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Brainard, Joe. (1942-1994) & Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022). "The 1967 Game Calendar". New York: Self Published. 1967. First Edition.

Softcover. 4to, [12] leaves printed on rectos only; 12 full-page illustrations plus the cover art by Joe Brainard, each illustration matched with a 4-line poem; saddle-stitched. Light toning, a little rubbed along the spine, else fine. Excellent collaboration between Elmslie and Brainard with the latter in fine form with his Pop Art illustrations of pin-up girls.

From the collection of Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965-2016. Perhaps Bidart's most celebrated poem, "The Second Hour of the Night," is partly based on his relationship with Brainard. "The relationship was," as Bidart has said, both "more than friendship and less than a romance." His "In Memory of Joe Brainard" is a profound elegy for his friend who died of AIDS-induced pneumonia in 1994. 

Brainard, Joe. (1942-1994) & Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022) "The 1967 Game Calendar"

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Brainard, Joe. (1942-1994) & Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022). "The 1967 Game Calendar". New York: Self Published. 1967. First Edition.

Softcover. 4to, [12] leaves printed on rectos only; 12 full-page illustrations plus the cover art by Joe Brainard, each illustration matched with a 4-line poem; saddle-stitched. Light toning, a little rubbed along the spine, else fine. Excellent collaboration between Elmslie and Brainard with the latter in fine form with his Pop Art illustrations of pin-up girls.

From the collection of Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965-2016. Perhaps Bidart's most celebrated poem, "The Second Hour of the Night," is partly based on his relationship with Brainard. "The relationship was," as Bidart has said, both "more than friendship and less than a romance." His "In Memory of Joe Brainard" is a profound elegy for his friend who died of AIDS-induced pneumonia in 1994.