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Anthologist Helps Kick Off Fresno County's Sesquicentennial

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  • Anthologist Helps Kick Off Fresno County's Sesquicentennial

    ANTHOLOGIST HELPS KICK OFF FRESNO COUNTY'S SESQUICENTENNIAL
    Jim Guy The Fresno Bee

    Fresno Bee (California)
    March 24, 2006 Friday
    Final Edition

    Author celebrates Valley's voices

    When writer Gerald Haslam published "Many Californias," an anthology
    of California writers, he drew fire from a critic at the San Francisco
    Chronicle because much of the work was by Fresno poets.

    The critic argued that there should be more representation for other
    California poets from cities such as Berkeley.

    Haslam was quick to challenge the critic. What poets had Berkeley
    produced in the past 40 years, Haslam asked, that can stand up to
    the work of Valley poets? Haslam says the critic had the grace to
    concede the point.

    Haslam, a widely published author himself, spoke about "Fresno of the
    Mind" on Thursday night in downtown Fresno to help kick off the first
    event in the Fresno County Sesquicentennial, a yearlong celebration
    of Fresno County's 150th year. Books by Haslam include "The Great
    Central Valley: California's Heartland," "Working Man's Blues" and
    "Coming of Age in California."

    Much as crops from all over the world have flourished here, Haslam
    credits a diversity of people with hardworking roots for making the
    written word blossom in the Valley.

    He traces much of that back to William Saroyan, who was first to
    acknowledge the complexity of society taking shape here in the early
    part of the the 20th century through stories like "70,000 Assyrians,"
    about an Armenian boy getting a haircut and a history lesson from
    the victim of another diaspora.

    Longtime California State University, Fresno, professor Philip Levine
    is credited by Haslam for carrying on the tradition through nonelitist
    poetry that pays homage to the everyday person.

    "He put himself through school while wearing a shirt with his name
    on it," Haslam said. "He understood poverty. He understood diversity."

    Haslam cites "Death of a Hog," a seemingly simple poem about a boy's
    coming of age as he helps slaughter a hog, as evidence of that.

    "I think it's possible that no one has done more to invent the
    'Fresno of the Mind' than Levine," he said.

    Modern heirs of the tradition, Haslam says, include the prolific
    author Gary Soto and historian/polemicist Victor Davis Hanson. The
    two may have very different points of view, but that's part of the
    diversity, too.
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