Ever since its first flowering, jazz has had a powerful influence on
American poetry; this scintillating anthology offers a treasury of poems
that are as varied and as vital as the music that inspired them.
From the Harlem Renaissance to the beat movement, from the poets of the
New York school to the contemporary poetry scene, the jazz aesthetic has
been a compelling literary force--one that Jazz Poems makes palpable.
We hear it in the poems of Langston Hughes, E. E. cummings, William
Carlos Williams, Frank O'Hara, and Gwendolyn Brooks, and in those of
Yusef Komunyakaa, Charles Simic, Rita Dove, Ntozake Shange, Mark Doty,
William Matthews, and C. D. Wright. Here are poems that pay tribute to
jazz's great voices, and poems that throb with the vivid rhythm and
energy of the jazz tradition, ranging in tone from mournful elegy to
sheer celebration.