Connect the Dots
/What kind of reader would she be, our Poetry Editor asks, if she didn't allow herself to be susceptible to Ange Mlinko's sublime, piercing unreason?
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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.
What kind of reader would she be, our Poetry Editor asks, if she didn't allow herself to be susceptible to Ange Mlinko's sublime, piercing unreason?
Read Morea poem
Read MoreIs David Rakoff's novel-in-verse either worthy verse or a worthy novel? Does he pull off a high-wire act, as so many critics have concluded, or is it all a grand illusion?
Read MoreIn "Belmont," Stephen Burt, poet of Boston's byways, offers readers verses that so court the senses as almost to confound them, shifting from technical confidence to unstructured questioning. As Kirsten Kaschock writes, "Burt attempts in these pages what Shylock did not dare" ...
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Read MoreHospital visits, supermarket checkouts, and casseroles - the odd, unassuming verse of Jenny Bornholdt might leave some critics wondering if it's actually poetry at all. Critic Stephen Akey says her work is intimate yet reserved - and warns us not to expect The Duino Elegies.
Read MoreOur feature continues, as more Open Letters folk share their annual Summer Reading recommendations!
Read MoreModernist poet P. K. Page may be the most important Canadian author you've never heard of. An impressive new biography, replete with examples of Page's poetry and prose, seeks to remedy that.
Read Morea poem
Read MoreShane Book’s evocative collection Ceiling of Sticks shows us our familiar world in ways that might surprise even the most jaded reader into optimism about poetry.
Read Morea poem
Read MoreConstructing a "walrus itself" is a difficult thing to do - but it's just one of the transubstantiations Ben Mirov attempts in his latest collection of poems
Read MoreComing of age after World War I, Auden took the alienation of his generation and sharpened it to a special keenness; he transformed his disaffected modernism into an immortal body of work that still challenges today.
Read MoreEven the speaker in Jennifer Denrow's new book knows that the California she imagines is one she'll never visit, one that cannot possibly be real - but that's what makes it so alluring.
Read MoreA poem
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