Chicago Poems, Carl Sandburg
Chicago Poems, Carl Sandburg
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Chicago Poems
The Early Poetry of Carl Sandburg

Author: Carl Sandburg

Narrator: Robert Bethune

Unabridged: 2 hr 13 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/02/2011


Synopsis

This was Carl Sandburg's breakthrough book. It is easy to see how it draws directly on Sandburg's life in Chicago, as it speaks powerfully of the specific character of that city and begins with his famous poem that names Chicago as the "City of the Broad Shoulders". His poetry is deeply aware of the inner life of the city, from a homeless woman freezing in a doorway to the lifestyles of the rich and powerful. Sandburg, even in his poetry, is in many ways the quintessential newspaperman, constantly present, constantly observing, constantly taking a stand.So, what are we to make of the poems in this volume that don't fit that model? The poems that operate on a universal level, seemingly independent of location? As you listen to these poems, listen for Sandburg's involvement with the concept of the city as something itself universal, something that seeks the truth of the city as a human institution and human environment beyond the life of one city, Chicago. Sandburg here writes of urban humanity in its essence, not merely the urban life of one city on the shore of Lake Michigan. The city of Chicago, for Sandburg, is all cities; the lake, for him, is the sea, the universal sea.In these poems, Sandburg truly finds his voice, and brings us the universal city in all its ramifications. Enjoy!A note to the listener: This book was written in 1916 and uses the common language of that time. That includes a very few instances of words - referring to African-Americans and people of Central European ancestry - that today are unacceptable. We do well to listen to the way even our great poets once spoke, so that we do not forget that we once spoke that way.

About Carl Sandburg

Carl Sandburg was twice awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the first for History in 1940 for his six-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln, and the second for Poetry in 1951 for his Complete Poems. Born in Illinois of Swedish immigrant parents, Sandburg worked early in a wide variety of jobs, ranging from shoeshine-boy, milkman, fireman, and farmhand, to a soldier in the Spanish-American War. After college he went on to become a newspaperman, a political organizer, a collector of folk songs, author of children’s books, lecturer, poet and historian. The son of a man who could not write his own name, Carl Sandburg went on to write over thirty books and earned the title in America of “The Poet of the People.”


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jonfaith on January 08, 2020

Monday night just before bed I read a hundred pages of Dos Passos. It was only yesterday I elected to go this direction, the somewhat noted Chicago Poems. Whereas USA is a thousand pages of modernist poetic detail, the Chicago Poems are unfortunately poses, hokum, and “‘typifying' speeches"---which......more

Goodreads review by Xristina on February 13, 2024

A lovely and brief poetry collection, which helped establishing Sandburg as a major figure in contemporary literature and a remarkable attempt at American social realism. "I asked the professors who teach the meaning of life to tell me what is happiness".......more

Goodreads review by Peycho on June 02, 2011

Well, by far on of the greatest collections ever of one of the greatest American poets. I really love it, not only because I live in Chicago. And here is my little contribution to this great city: One Poet in Chicago This city is scary and supreme. Its shiny lakeshore with white yachts and seagulls and......more