Name Lyman Andrews | Role Poet | |
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Born Lyman Henry AndrewsApril 2, 1938Denver, Colorado Education Brandeis University, graduate work at University of California Berkeley and King's College London Notable works "Ash Flowers" 1958 (Contemporary Poetry XVIII)Fugitive visions, White Rabbit, 1962Lyman Andrews, F.W. Willetts, Christine Bowler, Red Dust 1 new writing, Red Dust (January 1970)Kaleidoscope Calder and Boyars, 1973 Notable awards Fulbright FellowshipJames Phelan FellowshipWoodrow Wilson Fellowship Died February 13, 2009, Nottingham, United Kingdom Books Red Dust 1: New Writing, Kaleidoscope, New Writers 4 |
Lyman Henry Andrews (April 2, 1938 - February 13, 2009) was an American poet, and close friend of Allen Ginsberg and Robert Lowell amongst other writers with whom he maintained a lifelong contact. He also knew William S. Burroughs, in Tangiers and London. Lyman Andrews died Friday 13 February 2009 at his apartment in Nottingham.
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Life
He was born on April 2, 1938 in Denver, did his undergraduate studies at Brandeis University, where he studied with Philip Rahv, Claude Vigée and Pierre Emmanuel. He did graduate study at the University of California Berkeley and King's College London. He had four volumes of poetry published, beginning with Ash Flowers while an undergraduate, including The Death Of Mayakovsky and Kaleidoscope. He settled in the UK, and became poetry critic for the Sunday Times, and Lecturer in American Studies at University of Leicester, from 1965 to 1988 (during which time he led a "colourful" life).
He was also a defence witness for John Calder and Marion Boyars (his publishers) during the trial in 1967 bought against them by the Crown for the publication of Last Exit to Brooklyn, by Hubert Selby. It was at the celebratory party afterwards when he first met Burroughs - at first mistaking him for a butler being dressed in dark suit and tie.
His manuscript of Kaleidoscope is at Indiana University. He lived his final years as a recluse in Nottingham. Lyman left a major work Hometown (The Denver Poem), 57 pages long, which has not been published. He worked on this for the last twenty years of his life.