Barbara A. Holland (1925-1988) was called “the Sybil of Greenwich
Village,” for her sometimes eerie presence and her incantatory
readings. By 1970, she had published her work in over 700 magazines,
and had read her work everywhere a poet could read. After seeing
several small chapbooks published, Holland decided it was time to
tackle the big New York publishers. The Shipping on the Styx,
recently rediscovered in the poet’s papers, was rejected by all the
publishing houses by the end of 1972. What would have been her
“breakthrough” book is finally presented here. Its three parts
include a solitary observer’s impressions of bustling New York
harbor; a medley of her Manhattan-based poems that she read in
coffeehouses; and her blistering and unforgettable Gothic poem,
“Black Sabbath.”
Rounding out this
volume is Songs of Light and Darkness, a manuscript that probably
dates to 1951, the end-point of Holland’s graduate studies at the
University of Pennsylvania. These poems show the poet embarking on
her career as a devotee of the work of T. S. Eliot and, perhaps, of
Thomas Hardy. Pre-dating her “New York style,” this
never-before-seen glimpse at the early Holland is a revelation. This
is the 259th publication of The Poet’s Press.
Published December 2019. 110 pages, 6 x 9 inches.
ISBN 9781679125287. $12.95 from Amazon. PDF Ebook to be
published at a later date.
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