Fr. 34.50

Czeslaw Milosz - A California Life

English · Hardback

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Description

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"The first book to look at Czes±aw Mi±osz's life through a California lens"--

List of contents










Contents

One: California Considered as an Island

Two: The Burning City

Three: What the Beaver Said

Four: "To earn honestly one's bread one goes to America."

Five: Patmos

Six: "I did not choose California. It was given to me."

Seven: "Nothing witnesses here."

Eight: "American when will you be angelic?"

Nine: A Defector from the Age of Aquarius

Ten: Lessons under Lamplight

Eleven: Prophet of Être

Twelve: "Only Her Love Warmed Him..."

Thirteen: Ars Moriendi

Fourteen: "Home, always back home."

Fifteen: "There will be no other end of the world."

Acknowledgments

Notes and Permissions

About the Author


About the author










Cynthia L. Haven is a National Endowment for the Humanities Public Scholar and author of 2018's Evolution of Desire: A Life of René Girard, the first-ever biography of the French theorist. She has published two previous books on Czes¿aw Mi¿osz: An Invisible Rope: Portraits of Czes¿aw Mi¿osz and Czes¿aw Mi¿osz: Conversations. She has been a Milena Jesenská Journalism Fellow with the Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen in Vienna, as well as a visiting writer and scholar at Stanford's Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages, and a Voegelin Fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution. She has written for the Times Literary Supplement and has also contributed to the New York Times Book Review, the Nation, the Wall Street Journal, the Virginia Quarterly Review, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

Summary

The first book about the Nobel Laureate's transformative but conflicted time in the Golden State.
"There is much to learn from this book about Miłosz and California, yes, but also about poetry and the world."—Ilya Kaminsky
Czesław Miłosz, one of the greatest poets and thinkers of the past hundred years, is not generally considered a Californian. But the Nobel laureate spent four decades in Berkeley—more time than any other single place he lived—and he wrote many of his most enduring works there. This is the first book to look at his life through a California lens. Filled with original research and written with the grace and liveliness of a novel, it is both an essential volume for his most devoted readers and a perfect introduction for newcomers.
Miłosz was a premier witness to the sweep of the twentieth century, from the bombing of Warsaw in World War II to the student protests of the sixties and the early days of the high-tech boom. He maintained an open-minded but skeptical view of American life, a perspective shadowed by the terrors he experienced in Europe. In the light of recent political instability and environmental catastrophe, his poems and ideas carry extra weight, and they are ripe for a new generation of readers to discover them. This immersive portrait demonstrates what Miłosz learned from the Golden State, and what Californians can learn from him.

Additional text

"Cynthia Haven's book is delicious. She evokes so much so vividly and so intelligently; for me her pages were a restoration of a richer and less lonely time. And her intuition is right: Czeslaw Milosz and California are indeed a chapter in each other's history." — Leon Wieseltier



"Cynthia Haven’s Czesław Miłosz: A California Life will be a boon to readers who’ve only recently become aware of Miłosz and to those who have been reading him for forty years or more."John WilsonThe American Conservative


"Czesław Miłosz: A California Life is as much as portrait of a place as it is of a person. [...] When she writes about California, it’s not merely to draw the connection between the land and Miłosz. Rather, Haven takes space to revel in the 'hypnotic monotony' of the weather and the 'alien, hyperreal' rocks along Highway 1. Her language is a place of energy, richness, and—fittingly—poetry." —Peter SchlachteZyzzyva



"Haven draws on a compendium of knowledge of her subject, having mused on and written about Miłosz for more than 20 years. [...] Haven lets us into her thought processes, even when she is questioning them, and lovingly recreates conversations—in the relative present, at a café with Robert Hass [...] and in the recent past, at Miłosz’s Grizzly Peak home as the poet drinks bourbon and chats with friends into the wee hours." —Los Angeles Review of Books


"Much has been written about the poet, and Haven finds new ways into his life [...] and her examinations of the influence of place on his poetry are insightful. Fans of Milosz's work should give this a look."Publishers Weekly


“My father came to Berkeley in 1960, a towering Polish poet who testified to the murderous apocalypse of World War II, the nightmare of Stalinism, and the glow of the human spirit. Far from a monotonous exile, he gradually discovered in California a home for forty years, a vital inspiration, and a new international audience, leading to the Nobel Prize in 1980. Cynthia Haven tells this complex story from a deep and moving California perspective. Entrancing.” —Anthony Miłosz, executor of the Miłosz Estate 

Czesław Miłosz: A California Life asks about the meaning of exile, about the possibilities of a new home, about the transformation of a poetic perspective, about alienation and the building of literary bridges. But in the end, the book asks one big, nearly impossible question: How did the great Polish exile Miłosz change his newfound home—and how did California, after so many years, transform Miłosz’s own metaphysics? For it is a metaphysical question, after all: How does a place change the poet, and what does a poet do to shift our perspective on the place? On this unending journey, Cynthia L. Haven is an illuminating guide, one who brings knowledge, precision, and grace. There is much to learn from this book about Miłosz and California, yes, but also about poetry and the world.” —Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic

“Mining the largely untapped vein of Miłosz and California, Cynthia Haven has struck paydirt, a goldmine of perception and insight.” —Richard Lourie, author of The Autobiography of Joseph Stalin

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