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For your convenience, we've compiled a list of recommended books
by our published writers. To order a book, click on the book's
title, then add it to your shopping basket. Orders are filled
and shipped by Amazon.com, so you can be assured of reliable
service, great prices, and secure online ordering. Check back
often to see what new books are being added to our bookstore.
Most books are sold at 20% to 30% off the listed suggested retail
price.
Scratching the Beat Surface : Essays on...
Paperback – 175 pages Reissue Edition (November 1994), Penguin USA This insider's view of the Beat scene of the fifties and early sixties vividly marks the advancement of a new perception of art as "a living bio-alchemical organism" through essays by a poet and playwright who helped shape the movement.
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Touching the Edge : Dharma Devotions...
Paperback – 128 pages 1st Edition (May 1999), Shambhala Publications
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Huge Dreams : San Francisco and Beat...
Paperback - 192 pages (May 1999), Penguin USA (Paper) Huge Dreams republishes two books, out of print for thirty years, both influential in expanding poetry into a larger world, which focuses on nature, the environment, antiwar activities, individual anarchism, Zen Buddhism, jazz, and a kind of romantic mystical thought. |
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Rain Mirror: New Poems
This book contains two long poems, 'Crisis Blossom' and 'Haiku Edge'. "Haiku Edge" is a serial poem of linked haikus in the American idiom that catches moments in the landscape of Oakland's East Bay Hills where McClure now lives. "Crisis Blossom" in contrast is a long poem in three parts that records the poet's months' long shock and recovery after a near-fatal airplane accident. |
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Three Poems: Dolphin Skull, Rare Angel,...
In ``Dolphin Skull,'' he attempts to compress the depth of history into one illuminated moment. ``Rare Angel'' leads readers through primordial prehistory and out through the Zen tentacles of the modern unconscious self--arriving again and again at a certain poeticized fallout, ``the shapes of bookends, rugs, and tractors.'' ``Dark Brown'' shrieks page after page of tormented self-realization. |
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