In From Noon to Starry Night, published on the 100th anniversary of Walt
Whitman's death, the great poet of democracy has at last found his
biographer. Philip Callow brings to Whitman's extraordinary life the
skills and sensitivities of novelist, poet, and biographer. Here is the
life of America's poet--beguiling, surprising, in some ways magical--a
wonderfully detailed portrait, lyrically told. More successfully than
any earlier biography, Callow's has captured Whitman's elusive truth.
Drawing upon a broad range of sources, and quoting liberally from
Whitman's poems, Callow has re-created the poet's life in all its
roundness and intricate corners, "smiling evasively in his thicket of
identities." Tradesman, teacher, buccaneer journalist, suddenly a poet;
a man who loved crowds yet was fundamentally a solitary, with a sexual
fluidity that remains a riddle to this day, Whitman was, Callow
observes, a democrat who set out to imagine the life of the average man
in average circumstances changed into something grand and heroic. "The
sheer certainty of his voice can still astonish us, '' the author
writes. He has brought Whitman alive again in this perceptive and
evocative biography. With 8 pages of photographs.