HOME AMONG THE SWINGING STARS: THE COLLECTED POEMS OF JAIME DE ANGELO, Jaime De Angulo

HOME AMONG THE SWINGING STARS: THE COLLECTED POEMS OF JAIME DE ANGELO

Jaime De Angulo

Publisher: La Alameda Press
PubDate: 1/1/2006
ISBN: 9781888809473
Binding: PAPERBACK
Price: $18.00
Quantity Available: 21
Pages: 224
 

Poetry. Jaime de Angulo (1887-1950) was legendary as a homesteader in Big Sur, novelist, anthropologist, and linguist of Northern Californian Native languages. He lived among the tribes and went "rolling in ditches with shamans." Bohemian to the core, his life and work exemplifies the trickster wisdom in native "coyote tales." Perhaps best known for his renderings ofPit River lore in his book Indian Tales, there exists an abundance of poetry, important and marvelous, which is collected here--the out-of-print Coyote1s Bones, unpublished poems, and translations of Federico Garcia Lorca. Includes an essay by Andrew Schelling plus a brief biography. Edited by German poet/translator, Stefan Hyner with the cooperation of the Literary Estate of Jaime de Angulo.

Jaime de Angulo (1887-1950) was born in Paris of Spanish parents. He came to America in 1905, found work as a cowboy and ended up in San Francisco the day before the Great Earthquake in 1906. A picaresque life followed as a homesteader in Big Sur, medical doctor, psychologist, renowned linguist, and novelist. As a linguist, de Angulo contributed to the knowledge of many Northern Californian languages, as well ethnomusicological investigations. He lived among the tribes he studied and tried to become integrated into their daily lives. Much of his life and work exemplifies his recognition of the trickster wisdom in their native "coyote tales." Invited by Mabel Dodge Luhan to visit Taos, he turned out to be a vivid chapter in her artistic circle. Brilliant and eccentric, Ezra Pound called him "the American Ovid." Bohemian to the core, he was friend and colleague to poets, composers, and scholars such as Harry Partch, Henry Miller, Robinson Jeffers, Henry Cowell, Franz Boas, Carl Jung, D.H. Lawrence, and many others. Renderings of Pit River lore in his book Indian Tales had a distinct influence on Beat literature, especially Gary Snyder and Jack Kerouac. Besides prose, there exists an abundance of poetry which is collected in Home Among the Swinging Stars and includes the out-of-print Coyote's Bones, versions of Shaman Songs, translations of Federico Garcia Lorca, and unpublished poems.

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