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My 'poetry' was written at times of great happiness and love and at other times of deep sorrow and betrayal. And yet again, it was times of pure self-talk when I had to shore up my own strength and worth. So, each poem is mine and it is read, accompanied by a symphony in my mind. Each poem was written at a different time and with a slightly different 'beat' to the rhyme. Poetry must be read aloud. It may take on different meanings depending on how it is read, by whom it is read and when it is read. Poetry can be almost anything. It simply needs to be in writing with words that express feelings and ideas with style and rhythm. I thought I could do just that. It gave me an opportunity to play around with words and to search for the perfect word. It had to fit with the style and rhythm of the poem. Robert Frost said, "A poem begins as a lump in the throat." It can also begin with joy in your heart and a tear in your eye. The rest does not matter. I think I have broken a lot of rules in the English language, but then, rules are meant to be broken, at least the literary ones. That's what makes it exciting, because I can create my own rules. I can play around and do what I want. To use a pun, I do not have to have any rhyme or reason. That is freedom.
In his debut collection of poems, Conor Bracken traces the nerves of toxic masculinity—white as maggots but taut as lyre strings—that twitch and fizz inside events as homegrown as school shootings and as distant as the execution of medieval French heretics. Everywhere, though, there are bodies: the stout slouch of Henry Kissinger in a towel, a headless snake writhing in a footwell, a cantor with a beautiful voice and an inexorable need to be touched. And then there’s the body of our speaker: “white and alive and in love” and damaged by the same ravenous appetites he isn’t always able to curb. There is no hero here, only a song that turns towards and away from reckoning with the costs the neo-imperial world order extracts from bodies both supine and thrashing. These poems flicker like fire and billow like night’s velvet curtain, which you can “roughen with one hand / and smooth with the other.”
From the publisher of Farrar, Straus and Giroux: a first novel, at once hilarious and tender, about the decades-long rivalry between two publishing lions, and the iconic, alluring writer who has obsessed them both. Paul Dukach is heir apparent at Purcell & Stern, one of the last independent publishing houses in New York, whose shabby offices on Union Square belie the treasures on its list. Working with his boss, the flamboyant Homer Stern, Paul learns the ins and outs of the book trade—how to work an agent over lunch; how to swim with the literary sharks at the Frankfurt Book Fair; and, most important, how to nurse the fragile egos of the dazzling, volatile authors he adores. But Paul’s deepest admiration has always been reserved for one writer: poet Ida Perkins, whose audacious verse and notorious private life have shaped America’s contemporary literary landscape, and whose longtime publisher—also her cousin and erstwhile lover—happens to be Homer’s biggest rival. And when Paul at last has the chance to meet Ida at her Venetian palazzo, she entrusts him with her greatest secret—one that will change all of their lives forever. Studded with juicy details only a quintessential insider could know, written with both satiric verve and openhearted nostalgia, Muse is a brilliant, haunting book about the beguiling interplay between life and art, and the eternal romance of literature.
"Martin Kallich's important contribution to our knowledge of American Revolutionary verse lists and gives more reprintings of Revolutionary periodical poems than any other single bibliography."Periodical Verse of the American Revolution
Concentrating on the interaction between contemporary Hellenistic poets, this book attempts to chart the complex dynamics of Alexandrian poetical imitation and reception in the light of poetical self-positioning.