Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 278
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4422-2392-9 • Hardback • August 2013 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
978-1-4422-2394-3 • eBook • August 2013 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Carl Rollyson is a professor of journalism at Baruch College, The City University of New York. Rollyson has published more than forty books, including American Isis: The Life and Art of Sylvia Plath and Hollywood Enigma: Dana Andrews. His articles and reviews have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Minneapolis Star Tribune, The Raleigh News & Observer, The Kansas City Star, The Barnes & Noble Review, and The New Criterion. Visit his website: www.carlrollyson.com.
Acknowledgments
Author's Note
Introduction: The Absence of Amy Lowell
1: Out of the Brood (1874-1912)
2: A Voice in the Land (1910-1914)
3: Sword Blades and Poppy Seed (1915)
4: Reaping (1915-1916)
5: Winning (1917)
6: War (1918)
7: Peace (1919)
8: Recovery (1920-21)
9: Renewal (1921-22)
10: Sisters (1922-23)
11: The Death of Duse (1923-24)
12: Keats (1924-25)
13: Done (1925)
14: Legacy and Loss (1925-)
No husband, no babies, no Victorian prudery, just sublime poetry and a secret erotic life. Amy Lowell was not what we thought she was.
— Marion Meade, author of Dorothy Parker: What Fresh Hell Is This?
Informed by newly recovered personal accounts of Amy Lowell, Rollyson presents the growth of a poet who embraced and furthered imagism and unabashedly celebrated the body in love. He follows Lowell in her performances on the road and traces her lifelong interest in Asian culture. His abundant experience as a biographer allows Rollyson to offer a keen appreciation of Lowell’s own biography of Keats, to assess the sources of negative biographies and impressions of her, and to support the recent current of feminist recuperation of Lowell’s life and work.
— Bonnie Kime Scott, professor emerita, San Diego State University and the University of Delaware
Amy Lowell Anew deserves all the prizes. It is a major work of American cultural history, restoring to readers a poet of great distinction and a public figure of immense importance to American letters and our 20th Century history. Carl Rollyson is a hero of a biographer for his rescue and rethinking the lives of many neglected or misunderstood women. His approach has always been to treat his figures with dignity and respect. Dignity and respect have been sorely lacking in works about Amy Lowell. Recently, lesbian scholars have recreated Lowell as a grand dame diva, a great leap forward. Now Rollyson moves painstakingly through the life and works, not only writing/righting wrongs but carefully resettling Amy Lowell's poetry into the American canon where it belongs. His study of her role as public speaker and cultural advocate for poetry give us at last Amy Lowell as a Public Intellectual.
— Jane Marcus, distinguished professor of English and Women's Studies, CUNY Graduate Center and the City College of New York
This is the biography I've been waiting for. Carl Rollyson has exhaustively mined Lowell's archive to create a thoughtful portrait of a complicated, ambitious artist. Here, beyond the legends, the rumors, and the facile aspersions that her larger-than-life persona inspired is a woman I've wanted to meet for a very long time.
— Melissa Bradshaw, author of Amy Lowell, Diva Poet
Treated as the butt of jokes by her male modernist contemporaries and by hostile biographers, Amy Lowell has been rescued from decades of homophobia, sexism, and anti-fat prejudice by this brilliant new study. Carl Rollyson turns archival research into exciting storytelling, as he brings Lowell and her passionate relationships with her lovers out of the shadows, while demonstrating why the popularity once enjoyed both by her poetry, which infuses domestic situations with eroticism and with a political consciousness, and by her public performances of it was no fluke.
— Margaret D. Stetz, University of Delaware
'God made me a business woman,' Amy Lowell said, 'and I made myself a poet.' Since Jean Gould's Amy: The World of Amy Lowell and the Imagist Movement (CH, Mar'76), biographers have often focused on the poet's sexuality. This aspect of her life in relation to her poetry is addressed in Amy Lowell, American Modern, ed. by Adrienne Munich and Melissa Bradshaw (CH, Sep'04, 42-0146). Rollyson (Baruch) employs it to present Lowell as a maverick. . . . For Rollyson, Lowell's wealth was a source of authority with promoters and conflict with fellow poets. She was a strong-willed but somewhat isolated character, beset by 'enemies' and most vulnerable in her secretive relationships with younger women. There is little psychological or literary analysis, and one is left to wonder about Lowell's obsession with John Keats, her interest in classical themes, and her nuanced relationship with Ezra Pound. Clearly ambiguous (and rare) moments of feminist conviction in poems like 'The Sisters' are trotted out without explication. The volume is light, but engaging and readable. Summing Up: Recommended. . . . General readers.
— Choice Reviews
Rollyson has added a new book, Amy Lowell Anew, which delves. . . . into the interplay between Lowell's personal and professional lives. Rollyson had access to the extensive Lowell archive at Harvard University as well as resources in England. And he got help from a few archivists who located new sources, notably an archivist at the Massachusetts Historical Society who found a group of letters referring to a hitherto unknown female companion. ... The biography gives Amy Lowell her own place in the literary canon, even if it is a minor one—minor in part because of her early death, but also because her surviving partner chose to remain silent about their relationship. Rollyson put this relationship front and center to Lowell's most passionate works: her erotic poetry and her biography of Keats.
— Gay and Lesbian Review
For all of Carl Rollyson's impressive original research, Amy Lowell Anew is. . . an accessible introduction to its subject, which should do much to bring readers to this remarkable poet's work.
— The Wall Street Journal
- A riveting examination of Amy Lowell’s private life and lover, Ada Russell, who did so much to make Lowell’s career possible
- A compelling window into Lowell’s gregarious character
- Concise readings of Lowell’s most important poems reveal the depth and range of her erotic imagination
- An astute analysis of the way biographers and critics have maligned Lowell as a person and poet
- The startling discovery of a new Amy Lowell lover who perished on the Lusitania
- Key poems include: Madonna of the Evening Flowers, Venus Transiens, Patterns, and Lilacs
- The first biography on Amy Lowell in more than 40 years