California poet Jack Foley has been called "a brilliant critic and a
unique poet whose work energetically records the disintegration of the
patriarchy" and a writer of "genuinely avant-garde poetry." His
collaborative, multimedia poetry performances are both seminal and
shamanic, evolving from the linguistic musical tradition of the original
San Francisco Beat poets and extending their eye, ear and voice of
penetrating clarity into a modern mythology. "A Backward Glance O'er
Travel'd Roads" - a title from Walt Whitman - is a spiritual history, an
attempt to show, as Wordsworth put it many years ago, "the growth of a
poet's mind." Where did I begin? What forces moved me in what
directions? What is the result of the effort to create art in a medium
that is currently simultaneously respected, misunderstood, and
discredited? What kind of poetry is possible in a dark time? "A Backward
Glance O'er Travel'd Roads" throws light not only on Foley's life and
work, but also on the history of twentieth-century poetry, and on the
efforts, successes, and failures of Modernism.