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Meaning a Life (an Autobiography)

List Price: $18.95
SKU:
9780811229470
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  • Product Details

    Author:
    Mary Oppen, Jeffrey Yang
    Format:
    Paperback
    Pages:
    304
    Publisher:
    New Directions (April 28, 2020)
    Language:
    English
    Audience:
    General/trade
    ISBN-13:
    9780811229470
    ISBN-10:
    0811229475
    Dimensions:
    5.6" x 8.5" x 0.8"
    Case Pack:
    36
    File:
    -NortonNorton_060626-20260607-a.xml
    List Price:
    $18.95
    As low as:
    $14.59
    Publisher Identifier:
    P-WWN
    Discount Code:
    B
    Weight:
    11.68oz
    Pub Discount:
    65
    Imprint:
    New Directions
  • Overview

    First published in 1978, Mary Oppen’s seminal Meaning a Life has been largely unavailable for decades. Written in her sixties, her first and only prose book recounts, with honesty, depth, and conviction, her fiercely independent life—“a twentieth-century American romance,” as Yang describes it in the new introduction, “of consciousness on the open road; a book of travel where the autobiographer is not the usual singular self at the center of the story but the union of two individuals.”          Oppen tells the story of growing up with three brothers in the frontier towns of Kalispell, Montana, and Grants Pass, Oregon, determined to escape the trap of “a meaningless life with birth and death in a biological repetition.” That escape happens in the fall of 1926, when she meets another student in her college poetry class, George Oppen. She is expelled for breaking curfew, and from then on the two face the world intertwined: living a life of conversation, hitchhiking across the US, sailing from the Great Lakes to New York City, meeting fellow poets and artists, starting a small press with Zukofsky and Pound, traveling by horse and cart through France, and fighting fascism through the Great Depression. Mary Oppen writes movingly of both her inner life and external events, of the inconsolable pain of suffering multiple stillbirths, of her husband fighting on the front lines during WWII while she struggled to care for their baby daughter, of fleeing to Mexico to avoid persecution for their political activities. This expanded edition includes a new section of prose and poetry that deepens Oppen’s radiantly incisive memoir with further memories, travels, and reflections.