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Kenward Elmslie

Kenward Gray Elmslie (April 27, 1929 – June 29, 2022) was an American author, performer, editor and publisher associated with the New York School of poetry.

Kenward Elmslie
Elmslie in 2005
Born(1929-04-27)April 27, 1929
New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 29, 2022(2022-06-29) (aged 93)
New York City, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University (B.A. English, 1950)
Literary movementThe New York School

Life and career edit

Kenward Gray Elmslie was born to William Gray Elmslie and Constance Pulitzer in Manhattan on April 27, 1929.[1] His father was a tutor who met his mother, the youngest child of Joseph Pulitzer, while working as a tutor for her siblings.[1] He spent his childhood in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Washington, D.C.[1] He attended St. Mark's School in Southborough, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1950 with a B.A. in literature. He relocated to Cleveland to work as an intern at Karamu House, where there was an interracial theatre group. There he met lyricist John Latouche (1914-1956). At Latouche's invitation, Elmslie relocated back to New York in 1952 to live with him. In 1953 the couple bought a farmhouse in Calais, Vermont.[2] Elmslie collaborated with Latouche on some of his lyrics, including (uncredited) the lyric of "On the Waterfront," with music by Leonard Bernstein, and "Backer's Audition," for "The Littlest Revue".[3] Latouche died of heart failure in the house in Calais in August, 1956.[4] Elmslie kept the property, which served as his summer home for the rest of his life and, beginning during the 1970s, as the office for Elmslie's Z Press.

Elmslie's first work performed was the lyrics of the spring varsity show during his senior year at St. Mark's, his preparatory school.[5] He began his career collaborating with composers for operas and musicals in an attempt to bring a contemporary style to classical theater. Among his theatrical works are adaptations of Truman Capote's novel The Grass Harp and Lola, both projects in collaboration with Claibe Richardson. Truman Capote first granted Elmslie and Richardson the rights to make a musical of his novella in 1963, but it was not produced until 1971, and lasted only seven performances.[6] A cast album was issued in 1972.

Elmslie's first published poem, "Letter from Eldorado," appeared in the magazine Folder in 1956. In 1960 he published poems in four issues of the prestigious magazine Poetry. Elmslie later published more than thirty books of poetry and prose, and hundreds of poems in journals and anthologies. A collection of his writing, Motor Disturbance (1971), was awarded the Frank O'Hara Award for Poetry in 1971. He was awarded the National Endowment of the Arts Award for The Power Plant Sestina (1967) and the Ford Foundation Grant, as well as the Project for Innovative Poetry's Gertrude Stein Award for Innovative Poetry, and an award from the National Council of the Arts.[7] His poetry and prose is often combined with the work of painters and other visual artists, most notably black and white comics drawn by Joe Brainard, his "26 Bars" depicted by Donna Dennis, and full color collaborations with Trevor Winkfield.[8]

Reviews of Elmslie's poetry by other writers were often enthusiastic. When Tropicalism was published in 1976, John Ashbery described Elmslie's poetry as being like the notes of "a mad scientist who has swallowed the wrong potion in his lab and is desperately trying to get his calculations on paper before everything closes in".[9] When Routine Disruptions, a volume of selected poems and lyrics chosen from thirty-eight years of work, was published in 1998, poet Alice Notley wrote, “this is an icon, for me, of Elmslie's work, its wild funniness, theatricality, brazenness, its love of art and objects”.[10] In an interview during 2001, poet Mary Kite told Elmslie that, for her, his poems "resemble tiny theatres. They are observational and exciting."[11]

Elmslie's prose also received praise from critics. In a 1973 review of The Orchid Stories in The Atlanta Constitution, Edith Blicksilver wrote that Elmslie "has created a potpourri of unusual impressions and experiences. . . this latest work reveals Mr. Elmslie as a valid twentieth century version of the Renaissance man of letters."[12] Michael Silverblatt, writing in The Paris Review, said the book "bubbles with head-spinning mixtures. Its combination of energy and boredom astounds. . . You can read this book repeatedly, as I have, and it’ll be fresh each time, an eternal palate cleanser. Very few books in literature are as singular as The Orchid Stories."[13]

In 1973, Elmslie was asked to edit an issue of The World, the literary journal of the Poetry Project at St. Marks in New York. He decided he wanted to edit something more permanent, and instead initiated Z Magazine and Z Press, acting as the press' editor and publisher. The press was based originally in New York City, but then relocated to Elmslie's summer home in Calais. The journal, which was published annually and was titled in successive repetitions of the letter "Z" (i.e. "Z," "ZZ," etc.), continued for six issues, the last being published in 1978. Z Press continued publishing books, broadsides, postcards and the occasional LP record until 1987. The press was revived briefly during the late 1990s to issue several single-poem chapbooks, including, in 2000, Sun on Six by Jeff Clark, with a linocut by Jasper Johns. The Z magazine issues printed works by a wide range of authors, from poets associated with "the New York School" to personal essayist Phillip Lopate, and art features by Ian Hamilton Finlay and Donna Dennis, among others. Apart from the magazine, Z Press primarily published works by other New York School writers and artists (many of them Elmslie's friends) including John Ashbery, Ron Padgett, James Schuyler, and perhaps most extensively, long time partner Joe Brainard.[14] Elmslie's work with graphic artists such as Brainard combined poetry with art to emphasize their interconnectedness; his work in theatre demonstrates his commitment to art as a whole, not only to one medium.

Death edit

Elmslie died at his home in West Village neighborhood of New York City on June 29, 2022, at the age of 93. He suffered from dementia for several years prior.[1]

In an appreciation and memoir published in Rain Taxi, his sometime publisher W.C. Bamberger concluded: "Kenward Elmslie has now gone off into the far air, but he has left riches behind, and more so than any other writer I've read, the wider your experience of his arts, the richer each work becomes."[15]

Works edit

Theater edit

  • Miss Julie (opera libretto), Boosey & Hawkes (New York, NY), 1965.
  • Lizzie Borden (opera libretto), Boosey & Hawkes (New York, NY), 1966.
  • The Sweet Bye and Bye (opera libretto), Boosey & Hawkes (New York, NY), 1966.
  • The Grass Harp (musical), Samuel French (New York, NY), 1972.
  • City Junket (play), Adventures in Poetry (New York, NY), 1972; revised version: Bamberger Books (Flint, MI), 1987.
  • The Seagull (opera libretto), Belwin-Mills (Melville, NY), 1974.
  • Washington Square (opera libretto), Belwin-Mills (Melville, NY), 1976.
  • Three Sisters (opera libretto), Z Press (Calais, VT), 1986. [This libretto was also included inside copies of the album, issued simultaneously.]
  • Postcards on Parade, Bamberger Books (Flint, MI), 1993.

Poetry and prose edit

  • Pavilions, Tibor de Nagy Editions (New York, NY), 1961.
  • Power Plant Poems, C Press (New York, NY), 1967.
  • Album, Kulchur (New York, NY), 1969.
  • Girl Machine [single poem], Angel Hair (Bolinas, CA and New York, NY), 1971.
  • Circus Nerves, Black Sparrow (Los Angeles, CA), 1971.
  • Motor Disturbance, Columbia University Press (New York, NY and London, England), 1971.
  • The Orchid Stories [a novel], Doubleday/Paris Review Editions (Garden City, NY), 1973.
  • Tropicalism, Z Press/Unmuzzled Ox (Calais, VT and New York, NY), 1975.
  • The Alphabet Work, Titanic Books (Washington, D.C.), 1977.
  • Communications Equipment, Burning Deck (Providence, RI), 1979.
  • Moving Right Along, Z Press (Calais, VT), 1980.
  • Champ Dust, New Censorship: The Monthly Journal of the Next Savage State (v4 No.12, March 1994). [The entire issue is given to this one work by Elmslie.]
  • Bare Bones, Bamberger Books (Flint, MI), 1995.
  • Routine Disruptions: Selected Poems and Lyrics 1960 - 1998, Coffee House Press (Minneapolis, MN), 1998.

Collaborations with visual artists edit

  • The Baby Book (with Joe Brainard), Boke Press (New York, NY), 1965.
  • The 1967 Game Calendar (with Joe Brainard), Boke Press (New York, NY), 1967.
  • The Champ (with Joe Brainard), Black Sparrow (Los Angeles, CA), 1968.
  • Shiny Ride (with Joe Brainard), Boke Press (New York, NY), 1972.
  • Topiary Trek (with Karl Torok), Topia Press (Bradford, England and New York, NY), 1977.
  • Bimbo Dirt (with Ken Tisa), Z Press (Calais, VT), 1982.
  • Palais Bimbo Snapshots (with Ken Tisa), Alternative Press (Grindstone City, MI), 1982.
  • 26 Bars (with Donna Dennis), Z Press (Calais, VT), 1987.
  • Sung Sex (with Joe Brainard), Kulchur (New York, NY), 1992.
  • Pay Dirt (with Joe Brainard), Bamberger Books (Flint, MI), 1992.
  • Nite Soil (postcard collages by Elmslie), Granary Books (New York, NY), 2000.
  • Cyberspace (with Trevor Winkfield), Granary Books (New York, NY), 2000.
  • Snippets (with Trevor Winkfield), Tibor de Nagy Editions (New York, NY), 2002.
  • Agenda Melt (with Trevor Winkfield), Adventures in Poetry (New York, NY and Boston, MA), 2004.

Songs edit

  • Love-Wise composer: Marvin Fisher. Recorded by Nat King Cole
  • Bang Bang Tango, composer: Kenneth Deifik. Recorded by Estelle Parsons.

Selected recordings edit

  • Ben Bagley's The Littlest Revue (incl. "Backer's Audition," with John Latouche, music by John Strauss), Epic Records LP (LN3275), 1956.
  • Lizzie Borden (opera, music by Jack Beeson), Desto Records (DST 6455/6/7 - three record set), 1966; Composer's Recordings, Inc. Compact Disc (CD 694), 1995.
  • The Grass Harp (music by Claibe Richardson), Painted Smiles Records LP (PS 1354), 1972; Painted Smiles Compact Disc (SCD 102), 1972.
  • The Sweet Bye & Bye (opera, music by Jack Beeson), Desto Records (DC 7179/180 - two record set), 1974.
  • Highlights from Miss Julie (opera, music by Ned Rorem), Painted Smiles/Z Press LP (PS 1338), 1979; complete recording: Albany Records CDs (TROY761-62), 2005.
  • Kenward Elmslie Visited (songs and opera arias), Painted Smiles/Z Press LP (PS 1339), 1982.
  • Lola (musical play, music by Claibe Richardson), Painted Smiles/Z Press LP (PS 1335), 1985; Harbinger Records Ltd. CD 1704, 1999.
  • Kenward Elmslie in Palais Bimbo Lounge Show, Painted Smiles/Z Press LP (PS 1336), 1985.
  • Three Sisters (opera, music by Thomas Pasatieri), Z Press/Painted Smiles (PS 1333 - two record set), 1986.
  • 26 Bars (Elmslie reading, with incidental music), Z Press (cassette tape), 1987.
  • Palais Bimbo (readings and songs), Naropa Institute (cassette tape), 1991.
  • Postcards on Parade (musical play, with Steven Taylor), Harbinger Records CD HCD 1604, 1998.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Genzlinger, Neil (2022-07-08). "Kenward Elmslie, Poet and Librettist, Dies at 93". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
  2. ^ Pollack, Howard. The Ballad of John Latouche, Oxford University Press (New York, NY), 2017, pp. 350-351.
  3. ^ Pollack, 421.
  4. ^ Pollack, 463.
  5. ^ Elmslie, Kenward: "Libretto Land," Parnassus (v10, No.2, Fall Winter 1982), pp. 199-209.
  6. ^ "The Grass Harp Original Cast Recording". Kritzerland. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  7. ^ "Kenward Elmslie". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  8. ^ "Joe Brainard feature: Kenward Elmslie in conversation with Kristin Prevallet". Jacket Magazine 16. March 22, 2002. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  9. ^ Ashbery, John. "The Figure in the Carport, Parnassus (v5 No.1, Fall/Winter 1976), pp. 326-330.
  10. ^ Notley, Alice. “Elmslie's Routine Disruptions,” St. Mark's Poetry Project Newsletter, 1999.
  11. ^ Elmslie, Kenward and Mary Kite. Spilled Beans: A Conversation. Skanky Possum, (Austin, TX), 2001, p.21.
  12. ^ Blicksilver, Edith (April 15, 1973). "Exotic Tales Are Flower-Like". The Atlanta Constitution. Retrieved July 13, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Kenward Elmslie and The Orchid Stories". The Paris Review. October 25, 2016. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  14. ^ Eno, R.D. (August 31, 1976). "Composer, Poet Perform at Museum". Burlington Free Press. pp. 4A, 5A. Retrieved July 11, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ Bamberger, W.C. (July 15, 2022). "Kenward Elmslie (April 27, 1929-June 29, 2022". Rain Taxi. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  • Bamberger, W. C. "Interview with Kenward Elmslie," New American Writing #8/9 (Fall 1991), pp. 176-212.
  • Ford, Mark. New York Poets II: An Anthology. Carcanet Press, 2006

External links edit

  • Kenward Elmslie Papers MSS 0521. Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego Library.
  • Corrected manuscript of Elmslie's YELLOW DRUM at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • https://vimeo.com/channels/kenwardelmslie

kenward, elmslie, kenward, gray, elmslie, april, 1929, june, 2022, american, author, performer, editor, publisher, associated, with, york, school, poetry, elmslie, 2005born, 1929, april, 1929new, york, city, diedjune, 2022, 2022, aged, york, city, alma, materh. Kenward Gray Elmslie April 27 1929 June 29 2022 was an American author performer editor and publisher associated with the New York School of poetry Kenward ElmslieElmslie in 2005Born 1929 04 27 April 27 1929New York City U S DiedJune 29 2022 2022 06 29 aged 93 New York City U S Alma materHarvard University B A English 1950 Literary movementThe New York School Contents 1 Life and career 2 Death 3 Works 3 1 Theater 3 2 Poetry and prose 3 3 Collaborations with visual artists 3 4 Songs 4 Selected recordings 5 References 6 External linksLife and career editKenward Gray Elmslie was born to William Gray Elmslie and Constance Pulitzer in Manhattan on April 27 1929 1 His father was a tutor who met his mother the youngest child of Joseph Pulitzer while working as a tutor for her siblings 1 He spent his childhood in Colorado Springs Colorado and Washington D C 1 He attended St Mark s School in Southborough Massachusetts and graduated from Harvard in 1950 with a B A in literature He relocated to Cleveland to work as an intern at Karamu House where there was an interracial theatre group There he met lyricist John Latouche 1914 1956 At Latouche s invitation Elmslie relocated back to New York in 1952 to live with him In 1953 the couple bought a farmhouse in Calais Vermont 2 Elmslie collaborated with Latouche on some of his lyrics including uncredited the lyric of On the Waterfront with music by Leonard Bernstein and Backer s Audition for The Littlest Revue 3 Latouche died of heart failure in the house in Calais in August 1956 4 Elmslie kept the property which served as his summer home for the rest of his life and beginning during the 1970s as the office for Elmslie s Z Press Elmslie s first work performed was the lyrics of the spring varsity show during his senior year at St Mark s his preparatory school 5 He began his career collaborating with composers for operas and musicals in an attempt to bring a contemporary style to classical theater Among his theatrical works are adaptations of Truman Capote s novel The Grass Harp and Lola both projects in collaboration with Claibe Richardson Truman Capote first granted Elmslie and Richardson the rights to make a musical of his novella in 1963 but it was not produced until 1971 and lasted only seven performances 6 A cast album was issued in 1972 Elmslie s first published poem Letter from Eldorado appeared in the magazine Folder in 1956 In 1960 he published poems in four issues of the prestigious magazine Poetry Elmslie later published more than thirty books of poetry and prose and hundreds of poems in journals and anthologies A collection of his writing Motor Disturbance 1971 was awarded the Frank O Hara Award for Poetry in 1971 He was awarded the National Endowment of the Arts Award for The Power Plant Sestina 1967 and the Ford Foundation Grant as well as the Project for Innovative Poetry s Gertrude Stein Award for Innovative Poetry and an award from the National Council of the Arts 7 His poetry and prose is often combined with the work of painters and other visual artists most notably black and white comics drawn by Joe Brainard his 26 Bars depicted by Donna Dennis and full color collaborations with Trevor Winkfield 8 Reviews of Elmslie s poetry by other writers were often enthusiastic When Tropicalism was published in 1976 John Ashbery described Elmslie s poetry as being like the notes of a mad scientist who has swallowed the wrong potion in his lab and is desperately trying to get his calculations on paper before everything closes in 9 When Routine Disruptions a volume of selected poems and lyrics chosen from thirty eight years of work was published in 1998 poet Alice Notley wrote this is an icon for me of Elmslie s work its wild funniness theatricality brazenness its love of art and objects 10 In an interview during 2001 poet Mary Kite told Elmslie that for her his poems resemble tiny theatres They are observational and exciting 11 Elmslie s prose also received praise from critics In a 1973 review of The Orchid Stories in The Atlanta Constitution Edith Blicksilver wrote that Elmslie has created a potpourri of unusual impressions and experiences this latest work reveals Mr Elmslie as a valid twentieth century version of the Renaissance man of letters 12 Michael Silverblatt writing in The Paris Review said the book bubbles with head spinning mixtures Its combination of energy and boredom astounds You can read this book repeatedly as I have and it ll be fresh each time an eternal palate cleanser Very few books in literature are as singular as The Orchid Stories 13 In 1973 Elmslie was asked to edit an issue of The World the literary journal of the Poetry Project at St Marks in New York He decided he wanted to edit something more permanent and instead initiated Z Magazine and Z Press acting as the press editor and publisher The press was based originally in New York City but then relocated to Elmslie s summer home in Calais The journal which was published annually and was titled in successive repetitions of the letter Z i e Z ZZ etc continued for six issues the last being published in 1978 Z Press continued publishing books broadsides postcards and the occasional LP record until 1987 The press was revived briefly during the late 1990s to issue several single poem chapbooks including in 2000 Sun on Six by Jeff Clark with a linocut by Jasper Johns The Z magazine issues printed works by a wide range of authors from poets associated with the New York School to personal essayist Phillip Lopate and art features by Ian Hamilton Finlay and Donna Dennis among others Apart from the magazine Z Press primarily published works by other New York School writers and artists many of them Elmslie s friends including John Ashbery Ron Padgett James Schuyler and perhaps most extensively long time partner Joe Brainard 14 Elmslie s work with graphic artists such as Brainard combined poetry with art to emphasize their interconnectedness his work in theatre demonstrates his commitment to art as a whole not only to one medium Death editElmslie died at his home in West Village neighborhood of New York City on June 29 2022 at the age of 93 He suffered from dementia for several years prior 1 In an appreciation and memoir published in Rain Taxi his sometime publisher W C Bamberger concluded Kenward Elmslie has now gone off into the far air but he has left riches behind and more so than any other writer I ve read the wider your experience of his arts the richer each work becomes 15 Works editTheater edit Miss Julie opera libretto Boosey amp Hawkes New York NY 1965 Lizzie Borden opera libretto Boosey amp Hawkes New York NY 1966 The Sweet Bye and Bye opera libretto Boosey amp Hawkes New York NY 1966 The Grass Harp musical Samuel French New York NY 1972 City Junket play Adventures in Poetry New York NY 1972 revised version Bamberger Books Flint MI 1987 The Seagull opera libretto Belwin Mills Melville NY 1974 Washington Square opera libretto Belwin Mills Melville NY 1976 Three Sisters opera libretto Z Press Calais VT 1986 This libretto was also included inside copies of the album issued simultaneously Postcards on Parade Bamberger Books Flint MI 1993 Poetry and prose edit Pavilions Tibor de Nagy Editions New York NY 1961 Power Plant Poems C Press New York NY 1967 Album Kulchur New York NY 1969 Girl Machine single poem Angel Hair Bolinas CA and New York NY 1971 Circus Nerves Black Sparrow Los Angeles CA 1971 Motor Disturbance Columbia University Press New York NY and London England 1971 The Orchid Stories a novel Doubleday Paris Review Editions Garden City NY 1973 Tropicalism Z Press Unmuzzled Ox Calais VT and New York NY 1975 The Alphabet Work Titanic Books Washington D C 1977 Communications Equipment Burning Deck Providence RI 1979 Moving Right Along Z Press Calais VT 1980 Champ Dust New Censorship The Monthly Journal of the Next Savage State v4 No 12 March 1994 The entire issue is given to this one work by Elmslie Bare Bones Bamberger Books Flint MI 1995 Routine Disruptions Selected Poems and Lyrics 1960 1998 Coffee House Press Minneapolis MN 1998 Collaborations with visual artists edit The Baby Book with Joe Brainard Boke Press New York NY 1965 The 1967 Game Calendar with Joe Brainard Boke Press New York NY 1967 The Champ with Joe Brainard Black Sparrow Los Angeles CA 1968 Shiny Ride with Joe Brainard Boke Press New York NY 1972 Topiary Trek with Karl Torok Topia Press Bradford England and New York NY 1977 Bimbo Dirt with Ken Tisa Z Press Calais VT 1982 Palais Bimbo Snapshots with Ken Tisa Alternative Press Grindstone City MI 1982 26 Bars with Donna Dennis Z Press Calais VT 1987 Sung Sex with Joe Brainard Kulchur New York NY 1992 Pay Dirt with Joe Brainard Bamberger Books Flint MI 1992 Nite Soil postcard collages by Elmslie Granary Books New York NY 2000 Cyberspace with Trevor Winkfield Granary Books New York NY 2000 Snippets with Trevor Winkfield Tibor de Nagy Editions New York NY 2002 Agenda Melt with Trevor Winkfield Adventures in Poetry New York NY and Boston MA 2004 Songs edit Love Wise composer Marvin Fisher Recorded by Nat King Cole Bang Bang Tango composer Kenneth Deifik Recorded by Estelle Parsons Selected recordings editBen Bagley s The Littlest Revue incl Backer s Audition with John Latouche music by John Strauss Epic Records LP LN3275 1956 Lizzie Borden opera music by Jack Beeson Desto Records DST 6455 6 7 three record set 1966 Composer s Recordings Inc Compact Disc CD 694 1995 The Grass Harp music by Claibe Richardson Painted Smiles Records LP PS 1354 1972 Painted Smiles Compact Disc SCD 102 1972 The Sweet Bye amp Bye opera music by Jack Beeson Desto Records DC 7179 180 two record set 1974 Highlights from Miss Julie opera music by Ned Rorem Painted Smiles Z Press LP PS 1338 1979 complete recording Albany Records CDs TROY761 62 2005 Kenward Elmslie Visited songs and opera arias Painted Smiles Z Press LP PS 1339 1982 Lola musical play music by Claibe Richardson Painted Smiles Z Press LP PS 1335 1985 Harbinger Records Ltd CD 1704 1999 Kenward Elmslie in Palais Bimbo Lounge Show Painted Smiles Z Press LP PS 1336 1985 Three Sisters opera music by Thomas Pasatieri Z Press Painted Smiles PS 1333 two record set 1986 26 Bars Elmslie reading with incidental music Z Press cassette tape 1987 Palais Bimbo readings and songs Naropa Institute cassette tape 1991 Postcards on Parade musical play with Steven Taylor Harbinger Records CD HCD 1604 1998 References edit a b c d Genzlinger Neil 2022 07 08 Kenward Elmslie Poet and Librettist Dies at 93 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 07 11 Pollack Howard The Ballad of John Latouche Oxford University Press New York NY 2017 pp 350 351 Pollack 421 Pollack 463 Elmslie Kenward Libretto Land Parnassus v10 No 2 Fall Winter 1982 pp 199 209 The Grass Harp Original Cast Recording Kritzerland Retrieved 2 July 2022 Kenward Elmslie Poetry Foundation Retrieved 1 July 2022 Joe Brainard feature Kenward Elmslie in conversation with Kristin Prevallet Jacket Magazine 16 March 22 2002 Retrieved July 13 2022 Ashbery John The Figure in the Carport Parnassus v5 No 1 Fall Winter 1976 pp 326 330 Notley Alice Elmslie s Routine Disruptions St Mark s Poetry Project Newsletter 1999 Elmslie Kenward and Mary Kite Spilled Beans A Conversation Skanky Possum Austin TX 2001 p 21 Blicksilver Edith April 15 1973 Exotic Tales Are Flower Like The Atlanta Constitution Retrieved July 13 2022 via Newspapers com Kenward Elmslie and The Orchid Stories The Paris Review October 25 2016 Retrieved July 13 2022 Eno R D August 31 1976 Composer Poet Perform at Museum Burlington Free Press pp 4A 5A Retrieved July 11 2022 via Newspapers com Bamberger W C July 15 2022 Kenward Elmslie April 27 1929 June 29 2022 Rain Taxi Retrieved July 18 2022 Bamberger W C Interview with Kenward Elmslie New American Writing 8 9 Fall 1991 pp 176 212 Ford Mark New York Poets II An Anthology Carcanet Press 2006External links editKenward Elmslie Papers MSS 0521 Special Collections amp Archives UC San Diego Library Corrected manuscript of Elmslie s YELLOW DRUM at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library https vimeo com channels kenwardelmslie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kenward Elmslie amp oldid 1210286557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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