New Books in Poetry

Interview with Poets about their New Books

Arts
276
Janice A. Lowe, “LEAVING CLE: Poems of Nomadic ...
“Poems of Nomadic Dispersal” This latter phrase in the title of Janice A. Lowe‘s new book–LEAVING CLE: Poems of Nomadic Dispersal (Miami University Press, 2016)– has hung around me, following me through my home,
44 min
277
Rodrigo Toscano, “Explosion Rocks Springfield” ...
What is explosion? What does language look like when it mimics a gas leak, a bang, or rubble? What does language look like when it orbits other sounds, mediums, and musicality? How can it then react to and converse with itself?
46 min
278
Paul Rouzer, “On Cold Mountain: A Buddhist Read...
Paul Rouzer‘s new book offers a Buddhist reading of a famous collection of poems and the author associated with them, both of which were called Hanshan, or Cold Mountain. On Cold Mountain: A Buddhist Reading of the Hanshan Poems (University of Washingt...
62 min
279
Simon Critchley, “ABC of Impossibility” (Univoc...
From its opening fragment on “Fragments” to its “Possibly dolorous tropical lyrical coda,” Simon Critchley‘s new book is a pleasure to hold in the hand and the mind. ABC of Impossibility (Univocal Publishing,
64 min
280
Tina Escaja, “Free Fall/Caida libre” (Fomite Pr...
Tina Escaja‘s, Free Fall/Caida libre, translated by Mark Eisner (Fomite Press, 2015), is an exceptional example of poetry in translation as artistic collaboration. Poetry exists outside of the margins, and this often creates an insurmountable task for ...
42 min
281
James Franco, “Directing Herbert White” (Grayw...
Every poet has their obsessions and for James Franco they are childhood, gender, sex, innocence, and the work place he knows best: the film industry. Within these poetic frames we’re introduced to various voices, landscapes nearly worn out with elegy,
85 min
282
Mary Meriam, Lillian Faderman, Amy Lowell, “Lad...
In Lady of the Moon (Headmistress Press, 2015), the reader is graced not only with the poetry of Amy Lowell, but with sonnets in response and a scholarly essay on the poet’s life, love, and work. Amy Lowell lived and wrote in a time when she could not ...
44 min
283
Marisa Crawford, “Big Brown Bag” (Gazing Grain...
Winner of the Gazing Grain 2015 Chapbook contest, BIG BROWN BAGby Marisa Crawford is our final Chapbookapalooza installment. And what a way to end a glorious month of celebrating this small form. Set within the behind-the-scenes confines a fictional de...
11 min
284
Anders Carlson-Wee, “Dynamite” (Bull City Press...
Dynamite (Bull City Press, 2015) is transit distilled. Anders Carlson-Wee‘s poems employ movement as mechanism and movement as reverence in a journey that most dream of making yet few ever do. On a cross-country train trip,
14 min
285
Lynn Strongin, “The Burn Poems” (Headmistress ...
When Denise Levertov called Lynn Strongin a “true poet,” she recognized an awareness that transcended the young poet’s age. This very human awareness can come with suffering. Inflicted with Polio as a child,
19 min
286
Alexis Rhone Fancher, “State of Grace: The Jo...
Alexis Rhone Fancher‘s State of Grace: The Joshua Elegies (KYSO Flash Press, 2015) is not an “easy” collection. This is not a group of poems that you can take on the train for mere entertainment or to pass the time.
10 min
287
Hope Wabuke, “Movement No. 1: Trains” (Dancing...
The poem fragments in Hope Wabuke‘s Movement No. 1: Trains (Dancing Girl Press, 2015) function more as meditations than portions of a whole. They meditate on movement’s power over the body and mind. What are the vessels that carry our bodies through ci...
11 min
288
Lauren Gordon, “Fiddle is Flood” (Blood Puddi...
In her macabre pastoral landscape Fiddle is Flood (Blood Pudding Press, 2015), Lauren Gordon conjures up a persona far-reaching enough to grapple with loss, grief, and the shock of intense change. But the poet does not hide behind the personal,
7 min
289
Tim Tomlinson, “Yolanda: An Oral History in Ver...
Think of a place you have visited and to which you feel a connection. Now think of that place in utter ruin and devastation mere months later. You feel a pull, a pull to return, to help, and to make sense of the heavy fist nature can bring down on...
14 min
290
Metta Sama, “le animal and other creatures” (M...
As pleasing to the eye as it is to the ear the contents of Meta Sama‘s le animal and other creatures (Miel Press, 2015) remind us that creativity takes many forms and seeks many tributaries out to the sea of expression.
17 min
291
Suzanne Bottelli, “The Feltville Formation” (Fi...
When I first read Suzanne Bottelli‘s The Feltville Formation (Finishing Line Press, 2015), I was struck by the quietude and steadiness of the poems. Often in tercets, the stanzas stand like columns seeking to rebuild what was once strong.
12 min
292
Ross White, “How We Came Upon the Colony” (Un...
With air-tight verse and talent for the surreal, Ross White invokes a sibling version of our world in his new collection How We Came Upon the Colony (Unicorn Press, 2014). By tilting our view slightly to the left,
20 min
293
Ryo Yamaguchi, “The Refusal of Suitors” (Noemi ...
Does form make the poem? Robert Frost claimed that writing free verse poetry was “like playing tennis without a net.” Ryo Yamaguchi‘s poetry challenges the notion of imposing our will and wonders after the permeability of content.
39 min
294
Mariahadessa Ekere Tallie, “Dear Continuum: Le...
Poetry is far more than crafting verse. Poetry is a way of thought and a way of being. It seeps into every aspect of a poet’s life only to reveal that it is the life that seeped into poetry. In a series of letters penned to “Continuum,
30 min
295
Karina Borowicz, “Proof” (Codhill Press, 2014)
Karina Borowicz‘s collection Proof (Codhill Press, 2014) in three parts is a slow emerging, a crawling toward understanding. In a way that only the patience of adulthood looking back on adolescence can muster,
33 min
296
Brett Fletcher Lauer and Lynn Melnick, eds. “Pl...
Four years in the making, Brett Fletcher Lauer and Lynn Melnick have released an anthology into the hands of a new generation of readers, writers, and listeners. Please Excuse This Poem: 100 Poets for the Next Generation (Viking,
40 min
297
Daniel Tiffany, “My Silver Planet: A Secret His...
Mass-produced, fake, sentimental, easily digestible: when we think of kitsch these elements often come to mind. Furthermore, kitsch is almost always associated with material culture, but in Daniel Tiffany‘s new book,
34 min
298
Rachel Mennies, “The Glad Hand of God Points Ba...
To read this collection is to enter into a world of dimly lit rooms with candle light shimmering off errant metallic surfaces. It is mystical, it is brutal, and it unflinchingly stares down a history that some folks block out to merely survive the day....
39 min
299
Rountable on the Poetry of Xu Lizhi
When Xu Lizhi committed suicide on September 30, 2014, he left a substantial body of work for his brief 24 years. In his poetry, he displayed an awareness that haunted him and now haunts us. He was a factory worker for the infamous Foxconn who produces...
50 min
300
Ailish Hopper, “Dark Sky Society” (New Issues P...
I won’t say Ailish Hopper‘s collection Dark~Sky Society (New Issues Press, 2014) is “about” anything because that would do it a disservice. These poems are human. They move like legs on a street, like a mind at work that calls you to ruminate with it.
44 min