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LATER AUDEN

THE DEFINITIVE STUDY OF AUDEN'S POEMS FROM 1939 TO 1979

The richly detailed follow-up to Early Auden (not reviewed), Mendelson’s well-received study of the poet’s most notable period. With unparalleled access as executor of Auden’s literary estate, Mendelson (English and Comparative Literature/Columbia) blazes a scholarly trail ending in Auden’s “private spheres” as an expatriate poet and lecturer after the “public chaos” of WWII, which was preceded by his formative, more eventful experiences of the 1930s. Here he takes Auden at his word when he wrote “anything of importance that happens to one is immediately incorporated, however obscurely, into a poem”, and nothing, however obscure, escapes Mendelson. While the poetry that made Auden famous was created in Britain, this later period includes major, rich works such as The Age of Anxiety, the tour de force The Sea and the Mirror, and the anthology favorites The Shield of Achilles and “In Praise of Limestone”—all of which Mendelson exhaustively unpacks, making good use of drafts, correspondence, and Auden’s own literary criticism. With these and much of Auden’s prolific output, he elucidates both their relation to the poet’s personal life, which was dominated by his rise-and-fall affair with Chester Kallman, and his personal mythology, with its high-church Christianity and Jungian inclinations. While Mendelson ably keeps up with Auden’s restless intellectual existence, which absorbed Kierkegaard and Tillich, among others, he underplays his early legacy, especially the influences of Freud and Marx, whom Auden could not fully expel from his creative pantheon. Just as Mendelson assisted Humphrey Carpenter with researching his masterly biography of Auden in 1981, here he provides an invaluable academic trove. Not a critical study so much as a biography of Auden’s poetry itself that is comprehensive in situating the work in the life.

Pub Date: April 1, 1999

ISBN: 0-374-18408-9

Page Count: 496

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1999

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CONTAGIOUS SUCCESS

SPREADING HIGH PERFORMANCE THROUGHOUT YOUR ORGANIZATION

An adequate guide for running high-performance workgroups within a corporate setting, but far from a guaranteed formula for...

A satisfactory business study confirming the old business saw that 10% of the people do 90% of the work.

According to Annunzio's analysis, only 10% of elite information workers work in high performance-workgroups. The remaining 90%? Apparently they labor away as modern-day Bob Cratchits, in environments that neither demand nor deliver optimal performance. Ebullient accounts of the ideal workplace are nothing new in business nonfiction, nor are the lugubrious tales of moribund organizations. The author rarely notes here, though, anything we haven't heard a million times before from Tom Peters, Steven Covey, or even Donald Trump. Her maxims are boilerplate business clichés: value people; optimize critical thinking; seize opportunities. But basing a formula for business success on such bland principles is problematic, since they are so vague as to be meaningless. Do companies fail because they neglect to do such things? Most failures had nothing to do with workgroup functioning; instead, they stemmed from lack of foresight and, more commonly, simple bad luck. Nonetheless, Annunzio does proffer good advice for companies that wish to maximize the performance of their workgroups. First, identify those that are performing at a high level, those that can provide evidence of profit/revenue growth along with product, service, or process innovation. Second, work on bringing average groups up to maximum performance. More importantly, avoid destructive behaviors such as micromanagement, bureaucratic interference, resource and information hoarding, politics, and control. She also makes the astute—and cost-saving—observation that before hiring high-priced consultants to solve business problems, companies might consider consulting their own employees, who are more likely to know the answers.

An adequate guide for running high-performance workgroups within a corporate setting, but far from a guaranteed formula for business success.

Pub Date: Nov. 4, 2004

ISBN: 0-59184-060-0

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2010

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STICKS

A STORY OF TRIUMPH OVER DISABILITY

A real-life Frank Capra tale, just as corny, sentimental and inspiring as It's a Wonderful Life.

Hokey but charming memoir, reminiscent of an afternoon spent flipping through the pages of an antique photo album.

Although an autobiography, Coleman chronicles his life in the third person with a dispassion and modesty remarkable for a novice writer. It is perhaps the era that speaks through his prose—not a child of the "Me Decade," Coleman reminds us that the past was, indeed, more difficult than the present. And people certainly tended to whine a good deal less back then. The account begins chronologically, with his birth in 1902 to pioneer parents, their eighth child. By the time he was nine, the family had moved to their own homestead in Myrtle Creek, Ore. That summer he contracted polio and lost the use of his legs. Overcoming his crippled condition occupied a good portion of his youth, admirably marked by self-reliance and invention. He whittled his own crutches, made violins and, at 19, attempting to find a trade that would accommodate his physical condition, paid a jeweler $25 per month in order to serve as an apprentice to the watchmaker. As a young man in the '20s, he married and became a father, then established himself as sole proprietor of a jewelry store. The narrative is interspersed with photographs, newspaper clippings, Coleman's poems (an unfortunate weakness), musical scores (also not very solid), jewelry designs and the Coleman family tree. At a glance, Coleman’s history, aside from his disability, is not unusual. He becomes one of the leading merchants of a small town, state archery champion, and president of the Lion's Club. His would seem to be the unremarkable chronicle of a small-town success of interest to no one outside his family. Even so, it's his banality that is oddly compelling. Following the ups and downs of the Coleman jewelry store through the Depression, World War II, and the post-war era up until Coleman's death in 1972, is an enjoyable journey through the low-key strength and integrity that sustains middle-American lives. Coleman's son, John Coleman, today runs Coleman's Jewelers, the jewelry store founded by the author, in Corvallis, Ore. (Proceeds from the sale of this book, which has an endorsement from former senator Bob Dole, will go to Rotary International's "effort to eradicate polio" and to the Austin Family Business Program at Oregon State University.)

A real-life Frank Capra tale, just as corny, sentimental and inspiring as It's a Wonderful Life.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: 0-9754140-0-3

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: April 17, 2011

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