Savage Coast
Savage Coast
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Author(s): Rukeyser, Muriel
ISBN No.: 9781558618206
Pages: 352
Year: 201410
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.72
Status: Out Of Print

"What a treasure! Muriel Rukeyser takes us back to those crucial days when Spain became the first international battleground against fascism and hope for democracy, to tell a powerful story of personal, sexual, and political awakening. Savage Coast is bound to be an instant classic."--Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original "Muriel Rukeyser's stature as a major poet was recognized in the 1980s largely through the work of feminist writers and critics. Now, the research of a younger critic Rowena Kennedy-Epstein brings us Rukeyser's modernist novel of the Spanish Civil War's beginning. Rooted in a germinal moment of the poet''s life, its acute social and political observations weave the bildungsroman of a young American woman in Europe at a vital historical moment."--Marilyn Hacker "Savage Coast is an astonishing book, too long lost, now a treasure for historians of the Spanish Civil War, equally a pouch of rubies for poets.


Rukeyser captures the intensity of the moment--personal, political, and still contemporary."--Peter N. Carroll, author of The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade "Muriel Rukeyser spoke of Spain as the place where she began to say what she believed. At the time, Hemingway's and Orwell's male-centered blood and guts novels were greedily devoured, while a woman writing a sexually explicit, gender truthful and politically radical narrative against a background of war was inevitably ignored. Spain changed Rukeyser and her protagonist, Helen. This novel will change the reader. An extraordinary gift!"--Margaret Randall, author of To Change the World: My Years in Cuba "Savage Coast now joins the lost brother and sisterhood of Spanish Civil War classics, from Arthur Koestler''s Dialogue with Death , the desolate modernist novels of the Catalan writer Merce Rodereda, Andre Malraux''s Man''s Hope , Josephine Herbst''s The Starched Blue Sky of Spain , and the reportage of Martha Gellhorn. Rowena Kennedy-Epstein has rescued and edited a great story.


Helen and Otto are not Emma and Sasha, nor are they Karl and Rosa, but the American radical poet who tells her story speaks to all of us."--Jane Marcus, Distinguished Professor of English and Women''s Studies, CUNY Graduate Center and the City College of New York "Rejected by her publisher in 1937, poet Rukeyser's newly discovered autobiographical novel is both an absorbing read and an important contribution to 20th-century history. Rukeyser had already won the coveted Yale Younger Poets award when she traveled to Spain in 1936 as a journalist, to cover the ill-fated People's Olympiad, a protest against the Olympics in Nazi-era Berlin. Her firsthand observations of the cataclysmic start of Spain's Civil War, as seen through the eyes of her protagonist, a journalist named Helen, reflect the chaos, privation, and horror of the conflict's early days with authentic detail. Helen is on a train that is forced to stop at the small Spanish town of Moncada, where soldiers come aboard. She becomes acquainted with most of the other passengers, a polyglot group of differing political sympathies. Her aroused political consciousness is augmented by a brief love affair with an antifascist German athlete, and they have a few days together once the group arrives in Barcelona. Throughout the narrative Helen reflects Rukeyser's attempts to surmount her own emotional crises, articulating her need for a life of political action and expression.


Ironically, the factors that led to the novel's rejection--Rukeyser's avant-garde impressionistic prose style, alternating with realistic scenes of brutal death and a few descriptions of sexual congress--are what make the book appealing today. While initially suspenseful, some longueurs intrude when Rukeyser attempts to cover nearly every hour of Helen's five-day ordeal. Since the novel was left unfinished, albeit with Rukeyser's notes regarding the chapters she intended to expand and edit, readers are not likely to cavil over its shortcomings, applauding instead her documentation of a crucial moment in history."-- Publisher''s Weekly.


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