{{short description|American poet and novelist (1902–1961)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=February 2020}} {{Infobox writer | name = Kenneth Fearing | image = Kenneth Fearing 1939.jpg | caption = Fearing {{circa}} 1939 | birth_date = {{Birth date|1902|07|28}} | birth_place = [[Oak Park, Illinois]], U.S. | death_date = {{Death date and age|1961|06|26|1902|07|28}} | death_place = [[New York City]], U.S. | occupation = Poet, novelist }}
'''Kenneth Flexner Fearing''' (July 28, 1902 – June 26, 1961) was an American poet and novelist. A major poet of the [[Great Depression|Depression]] era, he addressed the shallowness and consumerism of American society as he saw it, often by ironically adapting the language of commerce and media. Critics have associated him with the [[American Left]] to varying degrees; his poetry belongs to the [[American proletarian poetry movement]], but is rarely overtly political. Fearing published six original collections of poetry between 1929 and 1956. He wrote his best-known poems during the late 1920s and 1930s.
He moved from Illinois to New York City in 1924, and spent the rest of his life there. He supported himself by writing pulp fiction, often under pseudonyms. Around 1939 he began to write novels and wrote less poetry. His seven novels are mystery and thriller stories with some unconventional characteristics. They often feature many characters who are given one or more chapters from their point of view, and in a few later novels he used fictional newspaper articles and radio transcripts to further the narrative. His most famous novel, ''[[The Big Clock]]'', has remained in print since its 1946 publication and was adapted for film.
==Personal biography== Fearing was born in [[Oak Park, Illinois]], to a successful family:<ref>Wald, 31</ref> his father was Harry Lester Fearing (d. 1940), a successful Chicago attorney and descendant of the family of [[Calvin Coolidge]]. His mother Olive Flexner Fearing was of Jewish descent and a cousin of the educator [[Abraham Flexner]].<ref name="ryley"/> His parents divorced when he was a year old, and they each had custody of him six months of the year. He was raised mainly by his aunt, Eva Fearing Scholl, in the other half of a [[Duplex (building)|duplex]] that the Fearings owned and lived in. He had a half-sister Ethel (b. 1916) and a half-brother Ralph (b. 1918). Fearing went to school at [[Oak Park and River Forest High School]], where he was voted "wittiest boy and class pessimist".<ref name="ryley"/> He was the editor of the student newspaper, a position previously held by [[Ernest Hemingway]]. He studied English at the [[University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign]] (1920–1922) and the [[University of Wisconsin–Madison|University of Wisconsin]] (1922–1924). At the latter, he became editor-in-chief of the school's [[literary magazine]], but was forced to resign in part for his acceptance of Modernist writing and other controversial material. He left without graduating, being one class short of a degree. In 1938 the University of Wisconsin awarded him the degree ''in absentia''; presumably the school wanted to recognize his fame.<ref name="santora">{{Cite journal |last=Santora |first=Patricia B. |date=1989 |title=The Life of Kenneth Flexner Fearing (1902–1961) |journal=CLA Journal |volume=32 |issue=3 |pages=309–322|jstor=44322031 }}</ref><!--dates differ in this source from others and it's a "weak" bio, as noted in one footnote somewhere, also potentially downplaying Fearing's politics-->
As a young man Fearing was thin, with dark hair and skin, and liked to wear dark suits. His voice was low and lispy. He had a "little-boy appeal", with messy hair and habits, horn-rimmed glasses, and an immature disposition<ref>Wald, 31</ref>—some of which may be seen in [[Alice Neel]]'s oil portrait, painted in 1935, which is now at the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York. The portrait includes some references to Fearing's poetry and shows a small skeleton in his chest, grasping his heart and pouring blood from it; Neel commented that "He really sympathized with humanity ... His heart bled for the grief of the world."<ref>{{cite web |title=Alice Neel. Kenneth Fearing. 1935 {{!}} MoMA |url=https://www.moma.org/collection/works/78559 |website=The Museum of Modern Art |access-date=February 8, 2020 }}</ref> After his death, according to Robert M. Ryley, friends remembered "his charm, his eloquence, his almost courtly manners, his prickly independence, his not-quite-hidden vulnerability and innocence—but mostly they would remember his gloomy, sardonic skepticism".<ref name="ryley"/>
During the late 1920s he had a romantic relationship with the writer and activist [[Margery Latimer]], whom he met at Wisconsin. (Latimer's [[roman à clef]] ''This Is My Body'' includes a character based on Fearing.<ref name="ryley"/>) Fearing cheated on Latimer and never proposed to her; she rejected his later attempt to renew their relationship.<ref name="ryley"/> In 1931, he met Rachel Meltzer, a nurse by training and a medical social worker. Fearing was poor at expressing affection in person (if not in his letters) and less interested in marriage than Meltzer. She later said of her husband, "Kenneth spent his whole life hiding his inner self from other people"; "[he] needed someone to take care of him."<ref name="ryley"/> They were married on April 26, 1933, and their son, Bruce Fearing, was born on July 19, 1935. The family soon travelled to Europe for nine months thanks to the $2,500 that came with Kenneth's 1935 [[Guggenheim Fellowship]]. Partly due to Fearing's growing alcoholism, he and Rachel divorced in 1941, with Rachel having custody of their son.
He stayed at the [[Yaddo]] artists' retreat for the first time in 1938 and returned often. At Yaddo he began a relationship with the painter [[Nan Lurie]] and they married on June 18, 1945. In this period his drinking became dangerous to his health, which scared him into temperance. Nan found him duller as a result, and their relationship suffered.<ref name="ryley">{{cite book| title=Kenneth Fearing: Complete Poems |editor=Ryley, Robert M. |author=Fearing, Kenneth |chapter=Kenneth Fearing's Life |publisher=The National Poetry Foundation |date=1994 |url=http://maps-legacy.org/poets/a_f/fearing/life.htm}}</ref> They separated in 1952. This was his last marriage.
Fearing lacked money for much of his life (the period following his most successful novel was the exception). In New York, he received a monthly allowance from his mother until 1935, when she decided that her son should bear full responsibility for his new child. His mother had been skeptical of his choice of writing career.<ref name="ryley"/> He also relied on gifts from his father and loans from Latimer in those years. He held few full-time jobs for more than a few months, despite claiming, apparently falsely, to have worked as a salesman, a journalist, and even a lumberjack in press materials.<ref name="ryley"/> In the 1950s, he worked for the "Books" section of ''Newsweek'' magazine (1952–1954), and, during his single longest period of employment, he developed press material and annual reports for the [[Muscular Dystrophy Association]] of America (1955–1958).<ref name="santora"/> Still, he lived in poverty in the 1950s, and had smoked and drank heavily for most of his life, which seriously affected his health in his last years.<ref name="ryley"/> In early 1961, he felt a sharp pain in his back that worsened through June, when his son Bruce moved in to care for him. They went to [[Lenox Hill Hospital]] on June 21, and five days later Fearing died of a [[melanoma]] of his left chest and pleural cavity. He is buried at [[Forest Home Cemetery (Forest Park)|Forest Home Cemetery]] in Forest Park, Illinois.
==Literary career== In December 1924, Fearing moved to [[New York City]], joining Latimer, where he pursued a writing career. His friend the poet [[Horace Gregory]] noted that his early writing was not particularly successful, but Fearing was particularly determined to make a living in writing.<ref name="santora"/> His early work was commercial, including stories for [[pulp magazine]]s, and he often wrote under pseudonyms. He wrote sex-pulp novels at half a cent a word, which were published under the pseudonym Kirk Wolff.<ref>Sources spell it Wolfe, Wolff, and Wolf.</ref> Meanwhile, he searched for editors who would publish his poetry.
Fearing told a writers' convention in 1948 that "Literature is a means for crystallizing the myths under which society lives."<ref>Wald, 26</ref> His poetic influences included [[Walt Whitman]], who he said was "the first writer to create a technique indigenous to the whole of this country's outlook",<ref name="santora"/> and [[François Villon]], [[John Keats]], and [[Edwin Arlington Robinson]].<ref name="santora"/> He enjoyed [[Maurice Ravel]] and the painter [[George Grosz]].<ref>Wald, 24</ref> His early poems were published in magazines such as ''[[Poetry (magazine)|Poetry]]'', ''[[Scribner's]]'', ''[[The New Yorker]]'', the ''[[New Masses]]'', ''Free Verse'', ''Voices'', and ''The Menorah Journal''.<ref name="santora"/> About 44 of his poems were published before his first book of poetry came out. He was involved in the formation of the [[League of American Writers]] in 1935 and worked for its national council in the first year. He participated in the [[Federal Writers' Project]] during the Depression, and in 1939 he taught at the New York Writers School.
===Poetry=== Fearing's first book of poetry, ''Angel Arms'' (1929), was dedicated to Margery Latimer and had an introduction by [[Edward Dahlberg]]. The next book, ''Poems'' (1935), was a success and won him the first of two [[Guggenheim Fellowship]]s (the fellowship was renewed in 1939). These two volumes contain some of his best-known poems, such as "Jack Knuckles Falters", "1935", "X Minus X", and "Dirge".
He published five original poetry collections; the remaining three are ''Dead Reckoning: A Book of Poetry'' (1938), ''Afternoon of a Pawnbroker and Other Poems'' (1943), and ''Stranger at Coney Island and Other Poems'' (1948). While his early poetry was well received, critics began to find his work repetitive in the 1940s.<ref name="arnold">{{Cite book |chapter=Stylistic Perspective Across Kenneth Fearing's Poetry: A Statistical Analysis |last=Arnold |first=Wayne E. |date=2016 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan UK |isbn=978-1-137-59568-3 |editor-last=Ross |editor-first=Shawna |location=London |pages=165–184 |language=en |doi=10.1057/978-1-137-59569-0_7 |editor-last2=O'Sullivan |editor-first2=James |title=Reading Modernism with Machines: Digital Humanities and Modernist Literature}}</ref> He was first anthologized in ''Collected Poems of Kenneth Fearing'' (1940). Fearing was most productive, and his future most bright, between 1938 and 1943, when he published a book of poetry or a novel each year. Even then, his royalties during this period were minimal, and only exceeded the publisher's [[Advance against royalties|advance]] on two occasions (the ''Collected Poems'' and the novel ''The Hospital''). Despite the fame, he remained dependent on his wife Rachel's income.<ref name="ryley"/>
====Poetic themes and style==== His poetry is concerned with "a society that was morally bankrupt and ... sapped by the economic and political maneuvers necessary to support the American ideal of 'getting ahead'".<ref name="santora"/> The characters in many of his poems are "types", and the effects of commerce and consumerism on the psyche are presented as if typical to everyone. The narrator is often superficially dispassionate, an ironic surveyor of the scene, but may reveal anger in the form of "sarcasm, contemptuous reductiveness, caricature, cartoony distortion, mocking [[hyperbole]]".<ref name="hall"/>
In "Dirge" (''Poems''), a successful "executive type" eventually loses his status via setbacks—"nevertheless, they shut off his gas; nevertheless, the / bank foreclosed; nevertheless, the landlord called"—and dies by suicide. The poem ironically intersperses comic-book language in its otherwise emotionless recounting: "And wow he died as wow he lived, / going whop to the office and blooie home to sleep and / biff got married and bam had children and oof got fired, / zowie did he live and zowie did he die". This effect, according to Nathaniel Mills, "indicates the manner in which mass culture works to deaden the sensory reality of pain ... For the reader, the aesthetic response of disorientation, unexpected excitement, or shock prompts a critical reflection: what sort of cultural and political formation could cheapen experience to the extent of rendering an obituary as 'zowie did he live and zowie did he die?'"<ref name="mills">{{cite journal |last1=Mills |first1=Nathaniel |title=The Dialectic of Electricity: Kenneth Fearing, Walter Benjamin, and a Marxist Aesthetic |journal=Journal of Modern Literature |date=2007 |volume=30 |issue=2 |pages=17–41 |doi=10.2979/JML.2007.30.2.17 |jstor=4619326 |s2cid=153369142 }}</ref>
The language of mass media similarly intrudes in "Jack Knuckles Falters" (1926), in which a war veteran has been sentenced to death for murder. In his final words, he struggles with his competing needs to proclaim his innocence and meet his death with "dignity". Newspaper headlines that cover his execution interrupt each stanza and undermine his speech: "{{sc|HAS LITTLE TO SAY ... THANKS WARDEN FOR KINDNESS ... STAGGERS WHEN HE SEES ELECTRIC CHAIR ... WILL RUMANIAN PRINCE WED AGAIN?}}" They convey nothing of his personal struggle but rather satisfy the public's need for a simple narrative in which a "criminal" is punished. The headline has moved on to another topic as the man proclaims his innocence.<ref name="mills"/> According to the poet [[Mark Halliday]], "Fearing in 1926 (before television, before the Internet) is not calling for some practical redesigning of news delivery; he is asking his reader to think about the psychological effect of the simultaneous availability of countless bits of information, all formatted for quick-snack consumption."<ref name="hall"/>
Fearing commonly uses a particular syntax, which Halliday describes as an "[[Anaphora (rhetoric)|anaphoric]] elaboration of a [[subordinate clause]] that waits in limbo for its controlling statement to arrive". This delay can be "a way of representing a life which people mostly can't shape for themselves, a world of people who can't be the agents of their experience and mostly live subordinated to great mysterious forces".<ref name="hall"/> The first two stanzas of "X Minus X" (from ''Poems'') illustrate this style:
{{Poemquote|style="margin-left:4em"|
Even when your friend, the radio, is still; even when her dream, the magazine, is finished; even when his life, the ticker, is silent; even when their destiny, the boulevard, is bare; and after that paradise, the dancehall, is closed; after that theater, the clinic, is dark,
Still there will be your desire, and her desire, and his desire, and their desire, your laughter, their laughter, your curse and his curse, her reward and their reward, their dismay and his dismay and her dismay and yours— [...]<ref>{{cite book|author=Fearing, Kenneth |title=Poems |date=1936 |orig-year=1935 |publisher=Dynamo |page=29}}</ref><ref name="hall"/> }}
===Fiction=== As the critical reception of his poetry declined into the 1940s—Halliday suggests that Fearing "seems to have felt increasingly jaded and skeptical about poetry's chance to participate in public life"<ref name="hall">{{cite journal |last1=Halliday |first1=Mark |title=Damned Good Poet: Kenneth Fearing |journal=Michigan Quarterly Review |date=Spring 2001 |volume=XL |issue=2 |hdl=2027/spo.act2080.0040.214 }}<!--Quoted in Arnold--></ref>—Fearing turned to novels. Between 1939 and 1960 he wrote seven mystery or "thriller" novels, although their formal qualities defy simple genre categorization.<ref>Wald, 25</ref> The most significant are ''The Hospital'' (1939), ''Dagger of the Mind'' (1941), ''Clark Gifford's Body'' (1942), and ''[[The Big Clock]]'' (1946).<ref name="hering">{{Cite book |title=100 American Crime Writers |editor-last=Powell |editor-first=Steven |date=2012 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=978-0230525375 |chapter=Fearing, Kenneth (1902–61) |author=Hering, David}}</ref>
Fearing was well known in 1939, and his first novel, ''The Hospital'', quickly sold six thousand copies. A power outage at a hospital, caused by a drunk janitor, is the central event around which numerous characters' lives are portrayed. Each chapter is devoted to one character's point of view, a style common to all of Fearing's novels.<ref name="lay"/> The novel was criticized for the large number of characters and their lack of depth, a complaint that continued throughout Fearing's fiction career. Critics, however, praised its crisp prose style—one called it a "staccato prose poem"—and its portrayal of lower-class characters like the janitor.<ref name="lay"/> ''Dagger of the Mind'' (1941) is a psychological thriller in which there is a murder at an art colony. The creation of suspense from states of mind (via [[interior monologue]]) rather than physical violence was a departure from most novels of its type.<ref name="lay"/> ''Clark Gifford's Body'' (1942) recounts a revolution in an unnamed country that begins with the title character's attack on a radio station. It has more than twenty characters, moves back and forth in time, and inserts contradictory radio and newspaper accounts of events. The novel's experimental aspects and pessimism were not met well by readers.<ref name="lay"/><ref name="ryley"/>
[[File:Judas-Picture-1.jpg|thumb|''The Big Clock'' first appeared in an abridged form in ''[[The American Magazine]]'' as "The Judas Picture" (October 1946)]]
He worked for 14 months on his most well-known novel, ''The Big Clock'' (1946), whose protagonist, an editor for a crime magazine, is put in charge of a murder investigation by his boss—but both men had had a relationship with the murdered woman. The novel was more successful than his prior efforts artistically and commercially, with an engaging plot and more character depth.<ref name="lay"/> [[Alan M. Wald]], an historian of the American Left, calls it "a psychosexual ''roman noir'' stressing the sinister effect of market segmentation in the publishing industry".<ref>Wald, 24</ref> It was critically well-received, and was popular enough that a Bantam paperback and an [[Armed Services Edition]] soon followed. It remains in print.<ref>Wald, 22</ref> The novel was developed into a film [[The Big Clock (film)|of the same name]] in 1948, and again in 1987 (''[[No Way Out (1987 film)|No Way Out]]''). The novel earned Fearing $60,000 from republication and film rights. His financial success was short-lived, as income from the novel dried up due to the unfavorable contracts that he had negotiated himself.<ref name="ryley"/>
Wald summarizes the "frightening and fragmented hollowness" that Fearing saw in post-war US society and depicted in ''The Big Clock'':
{{quote|The menacing ambience of dislocation that permeates ''The Big Clock'' is structurally and symbolically rendered as industrial capitalism, a socioeconomic order in which the avenues of communication, especially publishing and the airwaves, are evolving into a science of planned manipulation designed to ensure profitability. Well-paid deceivers, together with the naively deceived, are imprisoned as cogs in the apparatus of private enterprise's modern institutions. ... The genius of ''The Big Clock'' is its previsioning of the manifold mythological dimensions of a "Consumer's Republic" that would typify the era.<ref>Wald, 26</ref>}}
In ''Loneliest Girl in the World'' (1951), an audio recording and storage device named "Mikki" is at the center of a mystery. Ellen Vaughn, the daughter of its inventor, uses the machine's "463,635 hours of recorded speeches, music, and business transactions" to determine the circumstances of her father's death. She finds a recording in which her father and his brother argue about the best way to exploit "Mikki", which Ellen ultimately destroys with a gun. The story is unusual in that the mystery is resolved with retrieved information rather than "detection".<ref name="lay">{{cite book| author=Lay, Mary M. |chapter=Kenneth (Flexner) Fearing | title= Dictionary of Literary Biography: American Novelists, 1910–1945 |editor=Martine, James J. |publisher=Gale |year=1981 |via=Gale Literature Resource Center}}</ref>
''The Crozart Story'' (1960) is about the heads of two rival [[public relations]] firms. Fearing has one PR head explain how he shaped public opinion: "The fantasies we were adroitly joining and fashioning into loaded rumors, those gossamer rumors we were transmuting into triggered press releases, those childlike releases we were everywhere implementing with public degradation, internal exile, imprisonment, those incandescent anxieties we were molding and hardening into death's-head taboos—all these components of the commando raids we were mounting for the world's richest haul consisted of words, basically, only words."<ref name="lay"/> The novel was abstract and lacking in plot, and its reception was poor. It did not earn enough to pay Fearing's advance. Critics state that Fearing's two last novels, particularly ''The Crozart Story'', are more like unfinished sketches in places, and are suggestive of his declining motivation to write, his declining health due to alcoholism, or both.<ref>Wald, 25, 30</ref>
===Politics=== Accounts vary as to Fearing's degree of association with Marxism and the [[American Left]].<ref name="ryley"/> Marxists courted him and suggested that he contribute to periodicals like the ''New Masses'',<ref name="santora"/> which he did, beginning in 1926, and he was a contributing editor there from 1930 to 1933. He was a founding member of the [[John Reed Clubs|John Reed Club]] in 1929, where he was on the editorial board of the communist ''[[Partisan Review]]'';<ref name=":0">Wald, 31–32</ref> he is commonly included among its cofounders after the magazine repositioned itself as [[anti-Stalinist]]. He put his name to various pro-Soviet declarations from 1931 through to the 1939 "Open Letter of the 400", which defended Stalin's regime.<ref name=":0" />
Yet Fearing's poems were almost never overtly political, and his associates often found him uncommitted to communism.<ref name=":0" /> He told the ''[[Daily Worker]]'' in 1938, "I've not tried deliberately to be Marxist in my poetry ... Marxism is valuable in literature only to the extent that the writer assimilates it. Consequently its principles become part of a writer's background, the way he thinks and feels and interprets it."<ref name=":0" /> Fearing's family maintained that "politics was never an important part of his life".<ref name="santora"/> His son Bruce said that his father "''used'' a leftist political milieu to get his poetry published; he didn't believe in politics, he believed in poetry".<ref name="santora"/><!--sics avoided per MOS:QUOTE--> As a Jew, a pacifist, and an anti-fascist, Fearing was uncomfortable with the American Communist Party's support of the [[Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact|Hitler-Stalin pact]] in 1939.<ref name="capshaw"/> (As a child, Fearing witnessed the "reflexive anti-semitism" of his father towards his wife's family.<ref name="ryley"/>) The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact prompted him to write a poem, "Pact", which was published in the ''New Yorker'' that year and contained hints to his allies that he was breaking rank.<ref>Wald, 36</ref> Wald writes that Fearing had "a mistrust of all political premises and a disbelief in all ameliorative options, [which] ran contrary to any connection with a large organization that demanded ideological conformity and an activist commitment".<ref>Wald, 33</ref> In the era of [[McCarthyism]] his political associations were sufficient for him to be interviewed by the [[FBI]] and called before the [[House Un-American Activities Committee]]. The FBI reported that "[Fearing said] he had become a 'fellow traveler' in 1933, and that prior to that time he had not been very interested in the meetings of the John Reed Club due to the fact that he was not interested in the politics discussed at all the meetings."<ref name="ryley"/> Before the Committee in 1950, when asked if he was a member of the [[Communist Party USA|Communist Party]], Fearing replied, "Not yet."<ref name="capshaw">{{cite web |last1=Capshaw |first1=Ron |title=The Forgotten Founder of 'Partisan Review' Wrote Porn and Thrillers |url=https://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/books/180422/kenneth-fearing |website=Tablet Magazine |access-date=February 5, 2020 |date=July 31, 2014}}</ref>
==Legacy== The literary critic [[Macha Rosenthal]] called Fearing "the chief poet of the American Depression".<ref name="hall"/> He influenced the [[Beat Generation|Beat poet]]s, such as [[Allen Ginsberg]]. Alan Filreis writes that Fearing's "demotic, chatty, antic, digressive style made Ginsberg possible", and Fearing's contemporary [[Marya Zaturenska]] said of Ginsberg, "isn't 3/4 of him straight out of Kenneth Fearing?"<ref>{{Cite book |title=Counter-revolution of the Word: The Conservative Attack on Modern Poetry, 1945–1960 |last=Filreis |first=Alan |date=2012 |publisher=UNC Press Books |isbn=978-1-4696-0663-7 |page=12}}</ref>
Since Fearing's death, critics have offered more positive appraisals of his later poetry. In a 1970 article on the "Dynamo" school of poets, Estelle Novak wrote, "Fearing's true appeal as a revolutionary poet was his ability to combine realistic description and political comment in the form of a readable poem that lost nothing of its quality as poem while it gained in propaganda value."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Novak |first1=Estelle Gershgoren |title=The 'Dynamo' School of Poets |journal=Contemporary Literature |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=526–539 |doi=10.2307/1207635 |date=1970|jstor=1207635 }}<!--Quoted in Arnold--></ref> By the 1990s there was a "minor revival", with the [[National Poetry Foundation]]'s publication of ''Kenneth Fearing Complete Poems'' in 1994, and the poet [[Mark Halliday]] published an essay, "Damned Good Poet: Kenneth Fearing" (2001), which included an analysis of the poet's themes.<ref name="arnold"/><ref name="hall"/> A selection of Fearing's poems has been published as part of the [[Library of America]]'s American Poets Project.
==Bibliography== ===Poetry=== *''Angel Arms'', Coward McCann (New York, NY), 1929. *''Poems'', Dynamo (New York, NY), 1935. *''Dead Reckoning: A Book of Poetry'', [[Random House]] (New York, NY), 1938. *''Collected Poems of Kenneth Fearing'', Random House, 1940. *''Afternoon of a Pawnbroker and Other Poems'', Harcourt (New York City), 1943. *''Stranger at Coney Island and Other Poems'', Harcourt, 1948. *''New and Selected Poems'', Indiana University Press (Bloomington), 1956. *''Complete Poems'', ed. Robert M. Ryley, National Poetry Foundation (Orono, Maine), 1994.
===Novels=== *''The Hospital'', Random House, 1939. *''Dagger of the Mind'', Random House, 1941, as ''Cry Killer!'', Avon (New York, NY), 1958. *''Clark Gifford's Body'', Random House, 1942. *''[[The Big Clock]]'', Harcourt, 1946, as ''No Way Out'', Perennial (New York, NY), 1980. New York : New York Review Books, 2006, introduction by Nicholas Christopher, {{ISBN | 978-1-59017-181-3}}; ''Die große Uhr : ein Klassiker des Noir-Thrillers'', herausgegeben von Martin Compart; Übertragung ins Deutsche Jakob Vandenberg, Coesfeld : Elsinor, 2023, {{ISBN | 978-3-942788-71-7}} *(With Donald Friede and H. Bedford Jones under joint pseudonym Donald F. Bedford) ''John Barry'', Creative Age Press (New York, NY), 1947. *''Loneliest Girl in the World'', Harcourt, 1951, as ''The Sound of Murder'', Spivak (New York, NY), 1952. *''The Generous Heart'', Harcourt, 1954. *''The Crozart Story'', Doubleday, 1960.
===Essays=== * "Reading, Writing, and the Rackets." ''New and Selected Poems.'' Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1956, ix–xxiv. * "The Situation in American Writing: Seven Questions." ''Partisan Review'', Summer 1939, 33–35.
==References== {{reflist}}
* {{cite book |last1=Wald |first1=Alan M. |title=American Night: The Literary Left in the Era of the Cold War |date=2012 |publisher=UNC Press |isbn=978-0-8078-3586-9 }}
==Further reading== <!--meaning NOT USED as of Feb 2020 unfortunately--> * {{cite book|first=Andrew R.|last=Anderson |title=Fear Ruled Them All: Kenneth Fearing's Literature of Corporate Conspiracy |publisher=P. Lang |date=1996}} * {{cite book|first=Rita |last=Barnard |title=The Great Depression and the Culture of Abundance: Kenneth Fearing, Nathaneal West, and Mass Culture | publisher=Cambridge University Press |date=1995}}
==External links== * {{Internet Archive author}} * {{FadedPage|id=Fearing, Kenneth|name=Kenneth Fearing|author=yes}} (including ''The Big Clock'') * Poetry Foundation: ** [http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/kenneth-fearing Biography] ** [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69314/brother-can-you-spare-a-biff-bam-oof "Brother Can You Spare a Biff, Bam, Oof!!!: Kenneth Fearing's hard-boiled poetry"] by [[Robert Polito]] ** [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69313/and-wow-he-died-as-wow-he-lived "And Wow He Died As Wow He Lived: Kenneth Fearing, the Federal Writers Project, and the depths of the Great Depression"] by Jason Boog ** [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/articles/69926/not-yet "Not Yet: Daisy Fried on Kenneth Fearing"] by [[Daisy Fried]] * [http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.act2080.0040.214 "Damned Good Poet: Kenneth Fearing"] by [[Mark Halliday]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Fearing, Kenneth}} [[Category:1902 births]] [[Category:1961 deaths]] [[Category:20th-century American Jews]] [[Category:20th-century American male writers]] [[Category:20th-century American novelists]] [[Category:20th-century American poets]] [[Category:American magazine editors]] [[Category:American male novelists]] [[Category:American male poets]] [[Category:Burials at Forest Home Cemetery, Chicago]] [[Category:Deaths from melanoma in New York (state)]] [[Category:Jewish American novelists]] [[Category:Jewish American poets]] [[Category:Novelists from Chicago]] [[Category:Novelists from New York (state)]] [[Category:University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign alumni]] [[Category:University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni]] [[Category:Writers from Oak Park, Illinois]]