Russell Edson

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Russell Edson, an American poet, was born in 1935 in Connecticut. Edson won a Guggenheim fellowship in 1974, and has published eleven books of prose poems and one novel, The Song of Percival Peacock (available from Coffee House Press).

According to http://www.webdelsol.com/LITARTS/edson:

"Reclusive by nature, Russell Edson was born in Connecticut in 1935 and currently resides there with his wife Frances. Edson, who jokingly has called himself "Little Mr. Prose Poem," is inarguably the foremost writer of prose poetry in America, having written exclusively in that form before it became fashionable. In a forthcoming study of the American prose poem, Michel Delville suggests that one of Edson's typical "recipes" for his prose poems involves a modern everyman who suddenly tumbles into an alternative reality in which he loses control over himself, sometimes to the point of being irremediably absorbed--both figuratively and literally--by his immediate and, most often, domestic everyday environment. . . . Constantly fusing and confusing the banal and the bizarre, Edson delights in having a seemingly innocuous situation undergo the most unlikely and uncanny metamorphoses."

[edit] Bibliography

  • The Very Thing That Happens (1964)
  • The Childhood Of An Equestrian (1973)
  • The Clam Theater (1973)
  • The Falling Sickness: A Book of Plays (1975)
  • The Intuitive Journey and Other Works (1976)
  • Edson's Mentality (1977)
  • Gulping's Recital (1983)
  • The Wounded Breakfast(1985)
  • The Song of Percival Peacock: A Novel (1992)
  • The Tunnel: Selected Poems of Russell Edson (1994)
  • The Tormented Mirror (2001)
  • The Rooster's Wife: Poems (2005)