The Whole Nine Yards offers poems spanning the career of former Poet Laureate Daniel Hoffman. These explore violence and transcendence in realistic, gothic, and comic modes, as they tell of war, cold war, domestic violence, bureaucratic oppression, and a compassionate rescue at sea. Searching and lyrical suites celebrate the births of children, recoup a year in wartime France, and meditate on life and death, the seen and the unseen. Hoffman aims to share the pleasures of dramatizing language, theme, and form in dimensions new to his work. The result is a compelling collection from a distinguished poet.
Daniel Hoffman served as Poet Laureate in 1973-74 (when the post was known as Consultant in Poetry of The Library of Congress). His first book, An Armada of Thirty Whales, was W. H. Auden's choice for the 1954 Yale Series of Younger Poets. Among its dozen successor volumes are Brotherly Love (1981), a nominee for both the National Book Award and National Book Critics Circle Award; Beyond Silence: Selected Shorter Poems 1948-2003; and The Whole Nine Yards: Longer Poems (2009).
Best known of his critical studies is another National Book Award nominee, Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe (1972).
Among his distinctions, Hoffman received the Arthur Rense prize for poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2005, and, in 2003 from The Sewanee Review, the Aiken-Taylor Award for Contemporary American Poetry. He was given the Memorial medal of the Magyar P.E.N. for his translations of contemporary Hungarian poets.
Born in 1923 in New York City, Daniel Hoffman in 1948 married the poet and editor Elizabeth McFarland (d. 2005). They had two children. He took three degrees from Columbia, and taught there, at Swarthmore College, and at the University of Pennsylvania, from which he retired in 1993 as the Felix E. Schelling Professor of English Emeritus. From 1988-99 he was Poet in Residence, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, and administered the American Poets' Corner. He lives in Swarthmore, PA, and on Cape Rosier in Maine.
Daniel Hoffman (1923-2013) was once the poet laureate of the US, yet I never really heard much about him in my life.
This particular book was a collection of longer poems. I have been preparing a workshop for poets about writing the long poem, so I was looking for tips here. I found a few examples to use.