Howard W. Bergerson | |
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Howard W. Bergerson in 2007
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Born |
Minneapolis, Minnesota |
July 29, 1922
Died | February 19, 2011 Kirkland, Washington |
(aged 88)
Occupation |
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Nationality | American |
Genre | constrained writing |
Notable works |
Howard William Bergerson (July 29, 1922 – February 19, 2011) was an American writer and poet, noted for his mastery of palindromes and other forms of wordplay.
Bergerson's first volume of poetry, The Spirit of Adolescence, was published in 1950, and earned him the state's nomination as Oregon Poet Laureate in 1957. However, he declined the nomination for political reasons, and the position instead went to Ethel R. Fuller.
By 1961, Bergerson's interests had shifted to wordplay and constrained writing. He became fascinated with palindromes and set out to write a coherent, full-length palindromic poem. The result, the 1034-letter "Edna Waterfall", was for some time listed by the Guinness Book of World Records as the longest palindrome in English.
In 1969, Bergerson became editor of Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics, though stepped down a year later when Greenwood Periodicals dropped the publication. However, he continued to contribute material to Word Ways for several decades, including memorable articles on palindromes, anagrams, panalphabetic windows, pangrammatic windows, self-referencing acrostics, and vocabularyclept poetry. He also published games and puzzles in Reader's Digest and other magazines.
His 1973 book Palindromes and Anagrams was influential among wordplay enthusiasts, and has been hailed by critics as a "sine qua non for all serious logologists" and the greatest ever book on palindromes. He is often cited, along with Leigh Mercer and J. A. Lindon, as one of the greatest palindromists of all time.