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The first poet laureate of the Silicon Valley meditates on the meaning and mystery of memory, looking back on his childhood as the son of a chauffeur in New York and his college days in Eastern Kentucky. This is an insightful and often funny memoir from a member of the last generation to grow up without TV or coed dormitories. A sample from "A Hero's Life": "He was the worst teacher ever to be given a festschrift. He was so bad, he was a blessing, for the shyest, timidest, dullest, stupidest of us could feel superior, could know that when he said white, blue surely was in the running. His wife…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
The first poet laureate of the Silicon Valley meditates on the meaning and mystery of memory, looking back on his childhood as the son of a chauffeur in New York and his college days in Eastern Kentucky. This is an insightful and often funny memoir from a member of the last generation to grow up without TV or coed dormitories. A sample from "A Hero's Life": "He was the worst teacher ever to be given a festschrift. He was so bad, he was a blessing, for the shyest, timidest, dullest, stupidest of us could feel superior, could know that when he said white, blue surely was in the running. His wife Cora, however, was very sharp. She had a Ph.D., taught English at the girls' school across town, and looked like the heavy in Snow White and the Seven Dwarves in the middle of her big scene. She would come into his class, sit in the corner cackling and muttering under her breath, knitting like Madame DuFarge on some object that never got any bigger. When Lark would say something stupid, Cora would look up, snort, and say matter of factly, 'Freddy, you fool'"


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Autorenporträt
Nils Peterson is an emeritus faculty member of San Jose State University where he taught creative writing and Shakespeare among other things. He has published several collections, including the two mentioned below. In 2009, he was chosen as the first Poet Laureate of Santa Clara County (Silicon Valley).

Some of the pieces published here were originally in poetic form. Those pieces have been rewritten or reformatted. Versions of "My Lecture on Romanticism," "A Story," "A Latin Class" and "Homecoming" appeared in Comedy of Desire, Blue Sofa Press, Minneapolis, 1994, which was edited and introduced by Robert Bly.

Versions of "The Bus," "Christmas Mysteries," "Father Arrives in the Triumphal Car," "The Reading Room," "Sandlots," "A Thing of Beauty," "Learning From My Father," "Go Way From My Window," and "On the Nature of Exposition" appeared in A Walk to the Center of Things, Caesura Editions, San Jose, CA, 2011.

A version of "Letter to Paul Cantrell" appeared in San Jose Studies, and a version of "The Moon and the Bulldozer" appeared in Red Wheelbarrow. Versions of "Halloween," "Yankee Stadium Gone Impossible," and "Sandlots" originally appeared in The ERFA Newsletter [Emeritus and Retired Faculty Association].