Title: Summer Doorways: A Memoir
Publisher: Shoemaker Hoard (now part of Counterpoint Press)
Date: 2005
Pages: 216
ISBN13: 9781593761189
Readership level: General
Genre: Nonfiction
Worldcat: Worldcat Persistent link
America today is a mobile society. Many of us travel abroad, and few of us live in the towns or cities where we were born. It wasn’t always so. “Travel from America to Europe became a commonplace, an ordinary commodity, some time ago, but when I first went such departure was still surrounded with an atmosphere of adventure and improvisation, and my youth and inexperience and my all but complete lack of money heightened that vertiginous sensation,” writes W. S. Merwin. Twenty-one, married and graduated from Princeton, the poet embarked on his first visit to Europe in 1948 when life and traditions on the continent were still adjusting to the postwar landscape. Summer Doorways captures Merwin at a similarly pivotal time before he won the Yale Younger Poets Award in 1952 for his first book, A Mask for Janus–the moment was, as the author writes, “an entire age just before it was gone, like a summer.” --publishers site, now part of Counterpoint Press, see this link