About the Author
About the Author
James McWilliams is a writer and historian who teaches at Texas State University. His work has appeared in Oxford American, Virginia Quarterly Review, The New York Times Book Review, The American Scholar, and Mississippi Review.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"Texas State University historian McWilliams has written an impeccably researched, capacious, and probing biography of the enigmatic, neglected Southern poet... McWilliams closes with a devastating portrait of the brilliant, promiscuous, financially burdened 29-year-old spiraling out of control and, despite a film and his own small press that he ran with poet/lover C.D. Wright, he ended it all in 1978 with three shots to his chest. The full-throated biography fans have been yearning for."
--Kirkus Starred Review, April 2025 "This is a tour de force biography that toggles between moments in Stanford's life in this world and moments in our time today, revealing why both Stanford's work and spirit are still vital. Stanford's relationship with Blacks during his time in levee camps is one of the most compelling and surprising sections of this book, but on every page of this picaresque biography there are so many moments like it that you will learn as much about the ills of this country as you will about the complexity of Stanford."
--A. Van Jordan, author of When I Waked, I Cried to Dream Again "James McWilliams treats the lightning-flash, tempestuous life of Frank Stanford with verve, unremitting probity, and compassion. This astute, much-needed biography of a genuine American literary prodigy--a rambunctious southern visionary and iconoclast too often relegated to the back of the canon--is never anything less than essential and riveting."
--Cyrus Cassells, 2021 Texas poet laureate and author of Everything in Life Is Resurrection: Selected Poems "At the time of Frank Stanford's untimely death in 1978, he seemed to be on the cusp of canonical status. Yet, almost fifty years later, except to a modest circle of devoted readers, his unique voice has remained relatively unknown. James McWilliams's meticulously researched, candid biography, The Life and Poetry of Frank Stanford, should go a long way towards remedying that. McWilliams's close tracking of Stanford's personal evolution alongside the evolution of his poetic vision charts the making of a radical southern poetic voice. Born at the dawn of the civil rights movement, Stanford gradually sheds, like an unwanted skin, the assumptions of his white privilege. Unfettered, in his magnus opus, The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You, written over a period of more than two decades, Stanford is able to hear multiple languages of the South--The stories they tell and the truths they reveal."
--Mary Schmidt Campbell, author of An American Odyssey: The Life and Work of Romare Bearden
--Kirkus Starred Review, April 2025 "This is a tour de force biography that toggles between moments in Stanford's life in this world and moments in our time today, revealing why both Stanford's work and spirit are still vital. Stanford's relationship with Blacks during his time in levee camps is one of the most compelling and surprising sections of this book, but on every page of this picaresque biography there are so many moments like it that you will learn as much about the ills of this country as you will about the complexity of Stanford."
--A. Van Jordan, author of When I Waked, I Cried to Dream Again "James McWilliams treats the lightning-flash, tempestuous life of Frank Stanford with verve, unremitting probity, and compassion. This astute, much-needed biography of a genuine American literary prodigy--a rambunctious southern visionary and iconoclast too often relegated to the back of the canon--is never anything less than essential and riveting."
--Cyrus Cassells, 2021 Texas poet laureate and author of Everything in Life Is Resurrection: Selected Poems "At the time of Frank Stanford's untimely death in 1978, he seemed to be on the cusp of canonical status. Yet, almost fifty years later, except to a modest circle of devoted readers, his unique voice has remained relatively unknown. James McWilliams's meticulously researched, candid biography, The Life and Poetry of Frank Stanford, should go a long way towards remedying that. McWilliams's close tracking of Stanford's personal evolution alongside the evolution of his poetic vision charts the making of a radical southern poetic voice. Born at the dawn of the civil rights movement, Stanford gradually sheds, like an unwanted skin, the assumptions of his white privilege. Unfettered, in his magnus opus, The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You, written over a period of more than two decades, Stanford is able to hear multiple languages of the South--The stories they tell and the truths they reveal."
--Mary Schmidt Campbell, author of An American Odyssey: The Life and Work of Romare Bearden
Publishing Information
Publishing Information
Publisher:
University of Arkansas Press
Pub date:
2025-07-01
Length:
686 pages


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