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Poetry

2370 posts
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Troy, Unincorporated by Francesca Abbate

  • Barbara Berman
  • August 8, 2012
The good news about Troy, Unincorporated by Francesca Abbate, is that though it is a re-imagination of Chaucer’s “Troilus and Criseyde” from his Canterbury Tales, you don’t have to have…
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Butcher’s Tree by Feng Sun Chen

  • David Peak
  • August 3, 2012
Take the omniscience and time-weary voice of myths, add in the best parts of fables, namely the anthropomorphic language and the supernatural weirdness, ground it in some extremely compelling poetry, and you’re still nowhere near what’s happening in this book.
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Partyknife by Dan Magers

  • Matthew Zingg
  • August 1, 2012
When James Wright said, “I have wasted my life,” Dan Magers must haven taken it to heart.
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Scared Text by Eric Baus

  • Julie Brooks Barbour
  • July 27, 2012
A metamorphosis occurs among the prose poems of Eric Baus’ collection, Scared Text, winner of the Colorado Prize for Poetry. We are the audience, the spectators, but also part of…
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  • Poetry

Where I’m Reading: Milk Bar

  • Josh Lefkowitz
  • July 26, 2012
It’s Saturday morning, and so I’m sitting in a coffee shop which is in relative close proximity to my apartment. I’ve been going to coffee shops on Saturday mornings for…
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Advice for Lovers by Julian Talamantez Brolaski

  • T Fleischmann
  • July 25, 2012
“A rose is arrows is eros,” as one poem has it, and who is to argue? Love and lyricism are all the better for their queerness. Brolaski, with a powerfully trans poetic, instructs us on just this fact, cloying power dynamics, pulling hair, and refusing any of the quaint old boundaries.
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  • Poetry

Happy Release Day!

  • Brian Spears
  • July 24, 2012
If you’re a member of the Rumpus Poetry Book Club (and if you aren’t, here you go), then you should have received your copy of Leigh Stein’s Dispatch From the…
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  • Poetry

Where I’m Reading

  • Mary Mann
  • July 23, 2012
Editor’s Note: Back in June, I made a video for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club. I read a poem from our June selection, Allan Peterson’s Fragile Acts among the people…
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Black Square by Tadeusz Dąbrowski

  • Jim Zukowski
  • July 20, 2012
To say the least, the speaker in the collection works hard to figure himself out in relation to philosophical, religious, and spiritual matters, and while some American readers may find such a project quaint, naïve, or retro, it holds power because the speaker, no matter his tone or particular mood, remains piercingly perceptive and unabashedly honest.
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Paradise, Indiana by Bruce Snider

  • James Crews
  • July 18, 2012
It’s gratifying that Bruce Snider dwells in the past without so much as a hint of nostalgia, that he offers up both the beauty and devastation of small-town Indiana.
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I Am Your Slave Now Do What I Say by Anthony Madrid

  • Virginia Konchan
  • July 14, 2012
If this collection didn’t have one again questioning the origin and provenance of poetry (other than the intellect or empirical self), the poems would be getting short shrift.
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Madness, Rack, and Honey by Mary Ruefle

  • Lisa Wells
  • July 13, 2012
Madness, Rack, and Honey is a gift from a rigorous intellect, unflinching critic, and a big old sloppy heart. Ruefle has created a work of poetry from the daunting task of writing about it.
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