Fantasy Press (poetry)

Summary

The Fantasy Press was an English publisher of poetry between 1951 and 1962, allied to the Oxford University Poetry Society and superintended by the painter and illustrator Oscar Mellor. As well as publishing a regular series of pamphlets by undergraduate and graduate poets between 1952 and 1957, it also brought out longer collections by some, as well as anthologies of university poetry containing their work.

A local stimulus edit

The firm was established by Oscar Mellor in Swinford, Oxfordshire, primarily to finance his work as an artist,[1] but gained a high-profile through publishing a series of poets who became major figures of The Movement and The Group - as well as others who went on to make their name in the US, such as Donald Hall, Adrienne Rich, Richard Selig and George Steiner.[2] English Poets who had early works published by the Fantasy Press included Elizabeth Jennings,[3] Thom Gunn,[4] Philip Larkin,[5] and Geoffrey Hill.[6]

As well as those who made a short first appearance in the Fantasy Poets series, some proceeded to publish more substantial collections from the press. These included Thom Gunn's original "Fighting Terms" (1954);[7] two by George MacBeth ("A Form of Words", 1954, and "Lecture to the Trainees", 1962);[8] Charles Tomlinson (the original "The Necklace", 1955);[9] Gordon Wharton, ("This and That", 1955);[10] Donald Davie ("The Brides of Reason", 1955);[11] Lucien Stryk, ("The Trespasser", 1956);[12] Kingsley Amis ("The Evans Country", 1962);[13] Peter Dale, ("A Walk from the House", 1962);[14] Michael Fried, ("Other Hands, 1962").[15]

Up until 1953, the Basil Blackwell imprint had been the chief recourse for university poets and had published annual Oxford Poetry anthologies until 1953, when Fantasy Press took the project over.[16] Work in the successive anthologies was the choice of students from the Oxford University Poetry Society, who were also made aware at this time of the poetry being written by their Cambridge contemporaries.[17] Another Fantasy Press venture of this period, for example, Poetry from Cambridge 1952-4, contained early work by Ted Hughes and by Gunn.[18]

Fantasy Poets series edit

This was a numbered series of 35 booklets published by the press between 1952 and 1957. Each was in octavo format, card-wrapped and centre-stapled, containing a small eight-page selection of poems by an individual poet. Some 300 copies of each were printed.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ You Muddy Fools Letter by Trevor Denning to the London Review of Books, 7 February 2002
  2. ^ James Keery, "Menacing Works in my Isolation" in The Thing About Roy Fisher, Liverpool University, 2000, p.53
  3. ^ Obituary: Elizabeth Jennings Grevel Lindop, The Guardian, Wednesday October 31, 2001
  4. ^ Thom Gunn (1929 - 2004), The Poetry Foundation
  5. ^ Biography - Philip Larkin (1922-85) Archived 2010-02-09 at the Wayback Machine The Philip Larkin Society
  6. ^ "Fantasy Press", Peter Harrington
  7. ^ Biblio
  8. ^ "George MacBeth 1932-92", Old Edwardians
  9. ^ Biblio
  10. ^ Richard Warren, "Back from oblivion: tracking the poetry of Gordon Wharton"
  11. ^ Biblio
  12. ^ Abe Books
  13. ^ Clearwater Books
  14. ^ Poetry Archive
  15. ^ World Cat
  16. ^ Valentine Cunningham, "Literary Culture", in The History of the University of Oxford, OUP 1994, vol. VIII (The Twentieth Century), p.424
  17. ^ William Wootten, The Alvarez Generation, Liverpool University Press, 2015, p.3ff
  18. ^ Abe Books
  19. ^ John Cotton, The Fantasy Press (Dodman Press, 1977) Google Books
  20. ^ A. T. Tolley, "Lotte Zurndorfer: A Forgotten Poet", PN Review 213 (2013)
  21. ^ Oliver Tearle, "The Forgotten Movement Poet: The Poetry of Jonathan Price" (1931-85), Interesting Literature
  22. ^ Selig, Richard, 1929-1957, snac
  23. ^ "HOLLOWAY, Mark 1917-2004, Encyclopedia.com
  24. ^ "Aldridge, Richard (1930 - 1994)", Maine State Library
  25. ^ "KEENE, Dennis 1934–", Encyclopedia.com