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"Ogden Nash studied popular culture with a penetrating eye and wrote about America, its icons, habits, and affections with humor and levity. He struggled with comparisons to "serious" poets, those heroes of the canon who abandoned the rhyme and meter that Nash found crucial to his style of writing. His vignettes captured those moments in life that defy heavy-handed treatment.".
"Nash did not live out the stereotype of the aloof poet-recluse. In addition to his writing, Nash pursued publishing, screenwriting, and a rigorous lecture circuit. This self-styled poet of wide appeal appeared in newspapers and magazines found in homes across the country, accessible publications such as Life, New Yorker, Cosmopolitan, Sports Illustrated, Reader's Digest, and McCall's.
At a time when children's literature meant Winnie-the-Pooh, Nash produced verses for and about young people that amused, educated, and, more importantly, didn't pander or lecture. These poems and collections, including Custard the Dragon, The New Nutcracker Suite and Other Innocent Verses, A Boy Is a Boy, and Girls Are Silly, were classics of the genre."--BOOK JACKET.
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The life and rhymes of Ogden Nash
2000, Madison Books, Distributed by National Book Network
in English
0812840151 9780812840155
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-199) and index.
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