The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You

The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You
Author Frank Stanford
Language English
Genre Epic poetry, southern gothic
Publisher Mill Mountain Press & Lost Roads
Publication date
1977
Pages 542 pp (1st), 383 pp (2nd)
ISBN 0-918786-13-4
OCLC 3121031
811/.5/4
LC Class PS3569.T3316 B3
Preceded by Constant Stranger (1976)
Followed by Crib Death (1978)

The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You is a 15,283-line epic poem by the poet Frank Stanford. First published in 1977 as a 542-page book,[1] the poem is visually characterized by its absence of stanzas (or any skipped horizontal spaces) and punctuation.

Stanford worked on the manuscript for many years (beginning as a teenager in the 1960s[2] [or possibly even before his teenage years])[3] prior to its publication — a joint-publication by Mill Mountain Press (Stanford's publisher throughout the early and mid-1970s) and Lost Roads (Stanford's own press) — in 1977.[1] After being out of print for several years,[4] the book was republished by Lost Roads (under succeeding editorship of C.D. Wright and Forrest Gander) in 2000; this second, corrected edition — 383 pages, equipped with line numbers — is in print, having been reprinted by the press in 2008. A common misconception is that the 15,283-line poem (as evident in the 2000 edition) was actually over 21,000 lines in the first edition (which suggests that the two texts are actually different), but the seemingly longer line count in the 1977 edition is merely resultant of the paper's octavo size, effecting many lengthy lines to be necessarily broken with indents employed.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Stanford, Frank. The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You. Fayetteville, AR: Mill Mountain/Lost Roads nos. 7-12, 1977. ISBN 0-918786-13-4.
  2. Ehrenreich, Ben. "The Long Goodbye", The Poetry Foundation, 2008.
  3. Stanford, Frank. "Letter to David Walker", February 12, 1974. The Alsop Review.
  4. Stanford, Frank. The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You, preface. No place given: Lost Roads no. 50, 2000. ISBN 978-0-918786-50-0.
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