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NewsDavid Mason's verse-novel Ludlow published
From Ron Charles' review in The Washington Post: "One of the many pleasures of David Mason's Ludlow is a brief afterword in which he acknowledges readers' prejudice against books such as his: 'Anyone who writes narrative verse will confront a version of the following question: Why didn't you just write it in prose?' His answer invokes Seamus Heaney's best-selling translation of Beowulf and the continued popularity of Homer, but he also makes several practical arguments about the accessibility of this form: 'Narrative verse is not inherently harder to read than narrative prose. In the right hands, verse actually has more clarity, drive and economy than prose, and it can offer literary pleasures of a sort unavailable in other genres.' The evidence is right here in his powerful story about the 1914 massacre of coal miners and their families in Ludlow, Colo. Yes, it's told in more than 600 eight-line stanzas of nonrhyming iambic pentameter, and if those poetic technicalities excite you, you'll be dazzled by the feats Mason can perform within that structure..." Read the review Ludlow on amazon.com Interview with David Mason Classics-English Reading Fraternity meets this spring May 1: Jake York & Aaron Anstett reading |