
An American Poet such as Randall Jarrell, has many stories to tell, and share with the world. Jarrell was always interested in writing poetry about World War II, because he had joined the United States Army Air Corps. Though Jarrell remained a poet in the Military, he has always kept himself a part of the Military life style. Jarrell was also interested in Children's books as well as writing short stories around the 1960's.
In 1995 Jarrell wrote a few poems that became best sellers, "Little Friend, Little Friend, "Death of the Ball Turret Gunner", and also Eighth Air Force" (Parrish). These are just a few War poems he has written in his life time while he was in the Military. Some of the topics he used was military routine and human loss (Parrish). "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner", which I have read in my English class was a very elaborate poem, for being only five of six lines. This poem expresses pain in dying, and being reborn, as in the solider dying by this gun and being washed out like a new born coming out the womb. Very detailed and easily understandable and know what he's meaning about this solider dying by this tank gun. Reading this poem by Randall Jarrell, made me want to know more about why he a wrote a piece like this in the first place and to see if his other writings were the same way. Jarrell has written many poems I just haven't got around to read some of them, but now I know who he is more I am definitely going to read his best selling works of poetry. Nearly fifty of Jarrells War poems did not come out smoothly, most of the poems triggered battle in dramatic settings (Goldensohn). The poems that didn't get Jarrell anywhere were his poems, "Pilots, Man Your Planes", "The Dead Wing man", and a few others that struggled to become selling poems. Throughout his life Experiencing, and how he viewed things made him write these things, because he wanted others to know how he felt, and that War is not a game. Jarrell as a critic, always was criticized by other writers who loved his work or writers who just hated his work.
Though his life didn't revolve around War all the time, War was the first poems he had ever tried writing about. Even though some of his writings weren't a success, most of them became best sellers to critics all around the world. Not just writing adult poetry, Jarrell has also moved to writing children's books as well, and those have become a great success in his life time. One of his best selling children's books was, "The Bat Poet" that he published in 1964, The Gingerbread Rabbit in 1963, and the last one is "The Animal Family" in 1965 (Parrish). These poems dealt with his child hood and his teenage years. Jarrell also had written many short stories in his life time, but eventually couldn't write any more, because he came down with a disorder (now called bipolar) and had to return back to teach. Though he still taught, everyone still read his stories and even today they still do, he's in the Literature work books as well as teachers work books in college.
Works Cited
Goldensohn, Lorrie. "RANDALL JARRELL'S WAR." War, Literature & the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities 11.1 (1999): 42. Academic Search Complete. EBSCO. Web. 11 APR. 2011.
Parrish, Ann. "Randall Jarrell". Randall Jarrell (9781429814430) (2005): 1. MasterFILE. Premier. EBSCO. Web. 23 APR. 2011.
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