poetry
-

The Sunday Rumpus Essay: Fall
We are always falling, all the time, under the sway of one another, in and out of love.
-

The Robot Scientist’s Daughter by Jeannine Hall Gailey
Mary McMyne reviews Jeannine Hall Gailey’s The Robot Scientist’s Daughter today in Rumpus Poetry.
-

When Poets Ate Peacock
The New Yorker recalls the night that Ezra Pound and William Butler Yeats met over a dinner of peacock, and examines the role of public relations in the life of a poet.
-

Bigfoot for Women by Amy Pickworth
Melissa Adamo reviews Amy Pickworth’s Bigfoot for Women today in Rumpus Poetry.
-

Hypnos by René Char Translated by Mark Hutchinson
Patrick James Dunagan reviews Mark Hutchinson’s translation of René Char’s Hypnos today in Rumpus Poetry.
-

Storm Toward Morning by Malachi Black
Phillip B. Williams reviews Malachi Black’s Storm Toward Morning today in Rumpus Poetry.
-

The Joys of Reading Jorie
At the New York Times, Dwight Garner reviews Jorie Graham’s new collected, From the New World: 1976-2014. Graham is a giant of American poetry, and the volume follows her career as the margins drift in and out, the trees indicate…
-

Resurrection Party by Michalle Gould
Katherine Frain reviews Michalle Gould’s Resurrection Party today in Rumpus Poetry.
-

The Rumpus Interview with Susanne Paola Antonetta
Poet and memoirist Susanne Paola Antonetta discusses literary bias, feminism, and the origin of her nom de plume.
-

David Biespiel’s Poetry Wire: A Scream of Consciousness
Poetry is an art spoken, as if sung, in relation to other human beings.
-

The Rumpus Interview with Danez Smith
Poet Danez Smith discusses advocacy, translating spoken poetry for the page, and his new collection [Insert] Boy.
-

Red Flower, White Flower by Jennifer Tseng
Aaminah Shakur reviews Jennifer Tseng’s Red Flower, White Flower today in Rumpus Poetry.