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LAST CHRITMAS I was in the Coop, looking desperately for a present for an old friend, and I picked up Bill Knott's Naonti Poems. I don't know what I was looking for-I suppose I was expecting another dose of tense, burdened lyricism, or brief, staccato bits of free verse machinery-but what I found was the clearest, purest, most unpretentious voice I'd come upon among younger poets. Knott's images were whole and satisfying: for once words were the things they said they were. I bought the book and never gave it away...

Author: By Jonathan Galassi, | Title: Lyrics Bill Knott and James Tate | 10/16/1970 | See Source »

Then I read Bill Knott's Naomi Poems, the freshest lyrics, the most unabashedly real attempts at poems I'd come across in a long time. Some of them were bad, some were awkward, but the voice was true, untutored but true. This man has been going after poetry in his own fashion; he hadn't been following anyone's advice. As a result, his poems said what he meant, unconstrained by mentors and models and cliques...

Author: By Jonathan Galassi, | Title: Writing What to Do About Poetry | 4/17/1970 | See Source »

...Bill Knott, 28, who writes under the name Saint Geraud, makes his point even more apocalyptically in To American Poets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Freer Verse | 6/14/1968 | See Source »

...Hotel, car-rental and other service costs for foreign visitors are being lowered by a number of concerns. Seven hotel and motel chains-including Hilton, Knott and Hotel Corp. of America-have already introduced assorted room rate cuts of up to 40%. Also in effect are new 10% reductions in the rates of the three biggest auto rental companies, Hertz, Avis and National...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: Subsidy for Visitors | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

...days last week, Bobby and a caravan of 36 cars crammed with out-of-state reporters, committee staffers and electronic gear burned up the dirt-topped back roads of eastern Kentucky's poverty-blighted Wolfe, Breathitt, Knott, Harlan and Letcher counties, halting in hidden hollows at weather-bleached wood and tar-paper shanties sagging with neglect. And in spavined one-horse communities named Neon, Grassy Creek, Mousie, Fisty, Jackhorn and Cody, ragged, slack-eyed men and women and listless children with bellies taut from hunger spoke of their need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poverty: Misery at Vortex | 2/23/1968 | See Source »

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