) are certainly characteristic of the general ferment known as The New York School in which painters mixed with poets in a coterie atmosphere of play, performativeness, and pleasure. Indeed, as Fraser points out, Guest "was the only woman poet in the first generation of the New York School." (Fraser 1993, 56) However, Fraser continues, thereupon comes a notable glitch in the construction of literary history.
Reception and dissemination are never neutral phenomena, and it is often at this point that the familiar bumbling occurs ("honey, I lost women's writing"). Guest was scandalously excluded from a defining anthology of that New York School in which she had been a key participant, An Anthology of New York Poets
In contrast, though not in compensation, Barbara Guest was accorded a full place in a slightly earlier anthology edited by one of the art dealers and curators central to that conjunction of painters and writers, John Bernard Myers.

50. Barbara Geraghty: Homeopath In Wimbledon, London, SW19
Wimbledon, London Homeopathic practitioner.Category Regional Europe Homeopathy Practitioners and Clinics...... barbara Geraghty is our guest Writer about Homeopathy. barbara may be contactedon 020 8946 4950 for further details or to arrange an appointment.
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51. Barbara Guest: Gedichte Aus 'Moscow Mansions'
Translate this page barbara guest. Einige Gedichte aus Moscow Mansions. Ich habe barbara guestschon immer für eine der größten Lyrikerinnen dieses Landes gehalten.
http://www.jbeilharz.de/guest/moscow_mansions.html
Barbara Guest
Einige Gedichte aus Moscow Mansions in deutscher Übersetzung von Johannes Beilharz
~ Rote Lilien
Jemand hat sich daran erinnert das Geschirr abzutrocknen;
sie haben den Unfall aus dem Backofen genommen.
Danach Lilien zum Abendessen; da
werden die Linien vor dem Fenster
in den steinernen Tisch hineinradiert Das Papier fliegt hoch
dann runter mit dem Wind
der seinen Vogelgesang wiederholt wiederholt. Diese Arme unter dem Kissen
die grabenden Arme die sich nachts
spalten während der Schlepper Wasser tritt
nennen sich Äste Der Baum bist du
die Decke ist es die ihn wärmt Schnee eruptiert von der Distel bis zum Zeh; der Schnee fließt aus dir heraus. Eine kalte Hand auf dem Geschirr stellt eine Untertasse ab in ihr die sich zum Abendessen auszog dieses Haar in den Schnee gleiten ließ Die Zündflamme am Herd ging aus Die Zeitung gefaltet wie eine Serviette andere Schwingen flogen in den Stein.

52. Barbara Guest If So, Tell Me
Review by Geoff Ward.
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au:80/jacket10/ward-on-guest.html
If So, Tell Me
C O N T E N T S
H O M E P A G E T E N
Geoff Ward reviews
Barbara Guest, If So, Tell Me
You can visit Reality Street's website at freespace.virgin.net/reality.street/
or send email to reality.street@virgin.net
Visit Jacket's bookstore page to order Barbara Guest's books This piece is 2346 words or about 8 pages long
B ORN IN 1920 in North Carolina, Barbara Guest spent her childhood in Florida and California, graduating from Berkeley before moving to New York. It was in the 1960s in New York City that she made a name as a poet, connecting not only with the New York School writers Frank O'Hara, John Ashbery and James Schuyler, but also the painters of the Abstract Expressionist movement, whose replacement of representation by gesture would (along with other painterly attributes) influence her poetry.
Some startling and experimental collections over the next decade - most famously Moscow Mansions (1973) and The Countess from Minneapolis (1976) - set her work at a critical distance from both the autobiography and overt emotionalism of O'Hara and Schuyler and the protracted vocalisation and syntax of meditation that characterise Ashbery. Guest's work seemed to run on a parallel track to the innovations of the Language group, while speaking through traditions of aestheticism and of female-authored modernism, yet simultaneously showing no group affiliations at all.
If So, Tell Me

53. The Gendered Marvelous: Barbara Guest By Rachel Blau DuPlessis
gendered marvelous barbara guest, surrealism, feminist reception by RachelBlau DuPlessis. Selections from guest, barbara. Fair Realism.
http://scc01.rutgers.edu/however/v1_1_1999/rbgendered.html
Selections from
The gendered marvelous: Barbara Guest, surrealism, and feminist reception
by Rachel Blau DuPlessis
In her writing, Barbara Guest commemorates an artist's longing for that "tinge on her left retina something like tequila, a rough peppery hotness she called it the 'flavor of eyes.'" (Guest SP, 76) These aspects of her range of pleasures and intelligence, her "painterly witness" (in Kathleen Fraser's words) combined with "her skeptical wariness of language's confinement and oversimplification" ( Fraser 1993, 56) are certainly characteristic of the general ferment known as The New York School in which painters mixed with poets in a coterie atmosphere of play, performativeness, and pleasure. Indeed, as Fraser points out, Guest "was the only woman poet in the first generation of the New York School." (Fraser 1993, 56) However, Fraser continues, thereupon comes a notable glitch in the construction of literary history.
Reception and dissemination are never neutral phenomena, and it is often at this point that the familiar bumbling occurs ("honey, I lost women's writing"). Guest was scandalously excluded from a defining anthology of that New York School in which she had been a key participant, An Anthology of New York Poets
In contrast, though not in compensation, Barbara Guest was accorded a full place in a slightly earlier anthology edited by one of the art dealers and curators central to that conjunction of painters and writers, John Bernard Myers.

54. Naropa University - Summer Writing Program 1998
barbara guest Tribute conversation between Mei-mei Berssenbrugge and barbara guest.
http://www.naropa.edu/swp/mbbg.html
Summer Writing Program 1998
Search Engine best viewed
with Internet Explorer or
Writing and Poetics
SWP 2002 SWP 2001
SWP 2000
... SWP 1998 Summer Writing Program 1998 Barbara Guest Tribute
conversation between Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge and Barbara Guest Barbara Guest, a major poet of The New York School, has recently authored several books of poetry including Defensive Rapture, The Altos with artist Richard Turtle, Fair Realism , and Musicality with artist June Felter. She published a biography Herself Defined: H.D. the Poet and her World in 1984 and has served as visiting lecturer at Bethlehem College, Brown University, University of New York at Buffalo, University of California at San Diego, among others, and at the H.D. Symposia at Bryn Mawr and the Southbank Imagist Conference in London. Her awards include the Lawrence Lipton Award for Literature, the Longview Award, and the Yaddo Fellowship. Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge was born in Beijing in 1947, and grew up in Massachusetts. Her books include

55. Jacket 10 - Susan Gevirtz - On Barbara Guest
guest, barbara, Mysteriously Defining the Mysterious Byzantine Proposalsof Poetry, excerpts from a talk given by barbara guest at St.
http://jacketmagazine.com/10/gues-by-gevi.html

C O N T E N T S
H O M E P A G E T E N
Susan Gevirtz
Belief's Afterimage
Rocks On A Platter, Notes On Literature , Barbara Guest, Wesleyan University Press, Hanover and London, 1999. If So, Tell Me , Barbara Guest, Reality Street Editions, London, 1999. The Confetti Trees

A body by itself doesn't mean anything.
You have to surround it with a story. - Vladimir Dzuro, Czech Police detective, forensic team.
Nov. 1, 1999, New York Times Body in the field - beyond uneven brick,
meaning in advance of itself. If So, Tell Me , Barbara Guest, 13
B EGINNING AGAIN and again surrounding a body with story "another STORY BEGINS." ( Rocks , 3) Was there ever a body to begin with? Or can a body by itself exist? In Barbara Guest's three recent books there is only the surrounding that is poetry. Something imagined lying across the field of the page beyond the uneven brick of type.
To read Barbara Guest's three new books, almost simultaneously, is to visit a land of elaboration. Due to the accident of their publication, all appearing in 1999 within a few months of each other, the books converse more directly than they might if they had appeared further apart in time. Instead, I (as many readers may have) read each all the way through then saw that by their own momentum they began to shuffle - three extraordinary decks of cards - doors to worlds so rich and complex that comment is paltry, leaving only the possibility of response. Although The Confetti Trees was written long before the other two it fully participates in the orbit of this trialogue. Formally and otherwise the books are vastly different from each other and cannot be conflated.

56. University Press Of New England | Rocks On A Platter
A major poet reflects on the poetic process. Brief review of barbara guest's 'Rocks on a Platter.'
http://www.dartmouth.edu/acad-inst/upne/0-8195-6372-2.html
Rocks on a Platter
Guest, Barbara
A major poet reflects on the poetic process.
Rocks on a Platter began as an attempt to write about the making of a poem and in so doing, establishes a literary approach other than the essay form, with the rocks of the title being offered for the poem's construction. The resulting long poem is a meditation on the difficulty of assemblage and seeks to express and reflect on the poetic process. Barbara Guest's densely but deftly allusive poetry reveals the range and depth of her cultural knowledge, bespeaking a major poet at the peak of her powers.
Guest's work is saturated in the visual arts and music, and extends the formal experiments of modernism, playing abstract qualities of language against its sensuousness and materiality, and switching effortlessly from the real to the imagined. Innovative, intimate, erudite, her poems articulate a feminist aesthetic that seeks not to dispel mystery but to elaborate and perpetuate it.
BARBARA GUEST has published 14 volumes of poetry, including her Selected Poems (1995), as well as the novel Seeking Air (1996) and a biography of H.D., Herself Defined (1984). Her latest honor is the 1999 Robert Frost Medal for lifetime achievement from the Poetry Society of America.
(Cover illustration is for paperback edition only)
Wesleyan Poetry Series Wesleyan University Press distributed by University Press of New England
57 pp. 6 x 9"

57. Jacket 10 - Sara Lundquist On Barbara Guest's I The Countess
She suffers from a certain agoraphobia, unmixed, as it is in barbara guest, witha counterbalancing agoraphilia. Yale University, New Haven. guest, barbara.
http://jacketmagazine.com/10/gues-by-lund.html

C O N T E N T S
H O M E P A G E T E N
Sara Lundquist
The Midwestern New York Poet: Barbara Guest's
"Surely Ann Arbor is the only place in the western hemisphere where cafeterias frankly put out a neon sign saying simply and clearly: FOOD." Such was the tenor of O'Hara's first reports from the Midwest, a mixture of humor and surprise, but not the solitary pain he had anticipated. "This is not at all a bad place," he wrote . . . a few days after his arrival . . . . It seemed almost as if the openness and cleanness of the tree-lined streets and regular lawns of Ann Arbor, its fresh air and wide open spaces, were giving his poems a new clarity of language and concreteness of detail, their self-conscious preciosity being tempered by American pragmatism and imagism. - Brad Gooch, from City Poet - John Ashbery, from "For John Clare"
H OW AND WHY does a poet, associated throughout her career with New York City take on the subject of Minneapolis and its environs? How does she navigate the strong, long-standing cultural prejudice that conceives of New York City and the Midwest as polar opposites, places so divergent in their mores and values that they can cause visitors from one to the other to suffer intra-national culture shock? Mutual attraction and hostility mark this divide: inhabitants of both places tend to hope or fear that "real life" might truly be found not here but there.

58. Barbara Guest
Poem by barbara guest, published in Columbia Poetry Review number 12, 1999.
http://www.colum.edu/undergraduate/english/pubs/cpr/99/guest.html
back to Table of Contents for Columbia Poetry Review number 12, 1999
Barbara Guest
Unusual Figures
A person stands in the doorway. Someone else goes to greet him. They establish a calendar of meetings, apricot color. Once they arrived together in a cab of electricity, cool heat, desert air. The author attaches herself to those figures peculiar to her asking. They are needed by the pageant of creativity! The usual height and dots of activeness. Is it from the basket shrub? Lightness of feet, circle of grey, of green overlap. What language do they speak?
Columbia College Chicago

600 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60605-1996
Telephone: 312-663-1600
this page created by Karen Osborne for Columbia Poetry Review June 11 1999

59. Barbara Guest - The Academy Of American Poets
barbara guest The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selectedpoems, and links as part of its online poetry exhibits. barbara guest.
http://www.poets.org/npm/sponsors/bgues
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Barbara Guest Barbara Guest was born in Wilmington, North Carolina, in 1920. She attended the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of California, Berkeley, from which she graduated in 1943. Early in her career, she was known predominantly as a writer of the New York School, a group of poets that included John Ashbery Kenneth Koch Frank O'Hara , and James Schuyler. The New York School represented a rejection of the dominant school of confessional poetry and was deeply influenced by the action painters of the 1950s and 1960s, particularly Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Larry Rivers. Throughout the 1950s, Guest worked as a writer for Art News magazine, and she has continued to write articles and reviews for many art magazines. The tension between the lyrical (or musical) and the graphic (or material) is a defining feature of her work, and her poetry often utilizes space as a way to draw attention to language. Guest has published numerous collections of poetry, among them Miniatures and Other Poems (Wesleyan University Press, 2002)

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