Sign Up for Fishpond's Best Deals Delivered to You Every Day
Go
Daughters of Leda
By Lee Pennington, Jill Baker (Illustrated by)

Rating
Format
Hardback, 220 pages
Published
United States, 1 April 2017

Lee Pennington, a graduate of Berea College in Kentucky and University of Iowa, holds two Honorary Doctor degrees. He taught creative writing 40 years at UK's Jefferson Community College. He has traveled extensively. He's the author of 21 books, has had nine plays produced, over 1300 poems and thousands of articles published. In 1984 he was designated Poet Laureate of Kentucky. He continues to write poetry, and is a filmmaker. Sharon Sherman, writing in the Louisville Times, (November 2, 1968), reported on his career after he accepted a new position in Louisville. She reports that "Pennington won't allow his students to be 'suspended above life on the end of a spider web called college.' They write and submit their work for publication. They file rejection slips-or paper a wall with them-and send their writings out again. No one is happier than the teacher when his insistence pays off. 'It's like a dam bursting,' he explained, 'When one of them gets published, you can't stop the others.'" She then quotes Pennington, in reference to the reactionary episode at Southeastern Community College, who said "We create myths about ourselves and when they're exposed it frightens us." And again, "Those young people looked at their area-and maybe for the first time they knew the truth. They wrote the truth with love, but the power structure understood." Miss Sherman then reported that "Pennington picked up a thin, soft-backed book and flipped its pages. 'Look at that,' he said with an edge of bitterness in his voice. His fingers rested on the dedication page, underlining the words: To Harlan County. 'How ironic,' he said. 'They created something and they offered their creation. I don't say all of it is the best poetry in the world, but it's real-it's not false, not fake.... How people can be anything but proud of these young men and women I'll never know.... Those kids have just recorded the poems for a national company. Doesn't anyone see what an achievement that is for a group of mountain kids?'" Waynette Shackelford, in her article, "Life is for Touching," in The Kentucky School Journal (November 1971), has written a revealing profile of Pennington and how he teaches. She said "Recently, while speaking before a poetry class he instigated a session on sensitivity to sight. It was brought out that a familiar object could be seen-with just a bit of imagination-to resemble an entirely different object. This new image could then be used as a descriptive phrase in poetry or other writing. Being aware of the way an object appears could be the difference between dead writing and that which is alive."

Show more

Our Price
$76.11
Ships from USA Estimated delivery date: 24th Apr - 1st May from USA
  Include FREE SHIPPING on a Fishpond Premium Trial

Already Own It? Sell Yours
Buy Together
+
Buy together with Appalachian Newground at a great price!
Buy Together
$120.52

Product Description

Lee Pennington, a graduate of Berea College in Kentucky and University of Iowa, holds two Honorary Doctor degrees. He taught creative writing 40 years at UK's Jefferson Community College. He has traveled extensively. He's the author of 21 books, has had nine plays produced, over 1300 poems and thousands of articles published. In 1984 he was designated Poet Laureate of Kentucky. He continues to write poetry, and is a filmmaker. Sharon Sherman, writing in the Louisville Times, (November 2, 1968), reported on his career after he accepted a new position in Louisville. She reports that "Pennington won't allow his students to be 'suspended above life on the end of a spider web called college.' They write and submit their work for publication. They file rejection slips-or paper a wall with them-and send their writings out again. No one is happier than the teacher when his insistence pays off. 'It's like a dam bursting,' he explained, 'When one of them gets published, you can't stop the others.'" She then quotes Pennington, in reference to the reactionary episode at Southeastern Community College, who said "We create myths about ourselves and when they're exposed it frightens us." And again, "Those young people looked at their area-and maybe for the first time they knew the truth. They wrote the truth with love, but the power structure understood." Miss Sherman then reported that "Pennington picked up a thin, soft-backed book and flipped its pages. 'Look at that,' he said with an edge of bitterness in his voice. His fingers rested on the dedication page, underlining the words: To Harlan County. 'How ironic,' he said. 'They created something and they offered their creation. I don't say all of it is the best poetry in the world, but it's real-it's not false, not fake.... How people can be anything but proud of these young men and women I'll never know.... Those kids have just recorded the poems for a national company. Doesn't anyone see what an achievement that is for a group of mountain kids?'" Waynette Shackelford, in her article, "Life is for Touching," in The Kentucky School Journal (November 1971), has written a revealing profile of Pennington and how he teaches. She said "Recently, while speaking before a poetry class he instigated a session on sensitivity to sight. It was brought out that a familiar object could be seen-with just a bit of imagination-to resemble an entirely different object. This new image could then be used as a descriptive phrase in poetry or other writing. Being aware of the way an object appears could be the difference between dead writing and that which is alive."

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9780981844282
ISBN
0981844286
Other Information
Illustrated
Dimensions
21.6 x 14 x 1.9 centimetres (0.48 kg)

About the Author

Pennington, who grew up in Greenup County, Kentucky, is the author of nine other books of poetry including: Scenes from a Southern Road, April Poems, Songs of Bloody Harlan, I Knew a Woman and Thigmotropism. Appalachian Newground was released in April of this year and was entered for nomination for the Pulitzer by the publisher. This is Pennington's third nomination for the prize in poetry as his I Knew a Woman and Thigmotropism were previously nominated for the Pulitzer in 1977 and 1993. Pennington's life-long love-affair with writing all started in a one-room schoolhouse with the Farnham family and a row of strawberries. "When I was in the fourth grade, I went to school out in a little one-room schoolhouse on White Oak," said Pennington. "We had this history book, it was structured like a historical novel. It was about the Farnham family and it went from the settlement of the country until the late 1800s. I was disappointed that this family wasn't brought into the 20th century, so I wrote about 80 pages, adding two or three more generations to bring them up to the time that I was in school, that's the first writing I remember doing." And he never stopped. "I was in high school at McKell in 1957, the same time that Jesse Stuart was principal. Jesse came over to the Portsmouth Times and said, 'why don't you let one of our high school students report McKell news?' and they said they'd be happy to if he had someone in mind. So Jesse came back to school and said to me, 'you're our reporter.'" Pennington wrote various articles for the Daily Times, primarily sports, during his junior and senior years of high school, earning himself $3 per article. "My mother and father had a little farm, and one of the things that we raised were strawberries. My parents always gave me a row and the money that came in from that row was mine to keep," explained Lee. "When I got my first check from the Times, I went to Jesse all excited because the writing made me more money than my row of strawberries. So I told Jesse, 'I've made more money writing than I have farming, ' so I've decided to become a writer rather than a farmer." After graduating from high school, Pennington attended Berea College and went on to graduate school at the University of Iowa. In 1984, State Legislature named him the Poet Laureate of Kentucky. Pennington was a professor of English at the University of Kentucky Jefferson Community College, teaching creative writing and English for 34 years until he retired in 1999. He also taught at several other schools and universities including poetry at the Jesse Stuart Creative Writing Workshop at Murray State University for 10 summers. An award-winning artist, Jill Baker lives in Louisville, where she writes and paints iln her Artist's Studio. She walks to work and travels in her spare time. Baker received her M.F.A. from Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N.Y. in 1981, having gone to Baylor University in Waco, TX for her B.A. in Fine Art. She also did graduate work at Florida State University, at the Academia di Belle Arti in Florence, Italy and at Columbia in New York City She has worked all her life for the arts, working for non-profits, founding two non-profit organizations and making her living (at times) as an artist and a writer. As an artist, she has shown her work around the world, and in cities throughout the United States. She has done numerous illustrations for books, publishing houses and magazines, such as Institutional Investor and Self magazines on Madison Avenue, New York City. She currently illustrates books for authors of prose and poetry and exhibits her paintings, drawings, photographs and watercolors at home and around the nation.

Reviews

If you don't know the splendid work of poet Lee Pennington, this well may allure you. I always find him a compelling & swoon-inducing interweaving of the erotic, spiritual, and shamanic. -Mary Trainor-Brigham, author of Deep Cinema: Film as Shamanic Initiation.

Show more
Review this Product
What our customers have to say
Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
Home » Books » Poetry » American
Home » Books » Poetry » American » General
How Fishpond Works
Fishpond works with suppliers all over the world to bring you a huge selection of products, really great prices, and delivery included on over 25 million products that we sell. We do our best every day to make Fishpond an awesome place for customers to shop and get what they want — all at the best prices online.
Webmasters, Bloggers & Website Owners
You can earn a 8% commission by selling Daughters of Leda on your website. It's easy to get started - we will give you example code. After you're set-up, your website can earn you money while you work, play or even sleep! You should start right now!
Authors / Publishers
Are you the Author or Publisher of a book? Or the manufacturer of one of the millions of products that we sell. You can improve sales and grow your revenue by submitting additional information on this title. The better the information we have about a product, the more we will sell!
Item ships from and is sold by Fishpond.com, Inc.

Back to top