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Reviews

760 posts
  • Features & Reviews
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  • Rumpus Original

I Used to be Epic Spittle

  • Jim Zukowski
  • April 27, 2012
It’s the project of the impossible, then, that makes Yau’s new collection so provocative and provoking, so worth reading, even for a reader’s or poet’s temperament that might be different…
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Held Together By Sinews

  • Kascha Semonovitch
  • April 25, 2012
Kinsella describes; he does not prescribe. He rests less comfortably in his retreat than Thoreau and without the surety that he lives an exemplary life.
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A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon

  • Sean Singer
  • April 20, 2012
I found this text to be profound, relentless, frustrating, inspiring, demanding, silly, pompous, elastic, and mind-expanding. That is what poetry is for, and this is for poetry.
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Unless You Land in Dhaka

  • Natalie Eilbert
  • April 18, 2012
Ahmed’s roots construct a more nuanced Americana, as we follow Ahmed through the industrial American cities where she calls herself citizen (read: “free”), to her always-estranged returns to Dhaka.
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I Have a Jaw That Seeks Chunks

  • Matthew Zingg
  • April 14, 2012
In Melissa Broder’s second collection, Meat Heart, there is a burgeoning tension between the spiritual life of the imagination and its blood and guts container—the forehead, the hips, the heart—that…
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The Body Place Is a Thinking Place

  • Gina Myers
  • April 13, 2012
From these two new books, the reader can gather that it isn't just the day that is strong and can withstand change, but the same words can be applied to the speakers of these poems and to Myles herself.
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Envy Never Sleeps

  • Chloe Joan Lopez
  • April 11, 2012
As if to heed Hecate’s rebuke, to show the dire glory of her art, Szporluk’s poems speak with a voice unhinged by an unyielding despair. Teeming with submerged violence and…
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Met a Lunatic on Craigslist

  • Ellen Miller-Mack
  • April 6, 2012
But even here, vertigo and ambivalence dominate, and I find myself searching the poems for the kinetic energy of a walker in the city; heel marks and muddy droplets. I…
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If I Squint, I See Them Clearly

  • Andrew McFadyen-Ketchum
  • April 4, 2012
With its host of defunct genomes, a rupturing cosmos, malevolent gods, a derelict body politic, and endless war, the poems in this collection act as harbingers of the wasteland America…
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The Penguin Anthology of 20th Century American Poetry

  • Barbara Berman
  • March 31, 2012
It is clear from Dove’s introduction to the anthology, and from her selections, that she just wanted an engaging, informative, high -quality collection. She succeeded.
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An Inverted World of Trees and Trembling Sky

  • Lisa Wells
  • March 30, 2012
At its best, After the Point of No Return gives us just what we hope to find: poems that wrestle with mortality, retrace the steps of a life, and take…
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Tell Me She Is Happy With Her Life

  • Eric Smith
  • March 28, 2012
In this collection, Chaple successfully fuses the personal with the spatial. As a result, an awareness of the way poems, by airing out the rooms of stanzas, can provide at…
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