*** LATEST NEWS ***
GREAT BOOK REVIEW
THE cover says this book is aimed at the young adult market, but your mature adult reviewer found it an eminently enjoyable read. The story involves 14-year-old ‘‘Gunnie’’ Danson reading a manuscript written by his great-great-grandfather ‘‘Smokey’’ Danson who, also aged 14, set out on a droving adventure during the 1910 drought. With two horses and three dogs, Smokey drove 100 cattle across northern NSW, from Coonabarabran to Armidale, becoming involved in many adventures in the ‘‘long paddock’’ while camping under the ‘‘drover’s blanket’’ (the Milky Way).
Graham Croker
ALLEN
GREAT BOOK REVIEW
The following book review for 'Gunnedah Hero' appeared in yesterday's 'Daily Telegraph', thanks to Troy Lennon and Graham Croker ...
Great book
review - ‘Daily Telegraph’, Thursday 21 February 2013.
'Gunnedah Hero'
Clancy Tucker, Clancy Tucker
Publishing,
$18.50
THE cover says this book is aimed at the young adult market, but your mature adult reviewer found it an eminently enjoyable read. The story involves 14-year-old ‘‘Gunnie’’ Danson reading a manuscript written by his great-great-grandfather ‘‘Smokey’’ Danson who, also aged 14, set out on a droving adventure during the 1910 drought. With two horses and three dogs, Smokey drove 100 cattle across northern NSW, from Coonabarabran to Armidale, becoming involved in many adventures in the ‘‘long paddock’’ while camping under the ‘‘drover’s blanket’’ (the Milky Way).
One of those adventures — solving an old
murder case — resulted in Smokey being named the ‘‘Gunnedah Hero’’. While
Smokey’s main adventure involved saving the family property, Wiralee Station,
by keeping the breeding stock alive during drought, Gunnie also saves the day
for Wiralee in the present. The author cleverly weaves the bush atmosphere and
vernacular of pre-World War I Australia and provides a glossary of terms. See http://clancytucker.com.au
for where to buy the book.
Graham Croker
Now, having bragged a bit, let's get back to Allen Ginsberg ... CT
GINSBERG
As an adolescent, Ginsberg took pleasure in reading Walt Whitman. However, by the time he graduated from high school in 1939, Edgar Allan Poe was his favorite poet. Ginsberg longed to be accepted at Columbia University just like Edgar Allan Poe. He vowed to devote his life to helping the working class.
Ginsberg was accepted to Columbia University in the 1940s. It was at Columbia that he met and made close friendships with William S. Burroughs, Neal Cassady, and Jack Kerouac, all of whom later became leading figures of the Beat movement. Also around this time, Ginsberg had what he called the Blake Vision. This was an auditory hallucination of William Blake reading his poems. In the visions, William Blake read poems such as Ah Sunflower, The Sick Rose, and Little Girl Lost. According to Ginsberg, the visions played an important role in developing his comprehension of the universe which in turn affected his fundamental beliefs about life and work. While Ginsberg claimed he did not make use of any drugs, he later admitted to using drugs in an attempt to recapture the feelings derived from the visions.
Some more significant publications by Allen Ginsberg include Kaddish and Other Poems (1961), Planet News (1968), and The Fall of America: Poems of These States (1973), which won the National Book Award.
Clancy's comment: Interesting guy, eh? I saw him interviewed several times and admired his activism.
I'm ...
Blog coment:
June Collins has left a new comment on your post "22 February 2013 - ALLEN GINSBERG - Guest Author":
Congratulations Clancy. An excellent book review.
Your post on Alan Ginsberg was great. I always knew he was a smart man and trusted his judgments,but I had no idea about his varied and interesting background. His passing is a great loss to the USA.
June Collins (Goodbye Junie Moon)
Congratulations Clancy. An excellent book review.
Your post on Alan Ginsberg was great. I always knew he was a smart man and trusted his judgments,but I had no idea about his varied and interesting background. His passing is a great loss to the USA.
June Collins (Goodbye Junie Moon)
***
June Collins has left a new comment on your post "22 February 2013 - ALLEN GINSBERG - Guest Author":
Have I got the wrong Alan Ginsberg Clancy?
He sounds so different. Notice I now spell Alan with one 'L'. June Collins
Have I got the wrong Alan Ginsberg Clancy?
He sounds so different. Notice I now spell Alan with one 'L'. June Collins
Congratulations Clancy. An excellent book review.
ReplyDeleteYour post on Alan Ginsberg was great. I always knew he was a smart man and trusted his judgments,but I had no idea about his varied and interesting background. His passing is a great loss to the USA.
June Collins (Goodbye Junie Moon)
Have I got the wrong Alan Ginsberg Clancy?
ReplyDeleteHe sounds so different. Notice I now spell Alan with one 'L'. June Collins