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Gary Snyder United States of America    PWF 2007

Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder is a quiet contemplative who walks through the modern history of the United States. A distinctive poet, orientalist, lover of ecology and follower of Eastern thought, he was born in 1930 in San Francisco, California. Although he spent his entire childhood in the woods, he often later  found himself in the centre of things. He was, for example, an eye witness to the famous poetry reading in San Francisco‘s Gallery Six, where Ginsberg’s Howl was read for the first time. Jack Kerouac was also there, drinking wine from his paper cup. He wrote about Snyder in his Dharma Bums: Japhy Ryder was a kid from eastern Oregon brought up in a log cabin deep in the woods with his father and mother and sister, from the beginning a woods boy, an axe man, farmer, interested in animals and Indian lore so that when he finally got to college by hook or crook he was already well equipped for his early studies in anthropology and later in Indian myth and in the actual texts of Indian mythology. Finally, he learned Chinese and Japanese and became an Oriental scholar and discovered the greatest Dharma Bums of them all, the Zen Lunatics of China and Japan.

Indeed, Snyder was soon lost to Asian culture. He became a proponent of Zen Buddhism in the United States and even spent years in a Zen monastery. This experience seriously influenced him during his work on Turtle Island, which he titled after the Native American name for North America, and for which he won a Pulitzer Priz in 1975.

Now at eighty eight years old, Gary Snyder lives in a mountain farmstead in the Yuba River watershed of the northern Sierra Nevada,where he and his friends built a house that drew on rural-Japanese andNative-American architectural ideas.

Bibliography:

Myths & Texts (1960)
Six Sections from Mountains and Rivers Without End (1965)
The Back Country (1967)
Riprap and Cold Mountain Poems (1969)
Regarding Wave (1969)
Earth House Hold (1969)
Turtle Island (1974)
The Old Ways (1977)
He Who Hunted Birds in His Father's Village: The Dimensions of a Haida Myth (1979)
The Real Work (1980)
Axe Handles (1983)
Passage Through India (1983)
Left Out in the Rain (1988)
The Practice of the Wild (1990)
No Nature: New and Selected Poems (1992)
A Place in Space (1995)
narrator of the audio book version of Kazuaki Tanahashi's Moon in a Dewdrop from Dogen's Shobogenzo
Mountains and Rivers Without End (1996)
The Gary Snyder Reader: Prose, Poetry, and Translations (1999)
Danger on Peaks (2005)
Back on the Fire: Essays (2007)
Tamalpais Walking, with Tom Killion (2009)
The Etiquette of Freedom, with Jim Harrison (2010)

Nobody Home: Writing, Buddhism, and Living in Places, with Julia Martin (2014)

This Present Moment (2015)

Distant Neighbors: The Selected Letters of Wendell Berry and Gary Snyder (2015)

The Great Clod: notes and Memories on the Natural History of China and Japan (2016)

 


Related websites:
http://www.enotes.com/poetry-criticism/snyder-gary
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Snyder
http://www.rooknet.com/beatpage/writers/snyder.html
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/167

photo by Festival of Faiths

National Treasure: Gary Snyder

25.06.2018 Interviews

Beat hero, steward of the earth, Zen Buddhist—in his mid-eighties, poet Gary Snyder looks back on an honorable life at the leading edge.

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Gary Snyder with Ginsberg

Zen Master

23.10.2008

Gary Snyder with Allen Ginsberg

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Gary Snyder, Michael March

Gary Snyder in conversation at Hotel Josef

07.10.2008 Interviews

Gary Snyder and Michael March

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Gary Snyder

Why we Czechs can understand Gary Snyder’s poetry

07.10.2008 Articles

The question, why we Czechs can understand Gary Snyder’s poetry isn’t as easy as it seems. Let me try to find some satisfying answers.

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Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder: “Can Poetry Change the World?“

10.12.2007 Interviews

Interview with Susan Deming in Caffeine Destiny

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Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder: The Mountain Spirit´s True [No] Nature

10.12.2007 Readings

Wherever there are mountains, there are rivers. Wherever there are mountains and rivers, there are spirits. Even Buddhism, with its astringent skepticism toward the power of deities, finds itself dealing with nature spirits from the old days. Poets and storytellers have throughout time stepped in to mediate between gods, nature, religion, and society.

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Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder: High peak haikus

10.12.2007 Articles

Gary Snyder was a teenage mountaineer, studied Oriental languages, became a Beat poet in San Francisco with Ginsberg and featured in a Kerouac novel. After moving to Japan he took the vows of a Zen monk and Buddhism remains central to his work, which links ecology to literary values. Now 75, he lives on a remote 100-acre ranch in the Sierra Nevada

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Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder: Coyote Makes Things Hard

10.12.2007 Readings

Foreword to The Maidu Indian Myths and Stories of hanc´ibyjim, by William Shipley (Heydey, 1991)

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