An extraordinary collection of poetry and prose from the master of German expressionismThe first poem in Gottfried Benn's first book, Morgue (1912) written in an hour, published in a week, and torious ever after with its scandalous closing image of an aster sewn into a corpse by a playful medical student, set Benn on the path to celebrity and toriety. And indeed, mortality, flowers, and powerful aesthetic collisions typify much of his subsequent work.Over the decades, as Benn suffered the vicissitudes of fate (the death of his mother from cancer; the death of his first wife, Edith; his brief attempt to ingratiate himself with the Nazis, followed by their persecution of him; the suicide of his second wife, Herta), the harsh voice of the poems relented and mellowed. His later poetry from which Impromptus is chiefly drawn, many of the poems translated into English for the first time is deeply affecting: it reflects the routines and sorrows and meditations of an intelligent, pessimistic, and experienced man. Written in the low, unupholstered mologue of the poet talking to himself, these works are slender ribbons of speech on the naked edge of song and silence. With this collection of poems and essays edited and translated by the award-winning poet Michael Hofmann Benn, at long last, promises to attain the presence and importance in the English-speaking world that he so richly deserves.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Farrar Straus Giroux
ISBN-10
0374175373
ISBN-13
9780374175375
eBay Product ID (ePID)
183093886
Additional Product Features
Translated by
Michael Hofmann
Author Biography
Gottfried Benn (1886 1956) earned his medical degree in 1910 and began publishing poems two years later. The leading poet of German expressionism, and the author of brilliant essays and dialogues, he spent both world wars as an officer attached to the German Medical Corps. Benn lived and practiced in Berlin, was married three times, and won the Georg Buchner Prize in 1951. Michael Hofmann is the author of several books of poems and many translations from the German. He edited Twentieth-Century German Poetry (FSG, 2006) and teaches at the University of Florida in Gainesville.