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New Books In Poetry

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PAUL KILLEBREW Ethical Consciousness CANARIUM BOOKS, 2013

In Paul Killebrew’s latest book of poems, Ethical Consciousness (Canarium Books, 2013), the speaker inhabits the everyday structures of our lives, but responds to those structures in an entirely uncommon way. For Killebrew, his severe poetic lines (which he explains the origins of), once latched together create poems that act like tire-irons that the poet

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JOSHUA EDWARDS Imperial Nostalgias UGLY DUCKLING PRESSE 2013

Joshua Edwards new book and its title, Imperial Nostalgias (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2013), hint at a yearning for a lost world all of us helped to destroy or at the very least forgot. While tipping his hat to the social sciences throughout the book, Imperial Nostalgias is cunningly personal: each page is an intimate window

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LAUREN GORDON Fiddle is Flood BLOOD PUDDING PRESS 2015

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, instead she allows the speaker to become loss, become grief, and quake at the shock

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ELIZA GRISWOLD I am a Beggar of the World: Landays from Contemporary Afghanistan FARRAR STRAUS AND GIROUX 2014

In my dream, I am the president. When I awake, I am a beggar of the world. The landay represents an oral tradition of a mostly illiterate people. It is a dirge, a calling out to, that is specific to each woman who sings it. Even within the confines of an unwavering regime, life finds

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DAVID BIESPIEL Charming Gardeners UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS 2013

David Biespiels Charming Gardeners (University of Washington Press, 2013) is unlike any book Ive read in a long time. Filled with epistolary poems, his book despite being populated by the poets friends and family is actually a work of great loneliness. In many ways, Biespiels journey is Americas, where the road is both a symbol

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MARY RUEFLE Trances of the Blast WAVE BOOKS 2013

Mary Ruefle’s newest book of poems Trances of the Blast (Wave Books, 2013) is brilliant. Her poems have the confidence of a poet who is utterly fearless, but wise enough to never come out and brag about it. Her poetry is honest, but dignified, thoughtful and bizarre, and with a fidelity to lived experience that

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STEPHEN BURT Belmont GRAYWOLF PRESS 2013

Belmont (Graywolf Press, 2013) is a book of poems written by both a grownup and a child and each seem quite aware of the other. This split-consciousness, if you will, hangs around most of the poems, but not in a tense or obvious way, but from afar, after one has put the book down. Belmont

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DON SHARE Wishbone BLACK SPARROW 2012

Like great critics, the poetry of great editors is often overlooked, but I dont see how this can be the case with Don Share, whose work is too good to be ignored. A brilliant combination of the public and private, meshed together by a dark intuitive music, his poems brawl in ways that will startle

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JAMES LONGENBACH The Virtues of Poetry GRAYWOLF PRESS 2013

James Longenbachs The Virtues of Poetry (Graywolf Press, 2013) is not interested in the vices or failures found in some poems, so his concerns are not necessarily moral ones, but instead, as the title of the book suggests, he is interested in understanding what makes a particular poem (and poet for that matter) flourish, and

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JAMES FRANCO Directing Herbert White GRAYWOLF PRESS 2014

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, and a repertoire of imagery that is both tender and violent. Franco is our poet

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