Essay

Summer Reads

Some of our favorite recent features from poetryfoundation.org

BY The Editors

Originally Published: August 20, 2013
Image of children reading and playing on the beach

The dog days of summer are upon us. In some circles, that means time for cheap-thrills beach reads. In ours, it means time for poetry of all kinds. Here we've pulled together some of our favorite essays from the past year—ranging from a fascinating essay on an influential but little-known editor named Ronald Lane Latimer and a lively exploration of poetry’s first lines to a terrific appreciation of the poet Rachel Wetzsteon. We have also made them available as a downloadable eBook you can explore at your leisure.

“Good poems weird the truth, rearrange it, re-present it, cause us to re-envision the past,” writes Camille Dungy in her wonderful craft essay. We hope these slanted views bring you enjoyment and much to think about during the days ahead.

 
 

Essay
Mystery Man

For a few years in the 1930s, Ronald Lane Latimer struck gold as an editor, publishing Stevens, Williams, and more. Then he disappeared.
by Ruth graham

 

Essay
Tell It Slant

How to write a wise poem.
by Camille T. Dungy

 

Essay
Left Behind

Can poetry comfort the grieving?
by Joy Katz

 

Essay
Where Shall I Begin?

Inspiration and instruction in poetry’s first lines.
by Jessica Greenbaum

 

Essay
Not Quite

Why Rachel Wetzsteon is her generation’s best love poet.
by Adam Kirsch

 

Essay
Rumors of the Stars

Why would a poet try to immortalize gossip?
by Austin Allen

 

Essay
See What You Miss by Being Dead?

Elegy for a suicide in Matt Rasmussen’s Black Aperture.
by Kathleen Rooney

 

Essay
Lost at Sea

Why shipwrecks have engaged the poetic imagination for centuries.
by Casey N. Cep

 
 
This article was updated on August 13th, 2014. 
 

The editorial staff of the Poetry Foundation. See the Poetry Foundation staff list and editorial team masthead.

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