Translation of Ricardo Cazares.
James Laughlin wrote this and other autobiographical sketches at home, including three in the morning and the time of sunrise, when the cook brought him a breakfast of tea and blueberry muffins. The text resists classification. It was written in what Laughlin called the American plain style, following a sort of narrative free verse he learned from William Carlos Williams and he cut according to their visual extension on the page. By then, Laughlin, son of a wealthy family of steelworkers of Pennsylania, was not only a great poet and prose writer, but had already become the most influential editor of the twentieth century in the United States. Following the advice of Ezra Pound, the young publisher Laughlin founded New Directions. It published the Pound itself and many of the poets, essayists and decisive storytellers of our time, men and women wh...read more