Westport Poems
By (Author) Jonathan Towers
Afterword by Neil Baldwin
1
North Atlantic Books,U.S.
North Atlantic Books,U.S.
15th July 2011
United States
Paperback
432
Width 129mm, Height 202mm, Spine 31mm
458g
A beloved, familiar figure known as "Jon the Walker" for his daily appearances traversing the marshes and waterways of various Connecticut towns, Jonathan Towers composed brief, emotionally evocative poems until his suicide in 2005 after years of struggle with mental illness. His work was fuelled by reading and a rich inner life exploring the tarot, medieval history, courtly love and relationships and the pre-Socratic philosophers. These poems beautifully evoke a sense of place, while also powerfully critiquing the forces of modern life that threaten it.
"Towers does what they taught us to doSnyder, Corman, Rexroth, Whitman, Lanier, the great ones, all the way back to Wang Wei, Tu Fu, the beginnings: look around you and remember. Towers seems to have spent his years on earth looking, looking, and writing his slim, haunting poems down the margins of his life. To tell us. What he had seen. So in that sense a witness. Not of some historical turn, catastrophe, but of the incessant eventfulness around us, the things we see that are almost enough to go on living for. He reminds me sometimes of an Olson unencumbered by history, or a Celan unwilling to go too deeply into what he sayslest it cost him the shimmer and shiver of what he merely sees."
Robert Kelly, author of The Loom, Red Actions, and Threads
"Towers poems reveal a man who loves nature but who was deeply suspicious of human beings because of their inability to communicate. With his powerful, two-stressed lines, he reminds one of John Skelton (14601529), the English Renaissance poet; with his vivid images of his life as a vagabond, he is like Francois Villon (14311463), the French Medieval poet; but, with his lyrics flowing over rhythmic cadences, he is akin, also, to Biggie Smalls, the hip-hop artist. Like Skelton, like Villon, like Biggie, Towers wrote passionately about his successes and failures, and like his kinsmen, he wrote in blood."
Cecil Brown, author of The Life and Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger and I, Stagolee
Jonathan Towers was known for his interest in history, baseball, medieval alchemy and the geography and history of Westport, Connecticut, and the region surrounding it.