“I think avant-garde fiction has already gone the way of poetry. And it’s become involuted and forgotten the reader. Put it this way, there are a few really good poets who suffered because of the desiccation and involution of poetry, but for the most part I think American poetry has gotten what it’s deserved. And, uh, it’ll come awake again when poets start speaking to people who have to pay the rent.”
At Paper Cuts, in a general discussion of poetry’s threatened relevance in the U.S., the words of David Foster Wallace enters the conversation (quoted above.)