Kenneth Patchen: A Centennial Selection

Image of Kenneth Patchen: A Centennial Selection
Author(s): 
Release Date: 
November 1, 2011
Publisher/Imprint: 
Kelly’s Cove Press
Pages: 
90
Reviewed by: 

“This selection of Patchen’s best by one of his intimates is clearly a gift and tribute to the man and his work, . . . Kenneth Patchen may be experiencing a real revival in his 100th year. He clearly still has much to say to us.”

One of the chief values of this centennial collection of Kenneth Patchen’s work is the introduction provided by editor Jonathan Clark. While Patchen is a maverick hero to many for his engaged stance and experimental fiction, poetry, and combined arts, he yet remains an enigma to real critical response.

In recent years we have seen the reissue of his fables and poems in We Meet and his picture-poems in The Walking-Away World (both from New Directions), and in Awash with Roses: Collected Love Poems (Bottom Dog Press).

Mr. Clark is able here to reframe an approach to Patchen the writer. “One of the twentieth century’s leading experimentalists. . . . His strangeness assures him a place in the noble pantheon of American eccentrics. . . . The excellence of much of his writing, and his wide-ranging imagination, will not escape the notice of generations to come. . . . Patchen was a thorn in the side of American literature . . .”

Mr. Clark clearly states the critical dilemma of Patchen’s work; because he was a writer who essentially never wrote the same book twice, he defies critical classification:

“He turned his hand at one time or another to poetry and prose-poems, stories, novels (or anti-novels), reviews, stage and radio plays; typographical assemblages, drawings, watercolors, and mixed-media paintings; collages, sculptures, silkscreen prints, and decorated book covers; poetry-jazz readings and spoken-word recordings. His stylistic range encompassed political invective, structured and free verse, stream-of-consciousness prose, farce, lyricism, free association, religious allegory, fantasy, love poetry, surrealism, pseudo-folklore…you name the territory, Patchen was there.”

Patchen’s praise and response came chiefly from fellow writers Henry Miller, Jonathan Williams, Kenneth Rexroth, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and William Carlos Williams. They understood his intention and his engaged stance, for Patchen sought no less than changing the world through his art.

Mr. Clark aptly describes the overarching theme of his work: “that man has ‘betrayed his animal,’ the indwelling spirit of love and wonder that believed was the true nature or humankind. . . . Patchen’s legacy, then, is a record of the human spirit, for that is what he cared about and hoped to leave us.”

It is a bit surprising to hear someone so close to the man and his work admit that Patchen sometimes wrote “bad poetry,” stretching and distorting forms, or to accuse him of “riding roughshod through the china shop of literary form,” concluding that “Carelessness was part of his method.”

As is clear from those editors and publishers who worked with Patchen, he was intensely deliberate about how his writing should appear, and kept a sharp eye on their critical response. Yet perhaps this more honest approach will help open critical doors into a fuller appreciation of the author’s work.

The poems and art selected here are “a personal selection by Clark and represent well the wide range of the author.” Included are poems and drawings, concrete poems, Dadaist collage, and beautiful full color prints of his art and picture-poems. The poems themselves appear in no particular order and without documentation as to the book titles they are drawn from.

Kenneth Patchen: A Centennial Selection is more a serving of fine work without explanation moving from darker to lighter tones. Some are familiar like “Let Us Have Madness Openly” and “O Fiery River,” “As I Opened the Window,” and “Lonesome Boy Blues,” and some less well known, like “Vinegar and Perfume,” “But of Life,” and “The Great Birds.” Clearly one of the best is a poem that Patchen’s wife Miriam used to read at talks and presentations after Kenneth’s death in 1972. “What Is the Beautiful” contains the essence of the man and his work.

I believe in the truth.

I believe that every good thought I have,

All men shall have.

I believe that what is best in me,

Shall be found in every man.

I believe that only the beautiful

Shall survive on the earth.

This selection of Patchen’s best by one of his intimates is clearly a gift and tribute to the man and his work, as is the late 2011 exhibit of his art, “Beyond Words: Kenneth Patchen's Vibrant Designs Fuse Poetry and Image” at Rochester University. Kenneth Patchen may be experiencing a real revival in his 100th year. He clearly still has much to say to us.