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・ Louis Nippert
・ Louis Nirenberg
・ Louis Nix
・ Louis Nizer
・ Louis Niñé
・ Louis Noguères
・ Louis Maximilian II of Isenburg-Wächtersbach
・ Louis Maxson
・ Louis Mayer
・ Louis Mayer (painter)
・ Louis Mazetier
・ Louis Mbanefo
・ Louis McCoy Nulton
・ Louis McCullough
・ Louis McGuffie
Louis McKee
・ Louis McLane
・ Louis McLane House
・ Louis McManus
・ Louis Meeuwessen
・ Louis Meijer
・ Louis Meinertzhagen
・ Louis Meintjes
・ Louis Meldon
・ Louis Mellis
・ Louis Melsens
・ Louis Menand
・ Louis Menand House
・ Louis Mendes
・ Louis Menges


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Louis McKee : ウィキペディア英語版
Louis McKee
Louis McKee (born July 31, 1951, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, died November 21, 2011) was an American poet and a fixture of the Philadelphia poetry scene from the early 1970s. He was the author of ''Schuylkill County'' (Wampeter, 1982), ''The True Speed of Things'' (Slash and Burn, 1984), and fourteen other collections. More recently, he published ''River Architecture: Poems from Here & There 1973-1993'' (Cynic, 1999), ''Loose Change'' (Marsh River Editions, 2001), and a volume in the Pudding House ''Greatest Hits'' series. Gerald Stern called his work “heart-breaking” and “necessary,” while William Stafford has written, “Louis McKee makes me think of how much fun it was to put your hand out a car window and make the air carry you into quick adventures and curlicues. He is so adept at turning all kinds of sudden glimpses into good patterns.” Naomi Shihab Nye says, “Louis McKee is one of the truest hearts and voices in poetry we will ever be lucky to know.”
==2006==
''Near Occasions of Sin'', a collection issued in 2006 by Cynic Press, has been praised by Brendan Kennelly: “I really admire, and like, deeply, Louis McKee’s poems. They have two qualities I love — clarity and candour. And they often tell stories even as they evoke mysteries of being. And they engage a great deal with people. “The Soldier,” for example, is stunning for its pure drama. Then, he is a moving, complex love-poet, at once passionate and reserved. McKee’s poems are like flashes of spirit rooted in the body. He never hides behind, or in, obscurity. Near Occasions of Sin is utterly unpretentious because his genius (I think he has that) is so real; “I am content with this,” he says at the end of “Failed Haiku”, and this readiness to be himself, in all his complexity and simplicity, is, I think, the basis of the appeal of this most unusual and attractive book. Sometimes, McKee talks to his reader and it is like talking to a next-door neighbor (that’s what I mean by candour in these poems). Also, they sound like songs at times—winged, humane, vulnerable.”
Philip Dacey, writing about McKee’s poetry in ''Schuylkill Valley Journal'' (#24, spring, 2007) says, “It is the essence of McKee’s work to be rich in artifice and craftsmanship and informed poetic strategies while at the same time consistently brave in its presentation of two confrontations: a person’s with himself and that person’s with the world outside himself. To read McKee is to witness drama and struggle; if the art is hard-won, the human victories are, too.”

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