One Poem: Love Notes From My Sleepy Stalker
Here I am, tracing the birth of a soliloquy in the composition of your face / I am joyful as the wordsmith -- pen at hand to a curled fist.
Here I am, tracing the birth of a soliloquy in the composition of your face / I am joyful as the wordsmith -- pen at hand to a curled fist.
Anis Shivani | Posted 03.20.2012
The critic writing a book of poetry faces peculiar challenges. Can she silence her internal censor enough to produce breakthrough work? Can she both savor and sever her allegiances as the need dictates?
Mallory Yael Seegal | Posted 02.25.2012
Women, who like sex but never know how to ask for it, Who have bite-marks scoring lines down their necks, Like leopard spots, Like a surgeon's magic marker lines...
Anis Shivani | Posted 11.21.2011
During the last few weeks, as his new book Kindertotenwald was released, Franz and I exchanged a series of emails about the book, the results of which follow.
John Lundberg | Posted 10.21.2011
We admittedly aren't dealing with Thanksgiving here, or even Bring Your Daughter to Work Day, but National Bad Poetry Day is an excuse for us to celebrate the rich history of appallingly bad verse.
John Lundberg | Posted 09.30.2011
Here, for all of you fellow summer sufferers, are four very cold poems that might help you imagine some relief from the heat (and distract you from the fact that it isn't even August).
John Lundberg | Posted 09.09.2011
Williams' red wheelbarrow poem, in fact, can be read as a direct challenge to Eliot, who had a far different view of the direction that poetry should take in the early 20th Century.
Roger Housden | Posted 08.26.2011
What is found there, in the realm of poetry, is what is so often passed over in daily life: the miraculous, the unexpected, the undreamt of. Poems are necessary because they honor the unknown, both in us and in the world.
Anis Shivani | Posted 06.03.2011
Here's another great selection of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for Spring of 2011.
Ming Holden | Posted 05.25.2011
"Active prayer": It's what I would term Claudia Rankine's response to a poem by Tony Hoagland that angered and offended many readers with a racist worldview and language.
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
We introduce three brilliant emerging poets, all with poetry books out in early 2011. They give us an intimate look at what these books mean for thei...
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
The question of influence is a tricky one in the literary realm, but surely, if there are undeniable progenitors of today's collective poetry output, these are the ones.
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
There's much to be excited about, and these selections give a fair indication of the presses putting out the most important poetry of the day and the degree of vitality of various poetic styles.
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
"Is American poetry at a dead-end? Have American poets betrayed the great legacy of modernism? Why or why not?
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
This seems to be a particularly angst-ridden moment for the followers of American poetry. Is it savagely alive, or is it a moribund corpse, having long been administered last rites?
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
Are the writers receiving the major awards and official recognition really the best writers today? Or are they overrated mediocrities with little claim to recognition by posterity?
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
What I tell my students is this: Don't read any living American writers. If you're going to read any American writers at all, only read dead ones. That way you can be sure you're not wasting your time.
Anis Shivani | Posted 05.25.2011
For years, the Best American Poetry series has been on a downward slope (using slope in the most generous sense of the word). For its 2009 edition, it seems to have reached a final resting point.
Mallory Yael Seegal | Posted 04.19.2012