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Posts by tag

Reviews

760 posts
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
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  • Rumpus Original

A Busted Advent Calendar

  • Jeannine Hall Gailey
  • January 20, 2012
The Weary World Rejoices has its unadorned moments of grief, punctuated by moments of energetic wit and intelligent levity.
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There Are More Knowzits Than Ever

  • Sean Singer
  • January 18, 2012
Coleman’s work is functional and communal; she wields the oral tradition in a way that reflects her poetry ancestry—the blues queen, Koko Taylor, for example, or the fringe Beat genius,…
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The Short History of Summer

  • MIchelle Gillett
  • January 14, 2012
Innovation is at the heart of these poems, and King’s ability to see through the surface to the deeper and often disconnected intricacies of life make them pleasurable and powerful…
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Manifests Both Terror and Dis-Ease

  • Spenser Davis
  • January 13, 2012
What is a woman’s place in a world full of overwhelmingly masculine ideas and works? Marthe Reed, in her newest book of poetry, Gaze, examines the many intersections between women…
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Blizzard Over Bosphorous

  • David Peak
  • January 11, 2012
A Fire-Proof Box is a porous work, languages overlapped, breathing, an English translation that manages to capture the icy weight of classically “Russian” sensibilities.
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A Sunny Day is a Sufficient Cathedral

  • Virginia Konchan
  • January 6, 2012
The book’s strongest moments are often its quietest, as when the complexity of the speaker’s engagement with himself and the world is repulsed or rerouted by automatic prompts and alienation.
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Synapses Erupt Like Sparrows

  • Kascha Semonovitch
  • January 4, 2012
In Sancta, divinity irradiates. The afterlife approaches nuclear, dangerous and fascinating, a mysterium tremendum fascinans that can kill you with overexposure.
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The Garden, Disseminated, Overgrown

  • Chloe Joan Lopez
  • December 30, 2011
Out of reverence for the body’s irreducibility, Mort’s keeps strictly close to the phenomenal world, thereby freeing her imagination to honor all the body’s modes: five-fold sensuality, hunger as well…
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These Veins of Leaf, Hand, Storm and Stream

  • Barbara Berman
  • December 23, 2011
Ideally, critics and teachers are humbled by their vocations and the artistry the vocations expose them to, encouraging effort to stay fresh , emotionally resonant and intellectually worthwhile. Say yes…
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Somewhere Below the Solar Plexus of Her

  • Julie Brooks Barbour
  • December 21, 2011
What does it take for a person to kill a living thing, then a human being? Why are the truths of war silenced?
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It’s Pigsty I

  • T Fleischmann
  • December 14, 2011
Nomura plays with language in radical and diverse ways, employing subtleties of rhythm, semantics, image, gender, punctuation, and repetition, often all within the same short stanza.
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O Circular Philosopher

  • Alexis Orgera
  • December 9, 2011
The field is integral, too, to Dan Beachy-Quick’s Circle’s Apprentice—the field of vision, field of the empty page and of the populated page, field of self/ body/maker, absence of field.…
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