McGrath wrote mainly about his own life and social concerns. His best-known work, Letter to an Imaginary Friend, was published in sections between 1957 and 1985 and as a single poem in 1997 by Copper Canyon Press.[3]
Works
First Manifesto, A. Swallow (Baton Rouge, LA), 1940.
"The Dialectics of Love", Alan Swallow, editor, Three Young Poets: Thomas McGrath, William Peterson, James Franklin Lewis, Press of James A. Decker (Prairie City, IL), 1942.
To Walk a Crooked Mile, Swallow Press (New York City), 1947.
Longshot O'Leary's Garland of Practical Poesie, International Publishers (New York City), 1949.
Witness to the Times!, privately printed, 1954.
Figures from a Double World, Alan Swallow (Denver, CO), 1955.
The gates of ivory, the gates of horn, Mainstream Publishers, 1957 (2nd edition Another Chicago Press, 1987 ISBN978-0-9614644-2-4)
Herman J. Berlandt, editor, Peace or perish : a crisis anthology, Poets for Peace, 1983.
Morty Sklar, editor, Editor's Choice II : Fiction, Poetry & Art from the U.S. Small Press : Selections from Nominations Made by Editors of Independent, Noncommercial Literary Presses and Magazines, of Work Published by them from 1978 to 1983, Spirit That Moves Us Press, 1987. ISBN9780930370237
Robert Bly, editor, The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart : Poems for Men , HarperCollins, 1992. ISBN9780060924201
Estelle Gershgoren Novak, editor, Poets of the Non-existent City : Los Angeles in the McCarthy Era , University of New Mexico Press, 2002. ISBN9780826329516
Cary Nelson, editor, "The Oxford Handbook of Modern and Contemporary American Poetry", Oxford University Press, 2012. ISBN978-0-1953-9877-9
Reviews
Best of all, Letter to an Imaginary Friend licks its fingers and burps at the table. Polite it is not--and the better for it when McGrath turns from his populist vitriol to what may be his most abiding talent: that of bestowing praise--grace, even--on the common, the unruly, the inconsolable, those McGrath chose to side and sing with and for whom "the world is too much but not enough with us.[4]
The Revolutionary Poet in the United States: the Poetry of Thomas McGrath, Stern, Frederick C. (Editor), U of Missouri, Columbia, 1988 ISBN0-8262-0682-4
Reginald Gibbons; Terrence Des Pres (1987). Thomas McGrath: life and the poem. Northwestern University. (reprint University of Illinois Press, 1992, ISBN978-0-252-01852-7)