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Jennifer Grotz Selected for NPR’s Top Five

January 26, 2012

For NPR, Gregory Orr chooses Jennifer Grotz‘s new collection, The Needle, as one of five best poetry books of 2011 in “Truth and Beauty: 2011’s Best American Poetry.” (Grotz’s poems “The Fog and “The Forest” appear in the current issue of NER.) Orr also recommends NER poetry editor C. Dale Young’s book Torn, because, as Orr writes, “no critic can refrain from recommending more books than he’s supposed to.”

One of the few things almost everyone can agree on about contemporary American poetry is that no one can agree on much. At present, poetry is a jumbled landscape, with no single, dominant style and few living figures whose importance is accepted in more than one or two of the art form’s tiny fiefdoms. Although some might find this state of affairs discouraging, I think there’s good reason to be optimistic — poetry often needs to undergo periods of confusion to achieve the clarity for which we’ll later remember it. Here are five books that suggest that even if American poetry isn’t entirely sure where it’s going, that doesn’t mean it’s gotten lost.

[read more]

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books, NER Community, News & Notes Tagged With: C. Dale Young, Gregory Orr, Jennifer Grotz, NPR Books, The Needle, Torn

Luminous Airplanes Hypertext

January 25, 2012

Paul La Farge on his project Luminous Airplanes, which features both a printed novel and a hypertext for the web:

In the fall of 2003, I wrote a novel about a young man who’s summoned back to his family home in Thebes, NY, a sleepy town in the Catskills, in order to clean the house of five generations of junk. His grandfather has just died and no one else wants the job. So he goes. This was the seed of Luminous Airplanes, a book which would surely have been easier to finish if I hadn’t been haunted by the idea that the novel could be something more, that it could extend its branches indefinitely in the vast space of the Internet. After many false starts and dead ends, Luminous Airplanes became both a book and a hypertext.

[read more about the project] [or start reading the hypertext at luminousairplanes.com]

Filed Under: NER Recommends Tagged With: Hypertext, Luminous Airplanes, Paul La Farge

25th & Dolores by Monica Youn

January 24, 2012

Wires & Sky, San Francisco

Monica Youn’s poem, “25th & Dolores,” appeared in NER 22.3 (2001):

“The most beautiful freeway

in America” is beginning
to the right: its heaped-up hills,
its full-strength sunlight burning off

the camphor-infused fog.
You were wrong. I’m still capable
of begging.

[read more]

Filed Under: NER Classics Tagged With: 25th & Dolores, Monica Youn

Works from NER Chosen for “Best American”

January 23, 2012

Otto Penzler has selected Kathleen Ford’s “Man on the Run” 31.4 for Best American Mystery Stories 2012.

For Best American Poetry 2012, Mark Doty has chosen four NER poems:

• Amy Glynn Greacen, Helianthus Annus (Sunflower) (32.2)
• Reginald Dwayne Betts, “At the End of a Life, a Secret” (31.4)
• James Allen Hall, “One Train’s Survival Depends on the Other Derailed” (32.2)
• Natasha Trethewey, “Dr. Samuel Adolphus Cartwright on Dissecting the White Negro, 1851” (32.3)

Filed Under: News & Notes Tagged With: Amy Glynn Graecen, Best American Mystery Stories, Best American Poetry 2012, James Allen Hall, Kathleen Ford, Natasha Trethewey, Reginald Dwayne Betts

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Vol. 42, No. 1

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Writer’s Notebook

Writer’s Notebook—Field Dress Portal

Sarah Audsley

Writer’s Notebook—Field Dress Portal

Writing this poem was not a commentary on a rivalry between the sister arts—poetry and painting—but more an experiment in the ekphrastic poetic mode.

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