The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You


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Sale price$57.99


By Frank Stanford, Edited by James McWilliams, A. P. Walton
Imprint: THE UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 191 mm
Weight:
450 g
Pages:
452

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Description

“As John Lee Hooker would put it, Born in Mississippi, Raised up in Tennessee—I would add, Come Into My Own in Arkansas.” Thus did Frank Stanford (1948–78) describe his life less than two years before he died. Largely unrecognized by the poetic establishment, Stanford was a prolific poet with admirers ranging from Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti to Alan Dugan and Eileen Myles. Although disciplined about his writing, he lived hard and fast, balancing marriages, affairs, alcohol, financial struggles, and mental health issues until he no longer could.



James McWilliams is the author of The Life and Poetry of Frank Stanford. His writing has appeared in Oxford AmericanVirginia Quarterly ReviewHarper’s Magazine, and The Paris Review. A winner of the Hiett Prize in the Humanities, he is professor of history at Texas State University.



A. P. Walton, a poet, studied literature at Lund University, where he authored a seminal thesis on Frank Stanford. He is the editor of Letters of a Poet Dying (2026), the first-ever edition of Stanford’s selected letters.


“Stanford understood that in the South—and in life itself—humor keeps company with with the deepest mysteries. The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You brings this truth to life more powerfully and convincingly than any other American poem. Above all, it is a jubilee of language. As a child of the land that Stanford writes about, I guarantee you: this here is the real gab of the Delta. And thanks to the extraordinary work of James McWilliams and A. P. Walton, we have at last an authoritative, scholarly edition. McWilliams and Walton are rare scholars—as at home in Stanford’s levee camps as in the archives. For the stellar work they have done, this book’s growing readership will be forever grateful.”

—Greg Brownderville, creator of Fire Bones and author of A Horse with Holes in It


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