Kenneth Koch, in the words of editor Ron Padgett, wrote poetry that
became a part of "the mystery and pleasure of being alive." A center of
the New York School, he gained notoriety by mocking the stodginess and
academicism of much mid-century verse.
This enthralling selection encompasses the full range of Koch's poetry,
and includes such already classic works as "Fresh Air" (his
devastatingly satirical assault on mid-1950s poetic conformism), "The
Pleasure of Peace" (with its defiant assertion that "One single piece of
pink mint chewing gum contains more pleasures / Than the whole rude
gallery of war!"), "The Art of Poetry," his astonishing and light-footed
survey of the aims and methods of poetry, and poems from the late
collection New Addresses, including "To World War Two," "To
Psychoanalysis," and "To the French Language."
A poet at once directly accessible and deeply mysterious, Kenneth Koch
was the master of an art of surprise in which the world is constantly
reimagined.
About the American Poets Project
Elegantly designed in compact editions, printed on acid-free paper, and
textually authoritative, the American Poets Project makes available the
full range of the American poetic accomplishment, selected and
introduced by today's most discerning poets and critics.