The letters of Hart Crane, 1916-1932 by Hart Crane
(4 User reviews)
1184
Crane, Hart, 1899-1932
English
"The letters of Hart Crane, 1916-1932" by Hart Crane is a collection of letters written in the mid-20th century. The volume, edited and framed by Brom Weber, assembles the poet’s correspondence to reveal his artistic formation, personal entanglements, and the lived background of major works like The Bridge. Expect a candid self-portrait of a modern...
chronology, positioning Crane as a major American poet and explaining why the letters matter: they are emotionally frank, often written across distance, and closely intertwined with periods of peak poetic productivity. Weber outlines an editorial approach of minimal interference and full candor (tempered only to avoid harming living individuals), argues against judging the poetry by the life, and sketches Crane’s recurring struggles with relationships, sexuality, alcohol, and self-sabotage. A concise life outline follows (Ohio youth; early New York immersion; advertising work; the conception, funding, and completion of The Bridge; travel; the Guggenheim; death at sea). The first letters (1916–1920) then show a young writer juggling exams, early publication, and a headlong entry into New York’s literary world (meeting figures like Padraic Colum and Vachel Lindsay), alongside money and housing woes, parental divorce tensions, and flirtations with Christian Science. They also trace his return to Ohio to work for his father, his deepening ties with fellow writers and editors, the drafting of “My Grandmother’s Love Letters,” sharp literary opinions, and a discreetly acknowledged love affair—establishing the tone of urgency, vulnerability, and craft that will carry through the correspondence. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
George Brown
2 weeks agoIf you enjoy this genre, the interplay between the protagonists drives the story forward beautifully. I'm sending the link to all my friends.
Michelle Martin
1 month agoAfter looking for this everywhere, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling and well-thought-out. I learned so much from this.
James Gonzalez
5 months agoCompared to other books on this topic, the author's voice is distinct, making the complex topics easy to digest. Thanks for making this available.
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Deborah Martinez
4 months agoI didn't expect much, but the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged from start to finish. I couldn't put it down until the very end.