Robert Browning's Poetry

Robert Browning's Poetry

Author: Robert Browning

Publisher: W W Norton & Company Incorporated

Published: 1979

Total Pages: 689

ISBN-13: 9780393926002

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Works by modern and Victorian critics are presented together with poems from each stage of Browning's literary career.


Thirteen Ways of Looking for a Poem

Thirteen Ways of Looking for a Poem

Author: Wendy Bishop

Publisher: Addison-Wesley Longman

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780321011305

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Thirteen ways of Looking for a Poem encourages students to enrich their writing by actively studying and practicing poetic form. Using a unique textbook/anthology format, which includes poems by both emerging and well-known poets, Wendy Bishop demonstrates how various poetic forms offer insight into the often hidden inner mechanics of poem-building, strengthening writing skills and poetry interpretation at the same time.


Whale Day

Whale Day

Author: Billy Collins

Publisher: Picador

Published: 2021-12-14

Total Pages: 80

ISBN-13: 1760989649

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‘Funny but serious, accessible but rich in meaning, consistently surprising – the world looks slightly different after reading a Billy Collins poem. He’s a one-off, an American treasure’ Nick Laird These are poems of whimsy and imaginative acrobatics, but they are grounded in the familiar, common things of everyday experience. Collins takes us for a walk with an impossibly ancient dog, discovers the proper way to eat a banana, meets an Irish spider, and invites us to his own funeral. Facing both the wonders of being alive and the thrill of mortality, these new poems can only solidify Collins’s reputation as one of America’s most durable and interesting poets.


13th Balloon

13th Balloon

Author: Mark Bibbins

Publisher: Copper Canyon Press

Published: 2020-02-22

Total Pages: 91

ISBN-13: 1619322145

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O, The Oprah Magazine, "42 Best LGBTQ Books of 2020" NPR's Favorite Books of 2020 In his fourth collection, 13th Balloon, Mark Bibbins turns his candid eye to the American AIDS crisis. With quiet consideration and dark wit, Bibbins addresses the majority of his poems to Mark Crast, his friend and lover who died from AIDS at the early age of 25. Every broken line and startling linguistic turn grapples with the genre of elegy: what does it mean to experience personal loss, Bibbins seems to ask, amidst a greater societal tragedy? The answer is blurred— amongst unforeseen disease, intolerance, and the intimate consequences of mismanaged power. Perhaps the most unanswerable question arrives when Bibbins writes, “For me elegy/ is like a Ouija planchette/ something I can barely touch/ as I try to make it/ say what I want it to say.” And while we are still searching for the words that might begin an answer, Bibbins helps us understand that there is endless value in continuing—through both joy and grief—to wonder.


The McGraw-Hill Book of Poetry

The McGraw-Hill Book of Poetry

Author: Robert DiYanni

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages

Published: 1993-01-01

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780070169449

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This is, perhaps, the widest ranging, most comprehensive poetry collection available, and it is useful for poetry courses at all levels. It contains an excellent introduction to reading poetry and understanding the elements, as well as sections on poems and paintings, poems and music, and poems from other languages. Sections on featured poets are integrated with the chronological anthology which gives students a perspective on the variety and range of a large group of poets. This multi-national, multi-cultural, multi-genre and multi-lingual collection gives students a view and instructors an opportunity to teach the universality of poetry. Includes a superb historical range of poetry, from its recorded beginnings to most contemporary.


31 Letters and 13 Dreams: Poems

31 Letters and 13 Dreams: Poems

Author: Richard Hugo

Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company

Published: 1977-11-17

Total Pages: 82

ISBN-13: 0393044904

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Richard Hugo, whom Carolyn Kizer has called” one of the most passionate, energetic, and honest poets living,” here offers an extraordinary collection of new poems, each one a “letter” or a “dream.” Both letters and dreams are special manifestations of alone-ness; Hugo’s special senses of alone-ness, of places, and of other people are the forces behind his distinctively American and increasingly authoritative poetic voice. Each letter is written from a specific place that Hugo has made his own (a “triggering town,” as he has called it elsewhere) to a friend, a fellow poet, an old love. We read over the poet’s shoulder as the town triggers the imagination, the friendship is re-opened, the poet’s selfhood is explored and illuminated. The “dreams” turn up unexpectedly (as dreams do) among the letters; their haunting images give further depth to the poet’s exploration. Are we overhearing them? Who is the “you” that dreams?