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UID:Indybay-18434259
SEQUENCE:18506188
CREATED:20070709T210800Z
DESCRIPTION:CONTACTS:\nJerry Cimino (415) 399-9626\nTate Swindell\n\nPoet Harold 
 Norse's to read in celebration of 91st Birthday\nHistoric artwork and 
 photographs of Beat Generation writers exhibited at Beat Museum\n\nSAN 
 FRANICSCO – Legendary Beat Poet Harold Norse will be reading from his 
 collected works this North Beach at The Beat Museum. The acclaimed author 
 will be reading from over seventy years of published poetry in honor of his 
 recent 91st Birthday. The event is free and open to the public. The Beat 
 Museum is currently exhibiting exclusive photos of Norse with his close 
 friends William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg. Also on display are several 
 of his Cosmograph paintings, created during his stay at the Beat 
 Hotel.\n\nWHAT: Poetry Reading and Art Exhibit\n\nWHEN: Sunday, July 15, 
 2007 at 2:00 PM \n\nWHERE: The Beat Museum, 540 Broadway\n\nIn 2003 
 Thunder's Mouth Press published In The Hub of The Fiery Force, Norse's 
 collected poems. At over 600 pages, this historic collection gathers seven 
 decades of groundbreaking poetry. Norse's autobiography Memoirs of a 
 Bastard Angel is also in print. In it he details his exploits as poet born 
 gay, Jewish and illegitimate in Brooklyn, New York at the turn of the 
 century. His friends read like a whose-who of Twentieth Century American 
 artists: Tennessee Williams, James Baldwin, Anais Nin, Jack Kerouac and 
 W.H. Auden.\n\nDuring the early 1960's Norse resided in Paris at the 
 infamous Beat Hotel. There he collaborated with Brion Gysin and William 
 Burroughs in developing the cut-up method, adapting abstract and random 
 techniques from painting to writing. During this time he also befriended 
 poets Gregory Corso and Allen Ginsberg who also stayed at the hotel. 
 Burroughs hailed Beat Hotel, Norse's cut-up novella, as the most successful 
 result of the cut-up method.\n\nAfter traveling for fifteen years in Europe 
 and North Africa, Norse returned to America in the late 1960's to see the 
 dawning of the hippie movement. Friend and admirer Charles Bukowski met him 
 upon his return. Norse is currently searching for a publisher for a 
 collection of correspondence between the two writers. In the early 1970's 
 Norse moved to San Francisco to participate in the city's blossoming gay 
 liberation movement.\n\nHis book Carnivorous Saint featured over three 
 decades of gay themed poetry and was groundbreaking upon its publication in 
 1977. Twice recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, 
 Norse received a lifetime achievement award from the National Poetry 
 Association in 1991.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/07/09/18434259.php
SUMMARY:Poet Harold Norse reads in celebration of 91st Birthday
LOCATION:The Beat Museum, 540 Broadway, San Francisco, CA 94133
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/07/09/18434259.php
DTSTART:20070715T210000Z
DTEND:20070715T230000Z
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