For Marilyn Monroe's Birthday: "Pressure and Heat"
Marilyn the Tortoise, was bequeathed to my brothers and me in '69 by our drug-dealing Cuban building superintendent who, running one step ahead of the...
Marilyn the Tortoise, was bequeathed to my brothers and me in '69 by our drug-dealing Cuban building superintendent who, running one step ahead of the...
Seth Abramson | Posted 05.22.2012
This month, the series focuses on just two collections: works of such extraordinary merit that they require a longer-than-usual treatment: Peter Gizzi's Threshold Songs and Dean Young's Bender: New and Selected Poems.
Seth Abramson | Posted 06.01.2012
If there is something singularly grandiose, didactic, and even preposterous about A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon it must forgiven in light of the fact that its author believes all he writes
Julie Chae | Posted 04.30.2012
As New York began to rebuild from September 11, 2001 and move into the 21st century, a new wave of younger people became successful art dealers. Scott Zieher and Andrea Smith helped lead the way.
Seth Abramson | Posted 04.23.2012
There is an inimitable deftness of language in Jericho Brown's work; the level of torque and tension in these lines is enough to snap the neck of even the most jaded reader of contemporary poetry.
Seth Abramson | Posted 04.02.2012
Brigitte Byrd's cerebral prose poems are couched in an air of hyper-rationality that belies their visceral energy.
Seth Abramson | Posted 03.21.2012
Equal parts allegorical, rhetorical, and anecdotal, Yes, Master is -- the cover art compels a sports metaphor -- not a touchdown. It's not a touchdown because it's far more than that.
Seth Abramson | Posted 02.18.2012
Under Virga, Joe Amato (Chax Press, 2006). This glorious mess is an exhausting but also exhilarating archive of language and metalanguage.
Seth Abramson | Posted 01.30.2012
Those of us who've long been enamored with Rae Armantrout should do better at letting others in on the secret: This poet is the sort of Master whose poetics can inform, instruct, and inspire an entire generation of writers.
Seth Abramson | Posted 12.17.2011
The aim of this ongoing review series is to highlight superlative books of poetry from the last 10 years. Each entry offers an unranked, non-exhaustive list of such collections comprised of brief descriptions of each text and an excerpt.
Seth Abramson | Posted 11.13.2011
These are simply books which achieve excellence in some manner or another, and which consequently (in the view of this author) deserve a wider audience.
Anis Shivani | Posted 08.02.2011
Poetry contests are about the only remaining way to publish a first poetry book. And that's one way poetry is being killed in this country, reduced to consensus-by-committee, stripped of individual vision.
blogs.publishersweekly.com | Posted 05.25.2011
In the January issue of Poetry Magazine (which does not yet seem to be posted online, but which has already arrived in the mailboxes of print subscrib...
John Lundberg | Posted 11.17.2011
In a strange marriage of poetry and sports, Wimbledon has appointed a "Championships Poet" to help celebrate the world's most prestigious tennis event.
Travis Nichols | Posted 05.25.2011
Memory has generated great poems from Simonides, famous for eulogizing ancient Greek nobility, to Coleridge, to the contemporary poets writing an "experiment in collective autobiography," The Grand Piano.
Michele Somerville | Posted 06.01.2012