Lynn Riggs, a letter and a book for Isaac Goldberg (1930)
Riggs, Lynn (1899-1954). ALS to Isaac Goldberg (1887-1938). [With] Lynn Riggs, The Iron Dish. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Doran & Company, 1930. First edition. Inscribed to Isaac Goldberg. Offsetting to front endpapers, else a near fine copy lacking the dustwrapper. With newspaper clippings laid in.
A bright copy of this collection of poems written between 1925 and 1929, inscribed to the Jewish man of letters, Isaac Goldberg: "For Dr. Goldberg -- who allows a playwright to be a poet / Lynn Riggs / Boston / Dec. 16, 1930."
With a letter to Goldberg thanking him for his attention to his work:
I've been so attentive to the wanderings of Green Grow the Lilacs that I haven't had a chance before to say my gratitude to you for many things: your extremely illuminating study of my work which preceded our opening in Boston; your kindly presentation of me in the article mainly concerned with Roadside; the pleasant afternoon I had with you as an interlude between hours of rather agonizing difficulty. And now Mr. Paul Green tells me that you have reviewed very handsomely my book of poetry. I haven't seen the article but will soon....
Fluent in Yiddish and several other European languages, Goldberg was a prolific author, critic, and translator based in Boston. From 1923 to 1932 he served as literary editor of the American Freeman, a newspaper published by E. Haldeman-Julius. In 1930, he published an interview with Riggs in the Boston Evening Transcript that was excerpted in the New York Times. Goldberg, whose many books include biographies of H. L. Mencken, George Gershwin, and Gilbert & Sullivan, described the poet and playwright in fulsome terms. “It is a great man indeed who has the courage of his convictions,” he wrote. “It is a rarer one who has the courage of his exaltations. This is the quiet but unshatterable courage that characterizes Lynn Riggs.” Several clippings of articles by Goldberg on Riggs, including a review of The Iron Dish from The American Freeman, are laid in.
A wonderful association between leading literary representatives of two divergent cultural communities.
Sources
- Braunlich, Phyllis Cole. Haunted by home: the life and letters of Lynn Riggs. University of Oklahoma Press, 2002.
- Crandall, Allen. Isaac Goldberg, an appreciation. Sterling, Col.: The author, 1934.
- Ewen, David. “Isaac Goldberg at Fifty,” The American Hebrew, 5 November 1937 , p . 5
- Goldberg, Isaac. Profile of Riggs in the Boston Transcript excerpted in “And Now Lynn Riggs,” New York Times, 1 February 1931.
- Goldberg, Isaac. "In the World of Books: A New poetic Lochinvar out of the west," The American Freeman, 24 January 1931, p. 4.
Product tabs
Recommend this product
Lynn Riggs, a letter and a book for Isaac Goldberg (1930)
Related products
Billie Holiday and the Showgirl: A Correspondence Archive, 1939 to 1941
View details
A manuscript copy of an influential essay on Moravian folk songs by František Bartoš and Leoš Janáček
View details
The script for a French opéra comique, adapted for the provincial stage
View details
Manuscript Archive for Atomsk, a Cold War novel by intelligence operative Paul Linebarger
View details
French chansons of the 1780s
View details
A manuscript hymnal from the harmony society in Indiana
A manuscript hymnal from the harmony society in Indiana
View details
A Coded film script by Lynn Riggs
View details
H. P. Lovecraft, A rare postcard to Alfred Galpin, “my intellectual superior” (1922)
View details
A revolutionary Tagalog manuscript from the Philippine-American War
View details
Rockabilly notebook of a teenage fan
View details
Charles COTTON. Signed document (1663). A bond to the creditor who acquired Beresford Hall
View details
Sherlock Holmes in Boston: A Trail of Evidence
Sherlock Holmes in Boston: A Trail of Evidence
View details
Lynn Riggs, TLS to Barrett Clark (1931)
View details
The Boston Visionists: Letters of Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue to F. Holland Day
View details
E. E. CUMMINGS, Lawd My Hope (1936). Manuscript for a lost poem.
View details
William Stanley Braithwaite / Winifred Virginia JACKSON / H. P. LOVECRAFT: the racial politics and family romance of Boston poetics
View details
F. Scott FITZGERALD. The Princeton Bric-A-Brac (1915). His "country club."
View details
Stan BRAKHAGE. Space as Menace in Canadian Aesthetics (1989), signed typescript.
View details