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No Word of Farewell: Selected Poems, 1970-2000

No Word of Farewell: Selected Poems, 1970-2000

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.87
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: gwynn 4 star
Review: A tremendous collection of poems. This book displays Gwynn's great gifts to great effect. I really enjoyed this book for its humor. Excellen t.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hello to a Great Poet
Review: Being a teacher and writer, I had heard Gwynn's name through the years and associated him more as an editor than as a poet. However, I read a review of this present book in an esteemed literary journal and decided it was time to check out the creative work of R.S. Gwynn.

He's a delight, a master, a brave soul in a world of timid poetasters. He has no fear in using traditional forms and regular rhytms to write his poems. And he is equally unafraid to skewer what Orwell called the "smelly little orthodoxies" which strangle both society in general and literature specifically. Read his "Narcissiad," the great center piece of NO WORD OF FAREWELL. It's a wonderful, dead-on swipe at the Lit Biz today, where poetry is a commodity and celebrity is preferable to excellence.

NO WORD OF FAREWELL is a generous compendium of Gwynn's work, dating back to 1970 and going up through 2000. The selections show that Gwynn is capable of most everything - satire, ballads, love poems, etc. He is a man of uncommon sense who nevertheless does not allow his level-headedness to obscure his heart. That his work is not better known is a commentary only on the present state of poetry and reading, not on R.S. Gwynn.

Nevertheless, I feel confident that when the rubbish of all the poet manques who currently crowd our magazines and college campuses is wiped away, Gwynn's work will finally emerge, a diamond in the rough finally revealed.

Please read this book and give copies to your friends. It is an inestimable source of pleasure and wisdom.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hello to a Great Poet
Review: Being a teacher and writer, I had heard Gwynn's name through the years and associated him more as an editor than as a poet. However, I read a review of this present book in an esteemed literary journal and decided it was time to check out the creative work of R.S. Gwynn.

He's a delight, a master, a brave soul in a world of timid poetasters. He has no fear in using traditional forms and regular rhytms to write his poems. And he is equally unafraid to skewer what Orwell called the "smelly little orthodoxies" which strangle both society in general and literature specifically. Read his "Narcissiad," the great center piece of NO WORD OF FAREWELL. It's a wonderful, dead-on swipe at the Lit Biz today, where poetry is a commodity and celebrity is preferable to excellence.

NO WORD OF FAREWELL is a generous compendium of Gwynn's work, dating back to 1970 and going up through 2000. The selections show that Gwynn is capable of most everything - satire, ballads, love poems, etc. He is a man of uncommon sense who nevertheless does not allow his level-headedness to obscure his heart. That his work is not better known is a commentary only on the present state of poetry and reading, not on R.S. Gwynn.

Nevertheless, I feel confident that when the rubbish of all the poet manques who currently crowd our magazines and college campuses is wiped away, Gwynn's work will finally emerge, a diamond in the rough finally revealed.

Please read this book and give copies to your friends. It is an inestimable source of pleasure and wisdom.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Giddy with Laughter and Wisdom
Review: Full of wicked humor, slyly wrought pathos, boffo couplets, stunningly relevant sonnets, at least one startling take-stock epic, and giddy cynicism: there's simply no poet in America like Gwynn, and there's no one as funny, period. This is the REAL self-help book! Help yourself cope in this most angst-ridden of seasons: read Gwynn's wisdom and laughter.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Poet Laureate of Lamar University
Review: Gwynn is smart and funny, but his poems move the reader's emotions as well as her intellect. More readers should be familiar with Gwynn's work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wry, Intelligent, Powerful.
Review: Gwynn is smart and funny, but his poems move the reader's emotions as well as her intellect. More readers should be familiar with Gwynn's work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: i've waited a long time for this one
Review: I have waited six months since I first heard about R.S. Gwynn's new and selected poems, to publication. And it was worth the wait. It's well-known that Gwynn is one of the best of the New Formalists, and now more people can see why. The collection begins with an introduction by Gwynn's friend, and another of the best of the New Formalists, Dana Gioia. Followed by If By Song, Gwynn's new poems, which contains several of my favorites ("1-800", "The Classroom at the Mall", "West Palm", and "Snow White and the Seven Deadly Sins"), as well as other poems that showcase the poet's wit and skill with poetic form (such as "Black Helicopters," which holds your interest both in what it says as well as the form it says it). A section covering translations (which I was unaware Gwynn did any translating) and parodies. Once again, Gwynn shows his skill at humorous verse with "Versions for the Millennium" "The Professor's Lot" and the charming "Why They Love Us" (his tribute to the dog). Selections from "The Narcissiad" follows next. This is Gwynn's mock-epic about a poet who battles other poets in the effort to be the only surviving poet. (It's a great poem, I only wish it were still in print, so that I could pick up a copy) And the final section of the book is selections from _The Drive-In_, which is loaded with great poems, such as "Among Philistines", "Anacreontic" and "The Simplification" which are three of my favorites. It's such a strong selection, that I wish _The Drive-In_ weren't out of print so that I could pick that one up too (I'll be busy searching the used bookstores for copies of these two books).

Why should you purchase _No Word of Farewell_? I leave with what Dana Gioia said in his introduction: "I should probably also note two other obvious qualities of Gwynn's poetry. First, he is ingeniously funny. Second, he is an effortless master of verse forms. No American poet of his generation has written better sonnets, and very few can equal him in the ballade, couplet, rondeau, or pantoum-not to mention the half dozen new forms he has invented. But, to be honest, it was neither Gwynn's considerable formal skill nor his wicked humor that first attracted me, though those qualities surely added to my pleasure. Instead, it was his depth of feeling and intense lyricality."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Poet Laureate of Lamar University
Review: Mr. Gwynn is my poetry teacher at Lamar Univerisity Beaumont, Tx.
He is a master of wit and intelligence (speaking of poetry now).
His insights and advice has helped my poetry emmensely, but surely not my spelling. If you are a poetry writer or fan from anywhere in the area, then you should definetly think about taking one of his poetry classes, for he is a legend in the making. His poetry and knowledge thereof is awesome and awe inspiring. Pick up his work whenever you find it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wit and Compassion
Review: R.S. Gwynn is not nearly as well known as he should be; if there is any justice in the world, No Word of Farewell will change that. The poems in this book are written in an impressive array of forms, but their attitude is far from formal. Gwynn writes about pistol-packing old ladies ("At Rose's Range"), Samson and Delilah ("Among Philistines"), conjoined twins ("Chang and Eng"), and much more. Like all the best satirists, Gwynn joins wit with compassion for the characters who people his poems.

One of the many pleasures of No Word of Farewell is seeing Gwynn's humorous poems side by side with the more serious ones. My short list of favorite poems--both funny and serious--includes "Cleante to Elmire", "The Classroom at the Mall", "At Rose's Range", "Snow White and the Seven Deadly Sins", "Body Bags", and "The Garden Parasol". And that's not to mention the hilarious "The Professor's Lot" (which can be sung to the melody of a certain Gilbert & Sullivan song).

This is a wonderful book of poems, filled with warmth, wit, and variety. I can't recommend it highly enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Poetry as Pure Pleasure
Review: The only problem I have seen with reviews of R.S. Gwynn's poetry is that they may concentrate a bit too much on the satire, which is understandable when the satire is so funny ("Letter from Carthage" and "Anacreontic" are two of my favorites). The serious, quieter poems are equally impressive, especially poems like "The Dream Again," "Train for Ill: A Ballad," "Release," and "Our Hearts were Growing Up." The _variety_ in the book is impressive: ballades, villanelles, dramatic monologues, short lyrics, satiric couplets -- when formal poetry is often accused of being conservative, straitlaced or predictable, it is wonderful to see all the possible variations of form displayed so well. However, the technique is not just there for its own sake, but always wedded to emotion, whether serious or hilarious, so that no poem reads as an exercise. In an age where many poets seem stuck writing the same poem over and over, pleasure at all the different forms in this life is only more sharply enhanced.


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