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A book of art and writing by the American poet, Jack Micheline.
One Of A Kind combines unpublished work selected from the
poet's archives with rare writings from all points in his
career. It is the first large selction of Micheline's work
to appear since 1999.
Jack Micheline was born in the East Bronx,
New York on November 6, 1929, as Harold Martin Silver. Because
he was so small after
birth, his name was changed to Harvey (to fool the angel of death).
Harvey Martin Silver was of Russian-Romanian ancestry. After
quarreling with his father, he changed his first name to "Jack" in
honor of the socialist writer Jack London, and created "Micheline" by
exptrapolating from the maiden name of his mother, Helen Mitchell
(a.k.a. Yetta Klang). Informally educated, he identified closely
with the traditions of American vagabond poets like Vachel Lindsay
and Maxwell Bodenheim, and he moved to Greenwich Village in the
1950s to find an outlet for his poetry. In 1957, Troubadour
Press, which published a jazz and poetry magazine called Climax,
agreed to bring out a book if Micheline would stagger the lines
of each poem to make his verse look more unconventional, and
if he would get a "famous person" to write the introduction.
Jack Kerouac was sharing an apartment in the building where Micheline
was living. Kerouac liked Micheline's work and did him the favor,
referring to him as the "Doctor Johnson Zen Master Magee
of Innisfree," punning on the title of Yeats' famous poem
and "in us free," meaning that Micheline was free
inside himself. The book, River of Red Wine, was reviewed
by Dorothy
Parker in Esquire magazine (September, 1958, p. 12).
Proclaiming himself unaffiliated with any group, including the
Beats—whom
he characterized as a product of the media's hustle —Micheline
appeared frequently with Beat writers at poetry readings. His
work is meant to be read aloud, in the tradition of Beat poetry.
Micheline began painting in earnest, working primarily with gouache
in a self-taught, primitive style, during a trip to Mexico City
financed by Franz Kline in 1960. Micheline's most recent publication
was Sixty-seven Poems for Downtrodden Saints, published
by Matt Gonzalez in 1997 (FMSBW Press), and republished as a
second edition
in 1999 with many additional poems, photos and images that did
not appear in the first edition. Micheline was married twice.
His brother, Ed Silver (Puerto Rico), son, Vince Silvaer, daughter-in-law,
Sheri (Lauver) Silvaer, granddaughter, Nicole Solai Silvaer,
and grandson, Dustin Andrew Silvaer (Tucson, AZ), survive him.
[Bio taken from www.jack-micheline.com].
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