7 Books Of Poetry Worth Curling Up With
Gardening In The Dark
This book contains, among many other wonderful things, the greatest poem ever written about spring break, which begins, "I'm sixteen in the Bahamas. A drunk girl/ on a balcony in a sundress/ with a pina colada." Kasischke's verses walk that perfect Plathian line between the everyday making macaroni and cheese,
- Loh and Behold
Avant-garde murals and imaginative furnishings characterise a new Singapore hotel - Identity Parade
An iconic style magazine marks its quarter century - Summits of Style
Esoteric treatments in a minimalist setting - A Starflyer Is Born
In-flight comfort with an internet connection in every seat - Take a Hike
Destinations to restore your sense of wonder
Where Shall I Wander
Some poets thunder and some poets sing. Ashbery just talks, sifting through the verbal detritus of civilization and making fascinating sculptures out of what he finds. His poems register pain, but at a distance, transformed into a funny wistfulness, as if it all happened a couple of years and a couple of good martinis ago: "It's really quite a thrill/ when the moon rises above the hill/ and you've gotten over someone/ salty and mercurial, the only person you ever loved."
Bosh And Flapdoodle
"I'm largely a big joke: if somebody else/ doesn't make a crack about me, I do." You can be charmed by Ammons' self-effacement, but don't be fooled by it. His poems, framed in ordinary language and couched in stately couplets, are twisty and testy, bawdy and funny. This is Ammons' last book he died in 2001 at the age of 75 and you have a sense of him getting in his last licks, with no time left for politeness. "Do with the obvious," he advises, "little lies behind it."
Pennyweight Windows
it takes guts to write more poems about peace, war, God and children, but Revell's are so fresh, it's as if he's the first person ever to do it. He makes you feel how painfully near grace and redemption are at all times, and yet how unattainable. "If you know the taste of your own heart and like it," he writes, "Come into the woods to the red house/ Whose windows explode from the walls and wash/ Me clean."
Minsk
Reading Minsk is like stumbling on the tribal songs of some as-yet-undocumented Arctic people: "Here, the bedrock is older than life/ on earth. It carries no trace of death,/ no methane or anthracite, nothing to burn." Greenlaw's poems are dreams of travel and longing for home. They have the clarity and purity one associates with cold air which makes her rare outbursts of joy and heat and light all the more dazzling.
Overlord
"This morning before dawn no stars I try again." In Overlord the title comes from the Allied code name for D-day we find Graham deep in prayer, to whom and for what she isn't sure. But her poems, which mix autobiography and World War II documentary, struggle to come to terms with the raw human realities of war: "The experience of killing and getting killed."
Collected Poems 1943-2004
Unlike his artsier colleagues, Wilbur isn't afraid to bust a rhyme or two, and his tent is a big one: this volume includes children's poems and even show tunes. Always charming, Wilbur is a consoler, not a wallower, who offers those rare and most unfashionable commodities, beauty and pleasure.
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