Member Reviews
This is a fantastic resource for anyone studying Whitman or even just researching the creative process. You can see some traces of his more famous works, as well as other exercises in writing that didn't quite make the cut. Really interesting, even for a casual fan of Walt.
Thanks to the publishers and NetGalley for a digital ARC for the purpose of an unbiased review.
I do love reading other people’s notebooks and diaries - only when invited, of course. Writer’s notebooks are particularly interesting if they give little glimpses into the creative mind and how snippets become poems or stories. This book is a true insight into the mind of Walt Whitman. But because it is elucidated by Whitman scholars, it is also accessible and easy to follow.
There are snatches of poetry and writings on people he has met - usually men - and descriptions of places and things that he wants to capture for future work. There are sentences, paragraphs and occasional pages and all of it allows us to see the workings of a great mind. It reads like you're looking over the shoulder of the great man as he scribbles down something that has just occurred to him in the middle of lunch. I found it fascinating. Any Whitman scholar must own it but even a casual reader of his poetry will get something extra from it.
I was given a copy of this book by Netgalley in return for an honest review.
Every Hour, Every Atom: A Collection of Walt Whitman's Early Notebooks and Fragments
by Walt Whitman and edited Matt Miller and Zachary Turpin. Miller is an Associate Professor of English at Yeshiva University's Stern College. He holds a Ph.D. in English literature from the University of Iowa and an M.F.A. in creative writing from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Miller is a founding member of the Walt Whitman Initiative, an international collective bringing together all people interested in the life and work of Whitman, and currently serves on the board of directors. Turpin researches nineteenth-century periodical culture, digital humanities, textual recovery, and the history of epistemology and the sciences. His interests are in American poetry, particularly Walt Whitman. He has earned a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Houston.
The work presented is a collection of poetry and notes of Whitman's early writing. Turpin's expertise in document recovery is particularly useful, as many of the pages have not aged well. Even so, there are portions that are unreadable in the original. The work is recreated in standard printed text with more modern editorial markings. There is a legend for the editing markings. Miller was one of the few responsible for digitally recording the original documents at the Library of Congress. He and his group were among the last to touch the frail notebooks.
This collection presents what has been previously only seen by a few and presented in a very readable format. Every Hour, Every Atom is a book for fans and scholars of Whitman's work. These early works show the development of his poetry and his thinking. As with many notes and drafts, a great deal has been crossed out (but still readable) and abandon in final drafts. An excellent collection with introductions by both editors. Although available both in paperback and ebook format, the paperback will allow for notes in the margins and a cleared look at the prints of the original text. Extremely well done.
Turpin and Miller's transcription of Whitman's early notebooks provides the public with insight into the writing method and inner workings of Whitman as he added to and formulated his style and person. It is interesting to see the beginnings of works that sometimes appeared in published works but later disappeared, as well as getting to read bits that have never been fully published before. I do take what Whitman wrote with a grain of salt since it has been speculated that in later notebooks he edited his words later because he knew the books would be read, but never the less, this is worth the read (though maybe not in ebook format). I would recommend this to anyone with an interest or enjoyment of Whitman's works. I think this would also make a great companion book for any class teaching the works of Whitman.
Thank you to NetGalley and the University of Iowa Press for the DARC of this work in exchange for my honest review.