One of Henry Miller's most luminous statements of his personal
philosophy of life, Stand Still Like the Hummingbird, provides a
symbolic title for this collection of stories and essays. Many of them
have appeared only in foreign magazines while others were printed in
small limited editions which have gone out of print.
Miller's genius for comedy is at its best in Money and How It Gets That
Way--a tongue-in-cheek parody of economics provoked by a postcard from
Ezra Pound which asked if he ever thought about money. His deep concern
for the role of the artist in society appears in An Open Letter to All
and Sundry, and in The Angel is My Watermark he writes of his own
passionate love affair with painting. The Immorality of Morality is an
eloquent discussion of censorship. Some of the stories, such as First
Love, are autobiographical, and there are portraits of friends, such as
Patchen: Man of Anger and Light, and essays on other writers such as
Walt Whitman, Thoreau, Sherwood Anderson and Ionesco.
Taken together, these highly readable pieces reflect the incredible
vitality and variety of interests of the writer who extended the
frontiers of modern literature with Tropic of Cancer and other great
books.