News Archive
NEWS ARCHIVE
- November 2009
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November 2009
11.02.09
The Heliot with your judgments: Eliot letters suggest he's nicer than previously thought.
OK, Lorca reporters: less talking, more digging.
Campion's Keats insufficiently goofy. Cute, though.
Alan Bennett on Auden, Britten, and hunting snark.
Cork Literary Review goes hardcover.
Duffy's children's poetry book "regurgitates phenomena phenomenally."
On a dying body of poetry.
The Verb takes on Renga.
Wheatley on what Scots jot.
Motion writes movingly on Hiroshima.
11.03.09
The Waste Land left him wasted.
When Ashbery met Freilicher.
Finally, an update on Tam O’Shanter’s Augustan Digression.
“The street suddenly disappeared, political systems evaporated, the day became timeless, I met eternity, poetry woke up”: Zagajewski on Rilke.
Poetry speaks. But will it speak to you, o Interweb?
The Sweeney sweep.
To the Poemobile! (Whoamobile.)
Polito’s and Gerstler’s poetry pops.
Geese, goofs, goofe: the laborious, ludicrous limericks of Gavin Ewart.
Hopler wins Whiting “out of blue.”
Gender inequality prompts call for righting the Whiting.
New anthologies take on death, birds.
11.04.09
In London, a Dantesque dither.
Pinsky finds Yeats between incantation and conversation.
"A capricious anomaly in a sea of space," indeed: Michael Jackson's poetry.
UK likely to win splendid little war over Sassoon papers.
Wait—Keats died?
11.05.09
Detroit students ford poetic passes.
Mourning Francisco Ayala.
Poetry now a social networking tool! (It wasn't before?)
BBC talk with South African poets Keorapetse Kgositsile and Phillippa Yaa de Villiers.
On A New Literary History of America.
How do those poetic feet look in cowboy boots?
11.06.09
Lumpy Corral rounds up most neglected poets of the 20th century.
Women writers righting wrongs.
Admirable lines? Verse from a thighmaster.
Pinsky on the Simpsons and other concerns.
Gallaher on Young invention.
Poetry Palin comparison.
11.09.09
Writing on the wall: poets in the New York Times explore Berlin history.
Pondering the poetiquette of Motion’s found poetry.
The devil is in the Details Poetry Quiz.
Lynette Roberts, one of Britain’s greatest war poets.
His story is history: on myth-spinning Huge von Hoffmansthal.
Talking Tommy: BBC on Eliot letters.
“Wealth takes many forms, and sometimes it shows up as stanzas”: Kirby on Gerstler.
Rocky wins!
The writing of Whiting winner Joan Kane zips between Alaska and NY.
Clifton reviews Durcan, declares all real poets “street wanderers.”
Talking with Frieda Hughes.
We’ll always have Paris: Gourevitch to bid Review adieu.
Barnes into “Our Be’thplace.”
11.10.09
William Carlos Williams’s inferno. Not inspired by Dante’s.
Lumsden’s “Forgotten New.”
Poems and prose join hands in Alexie’s War Dances.
On Margate Sands, journalist connects nothing with nothing, giggles to self.
Next Welsh archdruid selected. (Wales has archdruids!)
The Odyssey . . . of American soldiers.
The rest of Paley’s oeuvre pales in comparison with this poem.
Talking with Britain’s “punk poet laureate.”
More chatter on PoetrySpeaks website.
Marie in Miami: Ponsot is “best poet you’ve never heard of.”
To support Irish poetry chair, handmade poetry pamphlets sell for arm and leg.
Interminable airport wait prompts Terminal Etude.
11.11.09
Why First World War writers were number one.
The chapbook: to have and to heart.
Poetry, shmoetry! Why should it be so hard?
What's the story with narrative in poetry?
On Russian poetry.
Doing Wright by Trakl.
The slightest Motion sets off burglar alarms.
In Miami, show goes on, with less poetry to show for it
11.12.09
Contented with their cells? On prisons, from Dickinson to Caleb Smith.
Bookninja karate-chops Canadian poetry debacle; invites response.
Ever wonder what happened to Cosby star Malcolm Jamal Warner? Poetry happened.
P.S.: P.S.A. moves online.
Toscano performs poetics theater, and it’s money.
Pretty fly: Nabokov captured in butterfly cases.
Kane do: more on Whiting winner.
“Crotch Itch” almost rhymes . . . Village Voice revives archived gem.
11.13.09
Drilling through the difficulty of The Cantos, The Dream Songs, The Sonnets.
VQR presents Sandburg and Ransom archives.
McHugh’s “Upgraded to Serious” upgraded to “ravishing.”
iPhone haikus on / Subject of disappointment / Let down this reader.
Seeking the apex of Canadia, Jake Mooney shares his top ten poem books of the decade.
Pioneering poetry indexer was “Rita Hayworth, with glasses.”
Celebrities record “Owl and Pussycat”; incredibly obvious jokes ensue.
Conquest to rebuild Housman.
“If we must die,” let’s at least talk.
Newfoundland poet on newfound honor of having inspired movie.
Remembering Dickey’s war remembrance.
One Good Read kicks off, complete with tweets.
11.16.09
Monumental Darwish gets his moment.
Duels, hissy fits, and A Century of Poetry Review.
Rhyme, meter, wallop, and wattage in Canadian poetry awards.
Bloom chews on Chaucer.
Angelou “as fine as wine in the summertime.”
Lost love, found poetry, and heartbreak.
NBA judges announced. (No, not that NBA).
Talking with Tom Healy.
A close bosom-friend of Keats’s introduces “To Autumn.”
Nabokov reads Pale Fire and Lolita.
Kim Addonizio commemorates Veterans’ Day
Skrief’s poems of stone
11.17.09
All about Armantrout.
Lisa Williams is latest genius of the sea.
Of Zozimus and other forgotten bards and balladeers.
Catching Denise Duhamel: Ka-ching!
On Ashbery’s “imaginary difficulty.”
11.18.09
Grave men, indeed: a map to poets’ burial sites.
Terrible poetry jokes. And more. And more.
What a larf! More on Flarf.
The images of imagism.
Doty’s out and about.
They moved for Motion to chair Booker Prize.
11.19.09
Keith Waldrop wins National Book Award.
Since you asked: top bird poems.
Letting loose on Eliot’s letters
Relaxing into Motion’s Booker chair
The New Yorker waltzes around with Sherman Alexie’s War Dances.
Michael Caines, Boyled down.
To my dear and loving husband: let’s talk.
Better than the rest? On Rawson’s “Unrest.”
Alan Bennett chats about his new, Auden-centric play.
11.20.09
Belgium bedazzled by the haiku of “Mr. Europe.”
“Yes, in fact, it is wack.”: Taking slam scoring to task.
Stefan Brecht, poet and son of Bertolt, is dead.
History boys: Auden and Britten.
Honoring O’Hara in Worcester.
Chaos reigns for the poet, frustration ensues for the reader.
The poet of Baghdad speaks.



