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Posts by tag

Books

1061 posts
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Notturno by Gabriele D’Annunzio

  • Josh Cook
  • February 6, 2013
Gabriele D’Annunzio wrote Notturno on strips of paper big enough for just one line a piece, while his eyes were bandaged into near blindness, as he convalesced for over two…
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Butch Geography by Stacey Waite

  • Julie Marie Wade
  • February 5, 2013
Of all the stunning epigraphs Stacey Waite includes in Butch Geography—insights from William Carlos Williams and Judith Butler and Virginia Woolf—the most memorable and significant to me is the Japanese…
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Murder Ballad by Jane Springer

  • Kent Shaw
  • February 2, 2013
Because a book of poetry can do anything, I am going to propose that Jane Springer’s Murder Ballad open a hole in the Mississippi River. An impossible hole. Because the…
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Orphan Hours by Stanley Plumly

  • Andrew Field
  • February 1, 2013
Like a blue jay, thrush, or white-chested robin, darting in last light into leaves, twigs, or sky – after the rain, say, but before evening falls, when dark follows a…
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Dialogos: Paired Poems in Translation by George Kalogeris

  • Daniel Bosch
  • January 30, 2013
I Scene: The hilltop retreat of the ascetic Skepticus, high above the City. Small, uneven open space amid rocks, center. A rocky path leads upstage left, and, eventually, down the…
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  • Other

The Science of Silent Reading

  • Lauren O'Neal
  • January 28, 2013
In a New Yorker piece about how women became readers, Joan Acocella describes the moment St. Augustine saw “his mentor, Ambrose, the bishop of Milan, reading without moving his lips”: “His…
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Poets Beyond the Barricade by Dale M Smith

  • Barbara Berman
  • January 26, 2013
In Washington, D. C. many years ago, Denise Levertov took questions after a reading and was asked if poets were obligated to protest with poetry when their government was acting…
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Homebodies by Sarah Jane Sloat

  • Sally Rosen Kindred
  • January 25, 2013
If you open your hands to hold Homebodies, a chapbook of poems by Sarah J. Sloat, you find much about the book itself that makes the act feel personal, private.…
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Loud Dreaming in a Quiet Room by Betsy Wheeler

  • Weston Cutter
  • January 23, 2013
Betsy Wheeler’s Loud Dreaming in a Quiet Room has sort of undone me for the month and a half I’ve spent with it, reading it or letting it hang over…
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My Scarlet Ways by Tanya Larkin

  • Sean Singer
  • January 19, 2013
In age of poetry saturated with the irony and airy nonsense of the last phalanx of the grandchildren of the New York School, it is wonderfully refreshing to read Tanya…
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In Beauty Bright by Gerald Stern

  • Andrew Field
  • January 16, 2013
Having never read Gerald Stern’s poetry before, I took This Time: New and Selected Poems out from the library. The book won the National Book Award in 1998, and it…
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Counterpart by Elizabeth Robinson

  • Marisa Siegel
  • January 12, 2013
Marisa Siegel reviews Elizabeth Robinson’s Counterpart today in Rumpus Poetry.
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