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Poetry Canadian

The Improved Binoculars

by (author) Irving Layton

Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Initial publish date
Oct 1989
Category
Canadian
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889841017
    Publish Date
    Oct 1989
    List Price
    $8.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

The 87 poems included in the first (1956) edition of The Improved Binoculars were selected from the eight volumes the poet published in the first ten years of his career. The publication of the book -- simultaneously by The Ryerson Press (Canada), Migrant Books (England), and Jonathan Williams ( US ) -- did much to establish Layton as a major talent on the international poetry scene and prompted Robert Creeley to note: 'Irving Layton may well be for the historian of Literature ... the First Great Canadian Poet.'

What a pleasure to rediscover 'The Bull Calf', 'The Cold Green Element', 'The Birth of Tragedy' and 'To the Girls of my Graduating Class' and discover these poems are as vital as the day they were written.

About the author

Irving Layton (Israel Lazarovitch) was born March 12, 1912 in Tirgu Neamt, Romania. Layton came to Montreal with his family before he was one. He attained a BSc in agriculture at Macdonald College in 1939. Following a stint in the Canadian Army, he did graduate work in political science at McGill. A poet, short-story writer, and essayist, Layton is perhaps the most well-known of the Montreal poets, a group of young poets who engaged in a battle against romanticism in poetry in the 1940's. Layton has published many poetry collections, including A Red Carpet for the Sun (1959) which won the Governor General's Award. Layton was poet-in-residence at various Canadian universities and a professor of English at York University 1969-78. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 1981.

Irving Layton died in 2006.

Irving Layton's profile page

Editorial Reviews

'The Improved Binoculars, a collection of poems from the first 10 years of Irving Layton's long career, is the work of a writer who can be confrontational, bawdy, crass, and even romantic. This poet sees fidelity to the truth as much more important than decorum or good taste. Layton leaps from mythology to scatology in his extravagant -- but often rigidly formal -- poems, apologizing to no one for his fury or his libido. At their best, these poems are richly joyous, even in their darkest moments. At times, Layton's poems do overshoot their mark with excessive or misdirected passion. But this is a necessary consequence of the poet's audacity; there were not many overreachers writing in Canada in the 1950s.

'The Improved Binoculars, published in 1956 by Jonathan Williams's Jargon Press, was the first of Layton's collections to be widely published in North America. Ryerson Press, the book's Canadian distributor, refused to distribute the book (or even release it to the author) because of its ''controversial'' content. It is telling that Layton, whom we now regard as the author of some of the finest poems in Canadian history, found a warmer reception at first in the United States than he did in his own country. Layton's early backers included Robert Creeley and William Carlos Williams, who provided a warm (but condescending -- he refers to Layton, a Montrealer, as a ''backwoodsman'') forward for The Improved Binoculars.'

'Layton has published at least seven volumes of ''Selected Poems'' over the years, but The Improved Binoculars is still one of the best introductions to his work. Readers new to Layton will appreciate this slender collection's size and be delighted with the scope and intensity of its contents.'

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