Wikipedia tells us that Robert Polito is a poet, biographer, essayist, critic, educator, curator, and arts administrator. Polito received the National Book Critics Circle Award in biography in 1995 for Savage Art: A Biography of Jim Thompson. Polito was the founding director of the New School Graduate Writing Program in New York City, and was the President of the Poetry Foundation from 2013 to 2015.
Polito is also the author of a recent book, pictured above, which the publisher's book jacket calls "an abecedarian of chapters surveying [Dylan's] albums, performances, films, and books since 1991." In fact, the word "abecedarian" is actually an adjective, not a noun, at least according to Merriam-Webster, and with respect to Polito's book on Dylan, calling it "abecedarian" means that his chapters are not numbered, but are alphabetized, instead - A, B, C, D, etc., from A to Z - with the first word in each chapter begining with the letter that heads up that chapter. What this adds to the content of the book remains unclear, at least to me, but I did enjoy the book, nonetheless, and despite this distraction.
If you are interested in Dylan, there is lots of information in Polito's book, which "arcs from [Dylan's] Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award on February 20, 1991 ... through his 2021-2024 Rough and Rowdy Ways tour." The main thesis of the book is that Dylan's second thirty years should be considered as something quite different from the early years - years that almost everyone knows something about - and that Dylan's place in history goes far beyond what he contributed then. In fact, says Polito, "those second thirty-odd years alone would surpass the lifetime achievements of approximately anyone else I could summon for resonant parallels, whether musicians, composers, poets, novelists, philosophers, or painters."
I, personally, was quite moved by Polito's description of Hibbing High School, which Dylan attended. I had the very same reaction when I visited it, back in 2023. My visit, then, was one of the "High Points" in my year.
In sum, Polito's book is aimed at those who already have a high regard for Bob Dylan (in any of the categories listed by Polito in the third paragraph in this blog posting). I think I'd add on "spiritual and religious thinker," too.
Since I am, indeed, a person with such a high regard for Dylan, here is my comprehensive summary and review of After The Flood: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
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