[April is National Poetry Month, and
to celebrate I’ve highlighted a handful of poets, past and present, we should
all be reading. Leading up to this crowd-sourced post chock full o’ even more
poets to read—add yours in comments, please!]
First, I should
note that I didn’t get to highlight my own favorite American poet, Sarah
Piatt, in this week’s series. So, well, consider her highlighted!
Or my favorite
contemporary poet, Jericho
Brown!
I also can’t end
a series like this without highlighting the amazing poetry of my
FSU colleague and friend DeMisty D.
Bellinger!
For a lot more
National Poetry Month goodness, check out the International Poetry Circle
community organized by the wonderful poet Tara
Skurtu!
Other poets and
poems we should all read:
Bill
Waddell follows up Thursday’s
Li-Young Lee post, writing, “The Lee poem that lives most
warmly inside my head is ‘Persimmons,’ also from Rose. That is
an extraordinary book—deservedly still in print and popular thirty years on.”
Rob LeBlanc nominates
Philip Freneau; Charles Reznikoff; Anne Waldman; Ron Koertge; and Diane di Prima.
Anne Holub writes, “So I keep
coming back to my wee copy of Meditations in an Emergency lately. Frank O’Hara was a doctor, ya know.” She also shares this great
conversation with Montana poets about their own recommendations.
Jeff
Renye goes with Etheridge Knight’s “It
Was a Funky Deal.” He adds, “Stephen Crane, Black Riders and Other Lines; William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell; and T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets.” Rob
Velella seconds the Crane love.
Kent
Rose writes, “Though he's best-known as a musician, Dave
Alvin’s Any Rough Times Are Now Behind You is an excellent book of poetry.
Seferine Baez nominates “Faudet
and Leav—who show a modern romance between writers in
their not-so-subtle odes to one another, every volume showing a new side to
their relationship, which feels very conversational almost like they’re writing
letters to a lover they can’t quite let go of.”
Andrew DaSilva seconds Neruda and adds, “Walllace Stevens and his “Sunday
Morning” or “The
Snow Man”; Rainer Maria Rilke’s “The Panther”;
D.H Lawrence’s “Whales
Weep Not”; Frank O'Hara and his “To the
Harbormaster”; Hart Crane's White Buildings;
“The Diver” by Robert Hayden; Marsden Hartley's “Warblers”;
“Take Me Under
Your Wing” by Hayyim Bialik; anything by Theodore Roethke; “Mandalay” by Kipling; and lastly if ya wanna spice things up a bit and raise
a few eyebrows you can add Radovan
Karadzic, although a convicted war criminal he is an award-winning
and outstanding poet.”
Vince
Kling writes, “Since I'm a translator, I recommend above all
James
Merrill's magnificent ‘Lost in Translation,’ a poem
‘about’ translation as a way of understanding everything life tosses at us.
Passionate, elegant, witty, poignant. That said, I'll put in a plug for
translators now sneered and jeered at by later translators who can't hold a
candle to the older ones. I'm thinking of Scott
Moncrieff's rendering of Proust’s Remembrance
of Things Past. All subsequent ‘improvements’ are
unable to get away from his masterful version, responsive to every nuance of
irony and rhythm in language. And any translation from Russian by the now
supposedly discredited Constance
Garnett is better than anything that came after. I've got a little list, but just one more—Dante's Divine Comedy in the Dorothy
L. Sayers translation.”
Heidi
Kim nominates Jennifer Chang
and Gabrielle
Calvocoressi.
Kelly Stowell highlights James Nicola's "Curtailed Sonnet."
Kelly Stowell highlights James Nicola's "Curtailed Sonnet."
Vicki Ziegler, curator
of the wonderful #TodaysPoem community on Twitter, shares, “Abigail
Chabitnoy's How to Dress a Fish and Natalie Scenters-Zapico’s Lima :: Limón are freshly Griffin
Prize shortlisted—really getting into their
collections and think they would be good additions.”
Finally, the poets Paul
Brookes, Meg
Kearney, Amy King, Melisa Malvin, Adrian
Neibauer, Tom
Ratt, and Ron Tobey were
kind enough to engage with my Tweets on the week’s series, so I have to return
the favor!
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other poets you’d highlight?
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