Poetry. Praise for William Heyen's earlier Holocaust poetry: "The most powerful book I have read this year is William Heyen's The Swastika Poems. I know no other book so firmly integrated. Sober and chilling, songs in shadowed measures, each leading forward into intenser realizations, darker clarities, these poems will invade your dreams"--Hayden Carruth. "As 20th-century poetry that is nakedly quintessential, William Heyen's Erika poems are unmatched. For it is a staggering paradox that the poetry of the Holocaust is best written by non-Jews. Written by Jews the poems of the Holocaust add to the literature of lamentation, the basic literature of the Old Testament. No matter how hauntingly great such works may be they cannot escape self-identification and the voice of the dirge. But to treat the Holocaust in a larger context, to throw light on the poetry of the victim one must be otherwise than the victim. I doubt if they can be equaled"--Karl Shapiro.
Author City: BROCKPORT, NY USA
William Heyen is a former Senior Fulbright Lecturer in American Literature in Germany and has won awards and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Guggenheim Foundation, Poetry Magazine, and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. His books include STRAIGHT'S SUITE FOR CRAIG COTTER & FRANK O'HARA (Mayapple Press, 2012), A POETICS OF HIROSHIMA (Etruscan Press, 2008), TO WILLIAM MERWIN: A POEM (Mammoth Books, 2007), TITANIC & ICEBERG: EARLY ESSAYS & REVIEWS (Mammoth Books, 2006), and THE CONFESSIONS OF DOC WILLIAMS & OTHER POEMS (Etruscan Press, 2006).