James Dickey published fifteen books of poetry, four collections of essays, four coffee-table books, three novels, and one screenplay. His book of poetry Buckdancer's Choice received the National Book Award, the Poetry Society of America's Melville Cane Award, and an award from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. His bestselling first novel, Deliverance, was made into a movie. He was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and was Poet-in-Residence and First Carolina Professor of English at the University of South Carolina from 1969 until his death in 1997.
Pat Conroy Who wrote better than James Dickey in this century? I
think he was in a league of his own. His poems are simply better
than anyone else's poetry. His criticism cuts to the bone. His
novels sizzle when they hit the fire. This book captures the
untellable genius of James Dickey. Pick it up and on any page you
get perfection and the most breathlessly fully alive writing ever
done by an American.
Gordon Lish Only death could exhibit the cheek to think it had the
reach to get a grip all the way around James Dickey. Life gave up,
reckoning it would never have the arms for it. In any event, James
Dickey is not dead, and shall not be, as this book notifies us,
sampling by sampling. Indeed, the thing that beats in him -- the
heart of none other than the unrepeatable man -- must make the gods
puny and afraid.
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