A man with glasses wearing a suit and tie, holding a book, standing next to a bookshelf.

Edward Case

Book cover for "The Business of the Dancer" by Edward Case (1923–1985), featuring a photo of Edward Case.  A collection of 75 poems.  Published by Kaseowitz Publishing in 2006.
Black and white sketch of a man wearing a hat, facing to the right, with the text 'KASEOWITZ PUBLISHING' below.

Paperback | 6 × 9 inches | 108 pages | Black and white interior | Cream paper | ISBN: 9798994470800

Available Mid-April 2026 through Amazon and independent bookstores. Sales links will appear here when book is launched.

The Business Of The Dancer is a posthumous collection of seventy-five poems by Edward Case (1923–1985). Shortly before his unexpected death at age sixty-two, Case selected these poems from more than one hundred fifty he had written, intending to publish them as a book under the title of the collection’s opening poem. The volume is presented here for the first time.

Case’s work has recently drawn renewed attention—rediscovered in past issues of leading journals including The New Criterion, The American Scholar, Modern Age, The Freeman, and Saturday Review where his poems originally appeared between the 1950s and 1980s. His poetry reflects a mid-century American voice, marked by intellectual clarity and a philosophical tone engaging themes of life, mortality, politics, civics, love, and nature.

The poems are formal but accessible, employing meter and rhyme, and characterized by precision and economy of language with no excess and no wasted syllables. They exhibit a nuanced complexity, with words often bearing multiple meanings.

Educated in the 1940s at New York University and Columbia University, in the 1950s Case was a book review columnist for The Wall Street Journal and National Review and founded a syndicated literary journal titled Classic Features. Beyond letters, from 1960 until his death, he was a businessman, serving as President and CEO of a manufacturing company founded by his father. Additionally, he engaged in local politics and was elected to the Board of Education in Weston, Connecticut, serving as its chairman in the 1960s and 1970s.

The Business Of The Dancer
 brings to print the complete volume Edward Case intended to publish, offering contemporary readers a formally structured and disciplined body of work from an American poet of the postwar period.  Serious but not without wit, the poems are the work of a well-read, broad intellect.

* * *

As Grammarians

This life which is a sentence Is also a declaration. We make the sense of it In our own terms. As grammarians We assert our meaning, In what we decline, In what we affirm, In the conjugation of love, In the predicates And Imperatives And ambiguities Of prosaic choice We essay briefly To define ourselves Before the stop.

– Edward Case