I've written on and off about poetry over the years. This post talks a little about the core poets (and seeing Gwendolyn Brooks at a poetry reading!). It's always hard to crack that inner circle of poets, and mostly I have been adding poets in the next ring. I'd say in recent years, I have added Tory Dent and Barbara Hamby (who is a poet who generally writes humorous poems, which is fairly rare these days). And I really like Ronna Bloom's Public Works, though her more recent collections don't do quite as much for me. While I wouldn't say there is anything profound in this post or this post, they do have some comments that will nudge me to keep working on the transportation poetry anthology. In the back of my mind, after I go through this very long list of books, as well as my (also very long) backlist from Brick Boos, I should just wrap this up and see if I can find a publisher at all interested in taking this on. (It probably would have to be an academic publisher, but who really knows...) I have read most but not quite all of the books below.
Anyway, thinking back maybe the latest push to read more poetry was sparked by picking up a few poetry books at BMV, including Queen Rat by Lynn Crosbie and 3 Books by Galway Kinnell (Body Rags; Mortal Acts, Mortal Words; and The Past). Though also last fall, I dropped in on a couple of poets at Word on the Street (Jake Byrne and Matthew Walsh) and enjoyed them a bit more than I expected.
Galway Kinnell Book of Nightmares
Galway Kinnell Selected Poems
Galway Kinnell 3 Books
Galway Kinnell Strong is Your Hold
Jan Conn Peony Vertigo
Susan Musgrave Selected Strawberries and Other Poems
Susan Musgrave Things That Keep and Do Not Change
Susan Musgrave Origami Dove
Susan Musgrave Forcing the Narcissus
Kevin Killian Action Kylie
Kevin Killian Tweaky Village
X John Barton Compulsory Figures
X Amber Dawn Buzzkill Clamshell
Amber Dawn Where the Words End and My Body Begins
X Katherena Vermette Procession
X Karen Solie's Wellwater (this set off a long path through Solie's work where I liked her first books, especially Pigeon better than her recent work)
X Karen The Caiplie Caves (didn't enjoy this much at all)
X Konchan Requiem,
X Jack Spicer Collected Poems (generally his poetry does not do anything for me, much like Robert Duncan)
Jana Prikryl No Matter
Jana Prikryl The After Party
Kaveh Akbar Pilgrim Bell
X Ondaatje A Year of Last Things
(Daniel) Jones The Brave Never Write Poetry
Samiya Bashir Field Theories
X Robert Colman Democratically Applied Machine (got this signed at a reading with Ronna Bloom and Christina Shah)
Robert Colman Little Empires
X Robert Colman Ghost Work
X Ronna Bloom In a Riptide
X Christina Shah If, Prey: Then, Huntress
Kay Gabriel Kissing Other People or The House of Fame
Kathleen Wall Visible Cities
Chris Hutchinson Lost Signal
Chris Hutchinson In the Vicinity of Riches
X Natalie Lim Elegy for Opportunity
X Sarah Giragosian The Death Spiral
Robert Gibb The Empty Loom
Robert Gibb The Origins of Evening
Robert Gibb Among Ruins
Robert Gibb World Over Water
? Robert Gibb The Burning World
? Don Coles Where We Might Have Been
Don Coles Kurgan
X Don Coles Anniversaries
Don Coles Sometimes All Over
X Don Coles A Serious Call
X The Essential Don Coles
? Don Coles How We All Swiftly (The First Six Books)
Yoyo Comay States of Emergency
Charlie Petch Infinite Audition
X Joe Fiorito City Poems
X Philip Quinn The Subway (amazingly, I don't think I can extract a poem here that works for the anthology...)
Freda Downie Collected Poems
I picked up George Szirtes's Metro (at a bookstore on Roncy and then read a lot of his work, growing quite weary of his long, rhymed poems -- I could see either excerpting a chunk of Metro or some of his other poems about trains and subways for the anthology)
X George Szirtes New and Collected Poems
X George Szirtes The Burning of the Books
Joshua Weiner The World's Room (picked up a signed copy of this at the same Roncy bookstore on a follow-up trip)
Nathaniel Tarn Lyrics for the Bride of God
MLA Chernoff Squelch Procedures
Kayleb Candrilli Water I Won't Touch
Tanis Franco Quarry
Then Robarts had a whole display on new poetry books to celebrate Poetry Month, and I picked up a bunch.
X Omar Ramadan This Sweet Rupture
X Colleen Collins Sorry About the Fire
Dawn MacDonald Northerny
Simon Armitage Kid
X Wendy Cope The Orange and Other Poems
X Wendy Cope Serious Concerns
Wendy Cope Family Values
I had tried to get a book by Yusef Komunyakaa through Robarts, but they reported it missing. On my next visit, I couldn't recall how to spell the name and ended up getting a bunch of selected and collected poems with City in the title. Fortunately, I was able to find the mis-shelved book in the end!
Yusef Komunyakaa Magic City
Yusef Komunyakaa Night Animals
Yusef Komunyakaa Neon Vernacular (with such a cool cover, presumably Romare Bearden, but one I don't know)
Yusef Komunyakaa Pleasure Dome
Yusef Komunyakaa Everyday Mojo Songs of Earth: New and Selected Poems (also a very cool cover)
Yusef Komunyakaa The Cameleon Couch
Yusef Komunyakaa The Emperor of Water Clocks
Geoffrey O'Brien Floating City: Selected Poems (I very rarely bail on poetry, but this was doing nothing for me, so I abandoned it)
Tamar Yoseloff Sweetheart
Tamar Yoseloff Fun House
Kirby Wright Before the City: Collected Poems & Prose Poems
Claude Beausoleil Concrete City: Selected Poems 1972-82
Eugene Gloria Drivers at the Short-Time Motel
Enda Wyley Borrowed Space: New and Selected Poems
Enda Wyley The Painter on His Bike (should be able to extract at least one bicycle poem from this...)
My last bunch seem to come from articles in the Guardian, such as this one or this one. (Now I will say they steered me wrong on Wendy Cope, and I also am not really sure about Rishi Dastidar, who seems to be a flash in the pan. I'm skimming Saffron Jack and it doesn't do much for me. I am supposed to have access to Neptune's Projects over at Robarts, but this just isn't working at the moment! As it happens, I did order Dastidar's Ticker Tape, which just arrived. If I do enjoy this, then I'll order Cherry Blossom at Nightbreak as a download.)
Sasha Debevec-McKenney Joy is My Middle Name
Harriet Armstrong To Rest Our Minds and Bodies
Colwill Brown We Pretty Pieces of Flesh
Suzannah Evans Under the Blue
Seán Hewitt Open, Heaven
Derek Owusu Borderline Fiction
Not that there is ever an end to reading poetry, but this somewhat manic burst will probably come to an end when I read the reissued Fleurs du Mal translation (George Dillon and Edna St. Vincent Millay) from NYRB Poets, comparing it to the Howard translation (from my undergrad days!).
And finally tackling Rimbaud yet again. (Rimbaud, or rather a modern incarnation of him, was heavily featured in the Howland Company's Take Rimbaud, wrapping up its run this weekend at Buddies in Bad Times, so he is back on my mind.)
















