Bezanson Thomas E (1 results)
Published by Thomas E. Bezanson [ and printed at The Stinehouse Press of Lunenburg, Vermont], New York 1993
- Signed
Seller: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.Ground Zero Books, Ltd.
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used - Very good
US$ 250.00
US$ 5.00 shippingShips within U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Condition: Very good. Limited Edition of only 250 copies. [2], 63, [3] pages. Inscribed by the author. Inscription reads: For my friend and partner David, Thomas E. Bezanson. Cover has slight wear and soiling. A collection of 42 of the author's poems, with topics including Chaos, Color and time, Lone tree on horizon's hill, Lose… one's self in one's own remaking, and Curl to get comfortable. The author is believed to be the Mr. Bezanson who has more than three decades of experience in commercial arbitration, the defense of products liability and other civil actions, representing both U.S. and European clients. He was awarded the title Empire State Counsel for pro bono representation yearly in 2006 - 2011. Also in 2008, he was awarded the first New York Lawyers for the Public Interest Pro Bono Leadership Award. He is listed in The Legal 500 US for litigation, Marquis Who's Who in America, Marquis Who's Who in Finance and Industry, is cited in New York Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Defense: Products in 2006 - 2012 and in Super Lawyers Corporate Counsel Edition. He has been listed in Law Business Research Limited's The International Who's Who of Business Lawyers and The International Who's Who of Product Liability Defense Lawyers, Marquis Who's Who in American Law, and was "highly recommended" for dispute resolution in Global Counsel 3000. Mr. Bezanson was also selected "Lawyer of the Week" by The Times of London. He is rated "Preeminent" by Martindale-Hubbell and "Superb" by AVVO. Among the 42 poems presented are: War torn and Towering, History in 12 Seconds, Valley Schedule, Inside Chant, Fanatic Causes, The ghetto screams, Viet Nam is death, and Goin' to New York City. Years after the poems publication, the author wrote to a previous owner regarding Fanatic Causes "I see poems like Fanatic Causes as a collection of words, sounds and rhythm whose meaning is whatever strikes the reader. Perhaps I was thinking that violence achieves more notice than persuasion, can have unintended consequences and is full of irony. What I might have thought or intended, however, is not as important as how the reader reacts to the words." Stiff cover with front and back flaps.