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Nick Twemlow
Three days of year-end lists: Tuesday
The National Book Critics Circle is doing it. So is Third Factory with Attention Span 2007. The New York Times even found a way to include a few poetry titles in theirs. What are we talking about? End-of-year book lists. This week on Harriet, we’re rolling out three such lists, beginning with recommendations from staff of the Poetry Foundation. Today, you’ll find selections from several Poetry magazine contributors. We'll conclude with the current Harriet writers weighing-in on their favorites for 2007 (and in some cases, from years past). Happy New Year! Poetry magazine contributors’ picks
This brings Silliman’s major early works back into print. These long poems were eye-opening when they appeared and they are still striking examples of a radical and original use of form in poetry. The title is a bit deceptive here. These serial poems have the sonic beauty we associate with the lyric but they also spin out tenuous, delicate narratives. They sometimes have the feel of fairy-tales, even as the characters that populate them are propelled through the spreading disaster areas of the world. Ripple Effect This collection adds some sharp new poems to a generous sample of Equi’s work from 1978 through the present. Her poems are mischievous, sly, and “slant” in Dickinson’s sense of that word. Necessary Stranger The poems in Foust’s third collection are cockeyed shards of sound that spin, dazzle, and cut. He “defamiliarizes” like nobody’s business. The Outernationale Gizzi’s poems reach persistently for what comes to seem like the ghost of the beauty of the world.
Jackson Mac Low (1922-2004) opened doors to places that poetry had not yet been. This substantial selection (450 pages), edited by Anne Tardos, with a pub date still a few weeks away, is the ideal introduction to his work. Mac Low didn’t write the “best” poems; he would have rejected that category, ¬but he did his best to challenge assumptions and invent not just new forms but new possibilities for poetry. A number of other North American poets published books in the past year, that, like Mac Low, take directions both unexpected and, perhaps more valuable, unexpectable. These books, among a number of others that have crossed my desk since December 2006 (including many books in translation and from Europe and South America that I didn’t include here), provide a context for my choice, for Mac Low is part of an ever-changing constellation, which this past year includes: Bruce Andrews, Swoon Noir (Chax Press)
I know this book came out two years ago, but discovering it stands out as one of the best things that happened to me in 2007. On reading it, I felt what I can only describe as violent joy. Davis’ poems are savagely intelligent, wicked in their intent, uncompromising in their dark humor, and spare no one. The book is, quite simply, shocking in its originality and
My favorite book of 2007, the one I keep returning to again and again, is Rafael Campo’s The Enemy. Campo, the pinpoint lyricist, takes an unflinching look at the deceptions necessary for war, the weaknesses it reveals and disguises as glory. Battles within the body, clashes of landscape and culture, wars of mindset and madness—Campo
Driftwood is a book-length poem by one of the most prominent contemporary Chinese poets, a senior writer who began his first important work, Death of a Stone Cell, during a bombardment of Taiwan in 1965. In describing his own work, Lo Fu writes, “It sums up my experience of exile, my artistic explorations, my metaphysics.” John Balcolm has delivered an excellent translation here of a book that hopefully will be widely read. Comments |
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Christian BökStephen Burt Daisy Fried Rigoberto González Major Jackson Reginald Shepherd A.E. Stallings STAFF WRITERS
Michael MarcinkowskiEd Park Fred Sasaki Don Share Elizabeth Stigler Nick Twemlow Emily Warn PREVIOUS WRITERS
Kwame DawesKenneth Goldsmith Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Patricia Smith Rachel Zucker RECENT COMMENTS
Evidence, But of What?, a Mini-Essay on Form (6)more scots, less porn (8) The Anatomy of Pleasure (16) Happy Birthday, George Gordon, Lord Byron (4) The Nude Formalism (6) RECENT POSTS
Evidence, But of What?, a Mini-Essay on Form (Daisy Fried)Illness and Poetry (Reginald Shepherd) The Bride-Choosing (Daisy Fried) Good Night, Sweet Ladies: A Thought About Slightness (Daisy Fried) The Anatomy of Pleasure (Daisy Fried) CATEGORY ARCHIVE
Poetry magazineAWP Arts Awards Biography Books Criticism Distribution Education Film Music Obituaries Outrageous Photographs Poems Poetry Out Loud Poetry and the Internet Politics Readings TV poetryfoundation.org AUTHOR ARCHIVES
Christian BökStephen Burt Kwame Dawes Daisy Fried Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Major Jackson Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Ed Park Fred Sasaki Reginald Shepherd Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Nick Twemlow Emily Warn Rachel Zucker Subscribe to the RSS feed. ![]() What is RSS? |

