Tag Archives: Frederick Glaysher

Finished the 8th Draft of The Parliament of Poets

Galaxy NGC 6822

Galaxy NGC 6822

August 17, 2012.

This morning I finished the entire eighth draft of The Parliament of Poets.

The eighth draft of the printed ARC or Advance Review Galley was only partly finished, up to the time whenever it was I sent it out and had it printed by Lightning Source, which version was about July 8th. That means up through BOOK IV, for the printed ARC. Most of the digital copies have been July 17th, to BOOK V, or earlier.

The Summer Serialization version, in ePub, has, however, been the eighth draft of each book. In fact I’ve finished each book usually three or four days ahead of publishing it on Sunday mornings throughout the summer. I’ve now finished BOOK XI and XII, so the entire epic is the eighth revision. I made some interesting changes and clarifications, much sharper here and there, with additional lines. Some nuances in BOOK XI, set in Africa.

This morning I found particularly exhilarating the Gates of Horn and Ivory in BOOK XII. I remembered and realized that I had written about both in my book The Bower of Nil and that there were fruitful connections to be made.

Frederick Glaysher

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Open Letter to The New York Times Book Review

Open Letter to The New York Times Book Review

August 12, 2012

Sam Tanenhaus, Editor
The New York Times Book Review
620 Eighth Avenue, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10018

Dear Mr. Tanenhaus,

I write to ask you to reassess the policy of The New York Times Book Review, as stated on the submission help page, that “we only review books . . . available through general-interest bookstores.”

Such a policy does not serve the best interests of readers, writers, nor the general culture. It serves the economic hegemony of largely New York corporate publishers and corporate distributors and bookstores, as well as the library journals of review and acquisition, and other outdated gatekeepers. It prevents new voices and ideas from reaching the nation. With the development of online booksellers and ebooks and the demise of Borders, the policy is no longer defensible, if it ever was.

I have enclosed a second letter that introduces myself and my accompanying epic poem, which I believe is the first epic poem in the English language in 345 years and the first global, universal epic. I invite you to consider reviewing it.

As a Post-Gutenberg writer and publisher, I reject the old model and ask The New York Times Book Review to embrace the new one now struggling to be born.

Sincerely yours,

Frederick Glaysher

 

— Second letter enclosed —

August 12, 2012

Sam Tanenhaus, Editor
The New York Times Book Review
620 Eighth Avenue, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10018

Dear Mr. Tanenhaus,

I invite you to review The Parliament of Poets: An Epic Poem, which will be published in November, and takes place partly on the moon, at the Apollo 11 landing site, the Sea of Tranquility. I believe it is both the first epic poem in the English language in 345 years and the first global, universal epic.

Apollo calls all the poets of the nations, ancient and modern, East and West, to assemble on the moon to consult on the meaning of modernity.

All the great shades appear: Homer and Virgil from Greek and Roman civilization; Dante, Spenser, and Milton hail from the Judeo-Christian West; Rumi, Attar, and Hafez step forward from Islam; Du Fu and Li Po, Basho and Zeami, step forth from China and Japan; the poets of the Bhagavad Gita and the Ramayana meet on that plain; griots from Africa; shamans from Indonesia and Australia; Murasaki Shikibu, Emily Dickinson, and Jane Austen, poets and seers of all ages, bards, rhapsodes, troubadours, and minstrels, major and minor, hail across the halls of time and space. One of the major themes is the power of women and the female spirit across cultures. Another is the nature of science and scientism, as well as the “two cultures.”

I studied writing with the poet Robert Hayden, who was one of W. H. Auden’s students at the University of Michigan in the early 1940s, edited both Hayden’s prose and poems, and have written or edited several books.

I lived for more than fifteen years outside Michigan—in Japan, where I taught at Gunma University in Maebashi; in Arizona, on the Colorado River Indian Tribes Reservation, site of one of the largest internment camps for Japanese-Americans during WWII; in Illinois, on the central farmlands and on the Mississippi; ultimately returning to my suburban hometown of Rochester. A Fulbright-Hays scholar to China in 1994, I studied at Beijing University, the Buddhist Mogao Caves on the old Silk Road, and elsewhere in China, including Hong Kong and the Academia Sinica in Taiwan. While a National Endowment for the Humanities scholar in 1995 on India, I further explored the conflicts between the traditional regional civilizations of Islamic and Hindu cultures and modernity. (See in the Contents “About the Author” for further details.)

I have been extensively involved with Post-Gutenberg publishing for well over a decade, and all my books are available worldwide, in printed and electronic form, as will be The Parliament of Poets in November. It will be marketed through over a hundred and fifteen advance review galleys, worldwide, both printed and digital, and through Google Adwords, my website and blog, Facebook, Google+ and other social networking, along with a national author tour and radio interviews, including epic poetry readings and lectures. In January 2009, I was mentioned in Rick Stevens’ Poetry Foundation study, “Technology: Poetry and New Media,” as “a dynamic presence among the advocates of self-publishing and adopting the independent music model of direct purchase from artist to consumer.”

Sincerely yours,

Frederick Glaysher

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BOOK X Summer Serialization

Working on the Eighth Draft, June 21, 2012

Working on the Eighth Draft, June 21, 2012

BOOK X Summer Serialization

The Parliament of Poets: An Epic Poem, THE ARGUMENT:

“Passage from India. Passage to the Americas. Borges opens the door. Walt Whitman captains the Persona back from the “streams of the Indus and the Ganges,” “circumnavigation.” Pacific blue. Octavio Paz, a shape-shifting jaguar, and Teotihuacan, the Temple of the Moon. Neruda’s “The Heights of Machu Picchu.” Borges, through a mirror, on the pampas, Buenos Aires. Argentina’s “disappeared.” Under the Southern Cross, bitter juntas of the soul. Mirror moon draws in the Persona, onward to another continent.”

https://books.fglaysher.com/The-Parliament-of-Poets-An-Epic-Poem-Book-X-Book-X.htm 

Frederick Glaysher

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For All Humanity

Crescent Earth Apollo 11 on return trip

Crescent Earth Apollo 11 on return trip

The Parliament of Poets is For All Mankind, East and West, North and South, to consider and ascend to a new vision of life, what it means to be a human being on this planet, meditate on the great image of the world, Earthrise, above the lunar crust, summoning us to realize we are but One People, inhabiting a whirling rock, flying together through the starry cosmos.

The deficient theories of much of the current American university–a corrupt and decadent institution that has betrayed much of the humane traditions of civilization in favor of “theory,” and other cynical, nihilistic banality, full of bemoaning resentment and triviality–the pernicious theories of deconstruction, and their like, have had a devastating impact on Western, indeed, world civilization, as they have gone around the globe.

One of the symptoms of modern intellectual decadence is its inability to perceive its own diminished state of affairs. Another is that it passes on its decline, increasingly, into the heads of its students, who are unable to perceive and understand what they’re being fed. Triviality, banality, frivolity, become ever more accepted, along with the dregs of nihilism, the lowest, crudest skepticism and cynicism of popular culture, which strictly speaking in no way constitutes culture, but its demise. Such is what the modern, contemporary American university, by and large, especially the English department, offers the young and impressionable, putty in the hands of the unworthy clerks of modernity, as Julien Benda so right understood.

Epic song does not stoop so low, as the American academy now regularly grovels, in obeisance to its contemptible theories. Epic song raises a new vision for the people, for the culture, helps renew and clarify what is the deepest, most profound vision that is already forming, independent of the poet and the poem, global now, inviting the people to a new way forward. The very nature of epic poetry is that it reassesses the prevailing order and articulates a fresh vision of life, already rising on  the foundations of the past.

https://www.facebook.com/events/188957824566313/

Along these lines, see my post on The American Scholar.

Frederick Glaysher

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