Lettersby Ted Berrigan, edited and introduced by Sandy Berrigan and Ron Padgett
October 12, 2010 6 x 9 368 pages 978-1-56689-249-0
Letters illuminating a legendary literary love affair and the young artists who made 1960s New York the worlds cultural capital.
Ted and Sandy Berrigans honeymoon ended when her father, a well-connected doctor, forced Sandy into a mental hospital, had Ted run out of town by the sheriff, and hired private detectives to investigate his friends. These intimate, irresistible letters, written over the course of their three-month separation, read like a passionate, epistolary novelfull of longing, intrigue, and gossip. They also offer serious advice for developing readers and writers, bring the thriving cultural scene in mid-twentieth-century New York to life, and serve as a day-by-day chronicle of Ted Berrigans developing voice.
In addition to the letters, this collection contains never-before-published reproductions from A Book of Poetry for Sandy, featuring Berrigans cutouts, drawings, photographs of fellow poets and artists, and excerpts from poems that eventually became The Sonnets.
About the Author
Ted Berrigan (1934-1983), a central figure in the second generation of New York School poets, was the author of more than twenty books including The Sonnets, So Going Around Cities, and A Certain Slant of Sunlight. The editor and publisher of C Magazine, he also wrote art criticism and became an influential mentor to an entire generation of writers.