Synopses & Reviews
The Iovis Trilogy, Anne Waldman's monumental feminist epic, traverses epochs, cultures, and genres to create a visionary call to poetic arms.
Iovis details the misdeeds of the Patriarch, and with a fierce imagination queries and subverts his warmongering. All of Waldman's themes come into focusfriendship, motherhood, politics, and Buddhist wisdom. This is epic poetry that goes beyond the old injunction, "to include history"its effort is to
change history.
This transformative twenty-five-year labor is published here for the first time in its historic entirety, including the first two out-of-print volumes.
Review
"Anne Waldman is an amazing woman. Long the fire and light behind Naropa University's Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, she's the author of over 40 books, the recipient of countless prizes and grants, and has most recently been elected to the Board of Chancellors for the Academy of American Poets. She's travelled everywhere, knows everyone, and has done everything. And now she's produced her magnum opus, a huge, sprawling, 1,009-page book called The Iovis Trilogy: Colors in the Mechanism of Concealment." Chris Faatz, Powells.com (Read the entire Powells.com review)
About the Author
Deemed a countercultural giant” by
Publishers Weekly, Anne Waldman is one of the best known and celebrated female poets not only in the U.S., but around the world. A prominent figure of the Beat Generation and New York School, she has had close ties with poets such as Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Patti Smith, Ted Berrigan and Barbara Guest, and she was a poet-in-residence during Bob Dylans Rolling Thunder Revue Tour. She has published over forty books of poetry, including
Fast Speaking Woman, Marriage: A Sentence, In the Room of Never Grieve: New and Selected Poems, and
Manatee/Humanity. She is also editor and co-editor of numerous anthologies:
The Beat Book, Civil Disobediences, Angel Hair Sleeps With A Boy In My Head, and
Beats at Naropa. Her work may also be found in numerous films, videos, and sound recordings.
She was one of the founders and directors of the St. Marks Poetry Project from 1966 to 1978. She and Allen Ginsberg also co-founded The Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University, the first Buddhist-inspired school in the West. Currently Waldman is Artistic Director and Chair of its renowned Summer Writing Program.
Waldman has received numerous awards and honors for her poetry, including The Dylan Thomas Memorial Award, The Poets Foundation Award, The National Literary Anthology Award, and The Shelley Memorial Award for poetry.
Her play Red Noir was produced by Judith Malinas Living Theater in NYC in 2010. She has performed on the world stage, from Madrid to Mumbai, from Beijing to Berlin, from Prague to Nicaragua. She divides her time between Boulder, Colorado and Greenwich Village, New York City.