A lover of Beat Generation poetry, since the film Kill Your Darlings, I've held a love for Allen Ginsberg for quite a while now. This is a book I got a while ago, from Puffin Modern Classics, and is merely just a collection of what is considered some of his best works.
Allen Ginsberg is one of my all time favourite poets, ever since I saw Kill Your Darlings, ever since I read his poetry when I was much younger, ever since I read “Howl” for the first time that I could actually remember it. So, when I saw Howl, Kaddish ad Other Poems on my boyfriend’s book shelf, I wasted no time whatsoever in asking if I could borrow it.
I started reading it when I wasn’t really in the mood to read, and ended up chucking it down on my table with a snort of disgust and leaving it for a while, angry I couldn’t get into it. All it took was for me to settle down, a cup of hot chocolate, and read “Howl” again, the first poem in this small collection. I was hooked immediately, and, before I knew it, I had finished the book.
People say a lot about Ginsberg. That his poems are mismatched and make no sense, there’s no discernible meaning behind them. Others, that his poems are works of pure genius and more should write like him but none could ever. I fit into the latter. I have always loved Ginsberg’s poetry and writings; I love all of the poets from the start of the Beat Generation; they started a literary revolution and it changed so much.
It’s poems such as “Howl” and “America” that make me realise what I fell in love with Ginsberg for. He seems to have no filter. He just writes and writes, his feelings flowing on the pages, not seeming to care what anyone says or thinks of his poems. He works and he writes, and he blossoms on the pages of the book you hold, no matter which book it may be. It’s not hard to see why he is considering one of the most famous poets of the Beat Generation.
My only qualm was with “Kaddish”. I was enjoying this. I started it off and it flowed really well and I stopped half way through reading it because I had to go about college things. When I came to this I was horrified to find that “Kaddish” was so hard to get through. It became mere ramblings that could not be followed easily and it left me totally dismayed. It took me so long to get through the second half of “Kaddish” and it truly upset me to find this. This is the first poem of Ginsberg’s I have not liked and it really put me off reading the rest of the book. However, I still love Ginsberg so I carried on.
This book was a good start, a really good start, that just got confusing and seemed to ramble as the poems went on. “Kaddish” was this poem for me, as mentioned in qualms, and yet, after “Kaddish” the poems got much better again, weren’t as muddled and I got sucked back in really quickly. It has a disappointing middle, but it goes back up to perfect after this. I’m really glad that I didn’t let myself get put off by “Kaddish” as I would have missed out on the rest of the perfect poems that Ginsberg has written.
After rereading this - all my original opinions still stand, and I'm still in love with this collection, and with Ginsberg as a poet. It's still one of the best poetry collections I've read in a long, long time.