Evergreen Review - Number 1
(202 pages)
$2.95

DOWNLOAD
|
Between 1957 and 1984, Evergreen Review brought together new voices, ideas, and images from around the world. As Newsweek magazine said, “Evergreen Review was one of the most important literary periodicals in the United States . . . where some of the best authors sought to deliver themselves alive and burning onto the printed page.”
This first issue includes contributions by Jean-Paul Sartre, Samuel Beckett, Henri Michaux, Michael Hamburger, Harold Feinstein, James Purdy Mark Schorer and others.
Evergreen Review defined the coming-of-age for two generations of writers and artists, presenting a cultural treasure for anyone seeking a greater appreciation for the forces at work in America's cultural & political landscape from the late 1950s.
|
Evergreen Review - Number 2 -
San Francisco Scene
(172 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Kenneth Rexroth — San Francisco Letter and Noretorp-Noretsyh
Brother Antoninus, O.P. — Four Poems
Robert Duncan — Three Poems
Lawrence Ferlinghetti — Dog and Other Poems
Henry Miller — Big Sur and the Good Life
Michael McClure — The Robe and Other Poems
Josephine Miles — Four Poems
Jack Spicer — Psychoanalysis and Other Poems
Ralph J. Gleason — San Francisco Jazz Scene
Harry Redl — 8 Photographs of San Francisco Poets
Michael Rumaker — The Desert
James Broughton — Four Poems
Gary Snyder — The Berry Feast
Philip Whalen — Five Poems
Jack Kerouac — October in the Railroad Earth
Allen Ginsberg — Howl
Dore Ashton — The San Francisco School
Cover photograph by Fred Lyon
|
Evergreen Review - Number 3
(168 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Evergreen Review Issue 3 includes contributions by Albert Camus, William Carlos Williams, Frank O'Hara, Patsy Southgate, Gregory Corso, James Grady, Samuel Beckett, E. G. Burrows, Clement Greenberg, Hans Namuth, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Barbara Guest, Eugene Ionesco, Gary Snyder, Georges Arnaud, Cover photograph of Jackson Pollack by Hans Namuth.
Between 1957 and 1984, Evergreen Review brought together new voices, ideas, and images from around the world. As Newsweek magazine said, “Evergreen Review was one of the most important literary periodicals in the United States . . . where some of the best authors sought to deliver themselves alive and burning onto the printed page.”
Evergreen Review defined the coming-of-age for two generations of writers and artists, presenting a cultural treasure for anyone seeking a greater appreciation for the forces at work in America's cultural and political landscape from the late 1950s till the early 1980s.
|
Evergreen Review - Number 4
(165 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD NOW |
Contents:
Charles Olson — The Lordly and Isolate Satyrs
Charles Foster — The Troubled Makers
Allen Ginsberg — Siesta in Xbalba and Return to the States
Alexander Trocchi — From Cain's Book
John Logan — On the Death of the Artist's Mother
Thirty-three Years Later
Baby Dodds — The Oliver Band
Eugene Ionesco — There Is No Avant-garde Theater
Jack Kerouac — Seattle Burlesque
Arthur Adamov — As We Were
Will Petersen — Stone Garden
Robin Blaser — Poem
John Hickey — Break Your Mother's Back
Paul Blackburn — Song for a Cool Departure
Lawrence Ferlinghetti — Horn on HOWL
Cover photograph by Robert Frank
|
Evergreen Review - Number 5
(169 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Evergreen Review – Issue 5 includes contributions by Edgar Morin, Samuel Beckett, Robert Creeley, H. D., Karl Jaspers, Philip Whalen, John Rechy, Edward Field, Jack Kerouac, William Eastlake, Denise Levertov, Charles Olson, Edward Dorn, Kenneth Koch, David Lyttle, Amos Tutuola, Roland Barthes, Michael Rumaker, Antonin Artaud, Clement Greenberg, Cover photograph of James Dean.
Between 1957 and 1984, it brought together new voices, ideas, and images from around the world. Newsweek magazine said, “Evergreen Review was one of the most important literary periodicals in the United States . . . where some of the best authors sought to deliver themselves alive and burning onto the printed page.”
Evergreen Review defined the coming-of-age for two generations of writers presenting a cultural treasure for anyone seeking a greater appreciation for the forces at work in America's cultural and political landscape from the late 1950s till the early 1980s.
|
Evergreen Review - Number 6
(196 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Evergreen Review – Issue 6 includes contributions by Andre Pierre de Mandiargues, Frank O’Hara, Paul Johnson, Robert Creeley, Daisetz T. Suzuki, Bruce Boyd, Frank O’Hara, James O. Mitchell, Franz Kline, Gary Snyder, Douglas Woolf, Federico Garcia Lorca, E. M. Cioran, Mike McClure, John Rechy, Gangadhar Gadgil, Alexander Trocchi, E. S. Seldon, Amos Vogel, Cover photograph by Susan Nevelson.
Between 1957 and 1984, it brought together new voices, ideas, and images from around the world. Newsweek magazine said, “Evergreen Review was one of the most important literary periodicals in the United States . . . where some of the best authors sought to deliver themselves alive and burning onto the printed page.”
Evergreen Review defined the coming-of-age for two generations of writers presenting a cultural treasure for anyone seeking a greater appreciation for the forces at work in America's cultural and political landscape from the late 1950s till the early 1980s.
|
Evergreen Review - Number 7 - Eye of Mexico
(260 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Anand Lall: The Continuing Position of India
Octavia Paz: Todos Santos, Dia de Muertos and Two Poems
Juan Rulfo: From Pedro Páramo
Alí Chumacero: Two Poems
Elena Garro: A Solid House
Carlos Fuentes: The Life Line
Manuel Durán: Three Poems
Jaime García Térres: Two Poems
Ricardo Pozas A.: Juan Pérez Jolote, Part I
Marco Antonio Montes de Oca: Poem
José Luis Cuevas: The Cactus Curtain
Guadalupe Amor: My Mother’s Bedroom
Esther McCoy: Felix Candela
Juan José Arreola: Nine Sketches
Jaime Sabines: Two Poems
Elena Poniatowska: Interview with Juan Soriano
Manuel Calvillo: Book of the Migrant
Miguel Léon-Portilla: A Náhuatl Concept of Art
Edwin Denby: Three Sides of Agon
Martin Williams: Thelonious Monk
Lysander Kemp: Fly Away, Little Dove
William Carlos Williams: E. E. Cummings
Frank O’Hara: About Zhiuago and His Poems
|
Evergreen Review - Number 8
(256 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Anthony C. West–Swineherd
Derek Walcott–A Far Cry from Africa
Boris Pastemak–Icefloe
E. E. Cummings–Poem
Robert Lowell–Commander Lowell (1887-1950)
Ivan C. Karp–Looking for Money
Jack Kerouac–Belief & Technique for Modern Prose
Gregory Corso–Paranoia in Crete
Allen Ginsberg–At Apollinaire’s Grave
Paul Carroll–At the Moment of Love & Blue Eyelids
Arthur Adamov–The Endless Humiliation
James Merrill–Landscape with Torrent
John Ashbery–The Poems
Horace Gregory–Boris MacCreary’s Abyss
Alexander Trocchi–From Cain’s Book
Charles Olson–The Company of Men
William Saroyan–My Drawings
Martin Williams–Instant Jazz
Richard Paul Goodman–A Statue of Goldsmith
Maurice Green–The Possibility of Existential Analysis
Douglas Woolf–One of the Truly Good Men
Wallace Fowlie–On a Study of Camus
David Greene–Recordings of William Butler Yeats
|
Evergreen Review - Number 9
(228 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD NOW |
Contents:
Henry Miller — Defence of the Freedom to Read
Samuel Beckett — Text for Nothing I
Samuel Selvon — Knock on Wood
Frank O’Hara — Three Airs
Denise Levertov — The 5-Day Rain
John Gross — Our Dance
Terry Southern — Put-Down
John Wain — My Nineteen-Thirties (Part One)
R. Inskip Mayes — One Sentence
Pierre Gascar — The Spider-Child of Madras
Alain Rohhe-Grillet — Old “Values” and the New Novel
Patsy Southgate — Artie
Gary Snyder — Two Poem
Philip Whalen — Two Poems
Patrick Shannon Gleeson — Two Poems
Michael Rumaker — The Pipe
Gregory Corso — Marriage
John Wieners — A poem for early risers
James Brunot — The Cure
Mulk Raj Anand — The Great Delight
Jerry Tallmer — Review of The Seven Deadly Sins
Seymour Krim — Review of The Holy Barbarians
B. H. Friedman — Thurber’s Ross - A Minority Report
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 10
(196 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
John Rechy — The City of Lost Angels
Samuel Beckett — Embers
Siné — These Weapons Will Still Remain
Feng Meng Lung — Song
Barbara Moraff — Tune
Cynthia Ozick — We Ignoble Savages
Paul Carroll — George Swimming at Barnes Hole
P. R. Brown — Africa and Small Poem
Corneille — Journal of a Painter in Ethiopia
Henry Miller — From Nexus
Paul Blackbum — Sirventes
William Eastlake — Three Heroes and a Clown
Henryk Musialowicz — Three Drawings
Bruce Morrissette — New Structure in the Novel:
But It Got Too Cold
Jealousy, by Alain Robbe-Grillet
B. H. Friedman — The Most Expensive Restaurant
Jerry Tallmer — Bye Bye Blackbird
Allen Ginsherg — Notes Written on Finally
Martin Williams — Funk for Sale
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 11
(203 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
William S. Burroughs – Deposition: Testimony Concerning a Sickness
Pierre Reverdy – Six Poems
Dore Ashton: Mark Tobey
Jack Kerouac – Conclusion of the Railroad Earth
Antonin Artaud – Letters from Rodez
Philip O'Connor – From Steiner's Tour
Allen Ginsberg – Sather Gate Illuminution
Philip Lamantia – Still Poem 9
Irene Grey – Dangerous Passage
Terry Southern – Red-Dirt Marihuana
Siné – Self Determination in Life
Robert Duncan – A Poem Beginning with a Line by Pindar
Jean-Paul Sartre – The Theater (An Interview)
Warren Tallman – Kerouac's Sound
Nat Hentoff – Who Else Can Make So Much out of Passing Out?
Seymour Krim – A Hungry Mental Lion
Horace Gregory – A Portrait of the Irish as James Joyce
New York Herald Tribune Editorial – Lady Chatterley Embattled Again
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 12
(207 pages) $2.95
DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Alexander Trocchi: From Cain's Book
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: He
Edward Albee: The Zoo Story Bertolt Brecht: The Prince of Homburg
Siné: For Darwin's Centenary
Anthony Kaye: Molly's Suggestion
LeRoi Jones: The Bridge
Diana Athill: An Unavoidable Delay
Louis Ginsberg: To a Mother Buried
John Bernard Myers: The Impact. of Surrealism on the New York School
John Logan: A Trip to Four or Five Towns
Frank Conroy: Spring for Alison
André Hodeir: An Analysis of Resnais’ FilmHiroshima Mon Amour
Martin Williams: Jelly Roll Morton-Three Minute Form
Albert Camus: On Capital Punishment-Reflections on the Guillotine
Cover: Larry Rivers-The Next to Last Confederate Soldier
|
Evergreen Review - Number 13 - What Is Pataphysics?
(198 pages) $2.95
DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Roger Shattuck: Superliminal Note
Raymond Queneau: A Fish's Life
Eugéne Ionesco: Foursome
Boris Vian: A Letter to His Magnificence The Vice Curator
Jacques Prévert: Chant Song
René Clair: The Chinese Princess
Jean Ferry: Two Stories
Maurice Saillet: Close to Antonin Artaud
Michel Leiris: Voodoo in Haiti
Alphonse Allais: Literary Assassin
Félix Fénéon: Soft Spoken Anarchist
Marcel Schwob: Double Soul
Léon-Paul Fargue: Explorer
Julien Torma: Author by Neglect
René Daumal: An Experirnental Mystic
Simon Watson Taylor: An Apodeictic Outline
Jean Borzic: Scienee: An Administrative Question
His Late Magnificence, Dr. I. L. Sandomir: Opus Paraphysicum
Nicolaj N. Kamenev: Report on Some Concrete Historical Problems
His Late Magnificence, Dr. I. L. Sandomir: Epanorthosis the Moral Clinmnen
His Late Magnificence, Jean Mollet: Message to the Civilized or Uncivilized World
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 14
(170 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Douglas Woolf: Bank Day
Namiki Gohei III: Kanjincho, A Kabuki Play
Samuel Beckett: From an Unabandoned Work
Siné: The Good Life
Jacques Prévert: Blood Orange
John Wain: My Nineteen-Thirties (Part Two)
Dore Ashton: Philip Guston
Philip Whalen: The Same Old Jazz
Charles Tomlinson: The Impalpabilities
Yasar Kemal: The Baby
Edward Dom: A Fate of Unannounced Yeas
Jerry Tallmer: "Jazz on a Summer's Day"
Lionel Abel: Brecht
Martin Williams: Charlie Parker: The Burden of Innovation
Art Buchwald: The Upbeat Beatnik
Letters to the Editor: The Great Delight and the Big Lie
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 15
(173 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Samuel Beckett: The End
Kenneth Koch: Bertha
Rowell Hoff: Redstone
Stig Dagennan: The Games of Night
Richard O'Connell: Med Cruise
Genevieve Serreau: A New Comic Style
Ann Morrissett: Dialogue with Arrabal
Arrabal: Picnic on the Battlefield
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: Hidden Door
Siné: Closing the Olympics
Klaus Roehler: New Year's Every Day
Jerry Tallmer: Down the Demerera
Martin Williams: Omette Coleman: The Meaning of Innovation
Walter Hollerer: Letter from Germany
LeRoi Jones: Cuba Libre
Cover photo by Robert Frank
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 16
(135 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Paul Goodman: Why Are Theere No Alternatives?
William Burroughs: From Naked Lunch
Alfred Andersch : The Night of the Giraffe
Hobert Duncan: Apprehensions
Gregory Corso: Berlin Impressions
John Williamson : Aughatane
Shelagh Delaney: Tom Riley
Herbert W. Stanford III : Erecting a Sacrilegious Cross on a Saturday on Washburn Campus
C.Wright Mills: On Latin America, the Left, and the U.S.
George Grosz: Six Drawings and a Watercolor from Ecce Homo
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 17
(135 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
C. P. Snow: From The Moral Unneutrality of Science
Henry Miller: From The World of Sex
Friedrich D?rrenmatt: The Tunnel
Jonathan Williams: Three Episodes from Jammin' the Greek Scene
Robert Pinget: The Old Tune (English text by Samuel Beckett)
Richard Wilbur: She
William Carlos Williams: Portrait of a Woman at Her Bath
William Jay Smith: The Vision
Michael Rumaker: The Morning Glory
George Dowden: On the Death of the Pilot Francis GaryPowers
E. M. Cioran: Beyond the Novel
Thomas L. Jackrell: Three Poem
Lew Welch: The Man Who Played Himself
Martin Williams: Some Comments in Appreciation of Ellington
Jerry Tallmer: The Six Million Deaths of Ernie Levy
Letters to the Editor
Cover Photo by Werner Bischof (Magnum)
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 18
(137 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
Brendan Behan: Where We All Came into Town
Pete Brown: Thoughtful
Jean Genet: From Our Lady of the Flowers
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: One Thousand Fearful Words for Fidel Castro
Aidan Higgins: Winter Offensive
Allen Ginsberg: Lysergic Acid
Mack Sheldon Thomas: Magnolia
Edward Field: Two Poems
Alfred Chester: The Victory - A Fable
Octavio Paz: The Blue Bouquet
Martin Williams: The Craftsmanship of Horace Silver
Jerry Tallmer: Hold That Tiger
Michel Butor: Delphi
Letters to the Editor
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 19
(134 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD |
Contents:
John Rechy: A Quarter Ahead
Alexander Blok: The Twelve
Alexander Trocchi: From Cain's Book, Vol. 2
Paul Blackburn: The Flies
Marcel Proust: The Sources of the Loir at Illiers
Leon-Paul Fargue: The American Frag
Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Foam
John Schultz: Goodbye
Al Sens: After the War Is Over
Alfred Andersch: The Crocodile
Gene Frumkin: Variations on the Taste of Dried Apricots
LeRoi Jones: The New Sherif
Larry Rivers & Frank O'Hara: How to Proceed in the Arts
Robert Stromberg: A Talk With Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Martin Williams: Bix Beiderbecke and the White Man'sBurden
Paul Carroll: Death Is a Letter That Was Never Sent
Jerry Tallmer: The Magic Box
Letters to the Editor
Cover photo by Martha Swope: The Blacks by Jean Genet, recently given
the "Obie Award" for the best new play off-Broadway for 1960-1961.
|
Evergreen Review -
Number 20
(135 pages) $2.95

DOWNLOAD
|
Contents:
Ahmed Yacoubi: The Night Before Thinking
William Burroughs: Comments On The Night Before Thinking
Michael McClure: On Seeing .Through Shelley’s Eyes The Medusa
Brendan Behan: The Big House
Pete Brown: Two Poems
Robert Creeley: The Book
Aleksander Yesenin-Volpin: The Raven
Janheinz Jahn: On Their Own Feet
Vladimir Mayakovsky: Two Poems
Al Sens: The Poet's New Audience
Rene Daumal: The Catechism
Vincente Huidobro: She
Octavio Paz: The Dialectic of Solitude
Martin Williams: A Purple Dog, A Flying Squirrel, and The Art of Television
Letters to the Editor
Cover photo: "Frontiersman" by William Wareing
|
Evergreen Review on CD (Issues 1 to 10)

BUY NOW |
Between 1957 and 1984, it brought together new voices, ideas, and images from around the world. Newsweek magazine said, “Evergreen Review was one of the most important literary periodicals in the United States . . . where some of the best authors sought to deliver themselves alive and burning onto the printed page.”
This Evergreen Review CD defines the coming-of-age for two generations of writers presenting a cultural treasure for anyone seeking a greater appreciation for the forces at work in America's cultural and political landscape.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|