Hi friends, it was a pleasure to review of Valerie Mejer Caso’s rich and extraordinary This Blue Novel; my piece on it is up now at Poetry Northwest.
Category Archives: poetry
Review of Valerie Mejer Caso’s “This Blue Novel” at Poetry Northwest
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New Publication: Review of Erica Mena and Robert Fernandez
Hey folks, new review of Erica Mena’s Featherbone (Ricochet) and Robert Fernandez’s Pink Reef (Canarium) up this morning at Jacket2.
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New Publication: on Corina Copp and Ben Fama
Hey folks— my review of Corina Copp’s The Green Ray and Ben Fama’s Fantasy is up now in the new Kenyon Review Online. Enjoy!
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New Poems in The Stockholm Review of Literature
A batch of my poems are online now in the decentered and uncanny journal The Stockholm Review of Literature. Much gratitude to the editors. (While you’re there, please also discover and adore Andy Stallings’ excerpts from his book-length sequence Paradise.)
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New Publication: on Emily Wilson and Julie Carr
Dear follower-friends, happy to share that Kenyon Review Online recently published my review of Emily Wilson’s The Great Medieval Yellows and Julie Carr’s Think Tank. Enjoy!
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New Publication: a Review of Norman Dubie’s “The Quotations of Bone”
My review of Norman Dubie’s zillionth book of poems, The Quotations of Bone, is up now over at Poetry Northwest.
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#tbt: review of Samuel Amadon, Daniel Groves, Elizabeth Willis
Here’s a 2011-or-so piece I published online with Poetry Northwest that seems to have since dematerialized from their webspace. Enjoy.
Amadon, Samuel. Like a Sea. USA: University of Iowa Press, 2010.
Groves, Daniel. The Lost Boys. USA: University of Georgia Press, 2010.
Willis, Elizabeth. Address. USA: Wesleyan University Press, 2011.
HEADLANDS AND HEADSTONES: NEW BOOKS BY SAMUEL AMADON, DANIEL GROVES, AND ELIZABETH WILLIS
Robert Frost once asserted that the poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom—“the figure is the same as for love.” Samuel Amadon’s Like a Sea and Daniel Groves’s The Lost Boys, both debut collections, express delight through very different temperaments, and conclude (if that’s the right word) in wildly divergent sorts of intelligence. In her fifth book, Address, Elizabeth Willis delights in juxtaposition and slippage, seeming wiser through an adamant refusal of book-smarts.
A first look at Samuel Amadon’s poetry suggests the academic, ambiguous, “well-wrought” American poetry of the 1940s and 50s. You can hear Wallace Stevens in his inquisitive, investigative language:
Were I to ask where you were staying
would that be what moves our conversation
beyond whether repetition
has more to offer than repetition
will be enough when I say
it has been enough is not enough… (20)
But, as this quotation suggests, his syntax is oddly-wrought and tricky; his poems hazard more than they assert. What is enoughness, in speech, understanding, acquaintance? The tercets Amadon is fond of (also Stevens-y at first look) wobble beneath the reader like three-legged stools, preventing her from feeling entirely stable or balanced within the poems. This imbalance is most pleasurable when it matches the poems’ logical upsets, the back-and-forth of Amadon’s continuous present:
I could not sound like anyone to anyone,
but often meant to almost (as
rocking is from weaving) sound
local, as there should be more
local, I started staying here, how-
ever I sounded saying
I can be here again, saying it over
in a way so it piled, in a way
piling, as we cannot see it
ending, where it is from, the reason for
it is in fact frightening
to hear so much anywhere in anyone (39).
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Interview with Maggie Nelson at The Conversant
My interview with the author of The Argonauts, The Art of Cruelty and Bluets is in great company: the entire new issue of The Conversant is full of interviewers (Caryl Pagel, Andy Fitch) I admire and interviewees (Kiki Petrosino) I adore. Thanks to the editors for accepting the piece.
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New Perch
Hey folks, thank you to Kevin Craft for offering me a contributing editor role at the nimble yet distinguished journal Poetry Northwest. I’m gonna be contributing reviews and essays, as well as keeping a regular column on their blog on poetry and poetics.
Here’s my first post at Poetry Northwest, a reflection on one of my very favorite poets, Mei Mei Berssenbrugge (thank you to Melissa and Cassie for the conversations that grew into these thoughts).
And here, just for the hell of it, is a photo of Mei Mei Berssenbrugge:
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