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Gunslinger (poem)

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Originally published
  
1968

4.1/5
Goodreads

Author
  
Ed Dorn

Gunslinger (poem) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTKolxTp7yqQX7hX7

American poetry books
  
The Maximus poems, Way West, Abhorrences, The Cantos, The Collected Poems

Gunslinger is the title of a long poem in six parts by Ed Dorn.

Contents

History

Book I was first published in 1968, Book II in 1969, The Cycle ('Book 2 1/2') in 1971, The Winterbook (Book III) in 1972, Bean News (Gunslinger's 'secret book') in 1972, and 'Book IIII' as part of the complete Slinger (minus Bean News) in 1975. Gunslinger is Dorn's best-known work, and widely considered his most important.

Summary

The gunslinger is a long form political poem about a demigod cowboy, a saloon madam, and a talking horse named Claude Levi-Strauss, who travel the Southwest in search of Howard Hughes.

The conversation stream of the poem is constantly interrupted. Dorn mixes the jargon of drug addicts, Westerners, and others to reflect the jumble of American speech. He seems to intentionally frustrate the reader; syntax is ambiguous, punctuation is sparse, and puns, homonyms, and nonsense words become an integral part of conversation.

References

Gunslinger (poem) Wikipedia