Larkin at Sixty

Larkin at Sixty (1982) is a collection of original essays and poems published to celebrate the sixtieth birthday of the English poet Philip Larkin. It was edited and introduced by Anthony Thwaite and published by Larkin's publishers, Faber and Faber.[1] A poetic dramatisation of the launch of the book was written by Russell Davies.[2]

Contents

Thwaite's introduction[3] reveals that there were originally to be twenty-three contributors, but four ("An American, a Russian, a Pakistani and a woman") dropped out for various reasons. As well as the introduction, the book contains the following:

References

  1. Thwaite, Anthony (1982). Larkin at Sixty. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-11878-X.
  2. "Interested Party" republished in the TLS, 19 Feb 2013
  3. p.12
gollark: That sort of labelling is too pro-nature for me.
gollark: I don't want to support things which are called "organic".
gollark: If you claim to care about something, but then mostly just ignore it, that's not exactly very meaningfully "caring".
gollark: I mean, yes, people care abstractly. If you ask them "hey, are you unhappy about some poverty-stricken countries being poverty-stricken" they'll say yes. But people do not actually practically care enough to do anything.
gollark: You STILL haven't demonstrated anything being basic.
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