"Douglas Crase's prose is rich with conviction and desire, inspiring as John Yau wrote, 'the kind of attention usually reserved for poetry.' His essays, written as rhythmically as poems, take a personal rather than abstract approach, offering committed and sometimes intimate portraits of John Ashbery, James Schuyler, Lorine Niedecker, and others. With generosity of spirit, Crase shares his devotion to poetry, democracy, and landscape in this ... volume that greatly enlarges the available body of his work and will be seen as the essential complement to his collected poems"--Provided by publisher.