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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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June 30, 2016

So Much Bastard Beauty

June 30, 2016/ David Nilsen

A lovely rural landscape is seen throught urban-trained eyes in Ada Limon's poetry collection Bright Dead Things. David Nilson reviews.

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June 30, 2016/ David Nilsen/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
July 2016, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review
March 31, 2016

Interior, with Music

March 31, 2016/ Liza Katz

The tension between the material and the abstract creates the complex music that threads through Ben Mazer's new volume of poetry, The Glass Piano.

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March 31, 2016/ Liza Katz/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
April 2016, Ben Mazer, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review
September 30, 2015

Not One to Eschew the Everyday

September 30, 2015/ Jack Hanson

From the tension between candor and formal presentation, Daniel Brown fashions the moments of discovery that comprise his new volume of poetry, What More?.

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September 30, 2015/ Jack Hanson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Jack Hanson, literary criticism, October 2015, Poetry, Poetry Review
August 31, 2015

Moving at the Speed of Love

August 31, 2015/ Scott Abbott

Poet Alex Caldiero's Some Love is tangled in the poetic complexities of love, and yet, as reviewer Scott Abbott discovers, the poems here can be every bit as fleshy and uncomplicated as the real thing.

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August 31, 2015/ Scott Abbott/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review, Scott Abbott, September 2015
February 28, 2015

The Only Relevant Thing

February 28, 2015/ Adam Palumbo

Matthew Lippman's third poetry collection sings of the joys and sorrows of married life - and ventures onto broader societal stages as well. The result shows the reader in new detail a world they thought they knew.

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February 28, 2015/ Adam Palumbo/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, March 2015, Poetry, Poetry Review
January 31, 2015

Grudge Sliver

January 31, 2015/ Maureen Thorson

In Alice Fulton's new book Barely Composed, her poems flash across the whole of the language, whip it into a froth, playfully distort it, and sometimes bypass it altogether. Open Letters' Poetry Editor reads along.

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January 31, 2015/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
February 2015, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry, Poetry Review
October 31, 2014

I Think We’re Alone Now

October 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson

Two poetry volumes - one concerned with how to be ourselves, alone, inside, the other concerned with making multifacted connections with external reality - are reviewed in a gentle dialogue with each other.

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October 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, maureen thorson, November 2014, Poetry, Poetry Review
October 31, 2014

An Unfolding Elegy

October 31, 2014/ Teow Lim Goh

When sudden death claimed poet Jake Adam York at the age of 40, it cut short his life's work of commemorating all the martyrs of the American Civil Rights movement; Teow Lim Goh re-reads the man and his work.

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October 31, 2014/ Teow Lim Goh/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, November 2014, Poetry, Poetry Review, Teow Lim Goh
May 31, 2014

Tempus Fugit

May 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson

Maxine Kumin, friend of Anne Sexton, master of poetic form and meter, died just before her eighteenth book was published. Maureen Thorson dives into her allusive, welcoming last poems.

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May 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
June 2014, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry, Poetry Review
March 31, 2014

Tell Me Something I Don’t Know

March 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson

Two new books of poetry take different approaches to the written word and its conundrums. Can words express the truth, or are we asking too much of them?

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March 31, 2014/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
April 2014, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry, Poetry Review
January 31, 2014

Office Space

January 31, 2014/ Teow Lim Goh

When we read poetry, we want the transcendence of art: how is that compatible with being at work? A new collection of poems explores the possibilities.

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January 31, 2014/ Teow Lim Goh/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
February 2014, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review, Teow Lim Goh
November 30, 2013

Thousands of Grids

November 30, 2013/ Liza Katz

Building on his previous work, in New Poems Ben Mazer tries to find a balance between structure and fluidity.

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November 30, 2013/ Liza Katz/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Ben Mazer, December 2013, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review
September 30, 2013

Connect the Dots

September 30, 2013/ Maureen Thorson

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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September 30, 2013/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, maureen thorson, October 2013, Poetry, Poetry Review
July 31, 2013

Home, Where the Art Is

July 31, 2013/ Kirsten Kaschock

In "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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July 31, 2013/ Kirsten Kaschock/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
August 2013, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review
July 31, 2013

August 2013 Issue

July 31, 2013/ Maureen Thorson

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July 31, 2013/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Monthly Cover, Poetry
August 2013, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry, Poetry Review
June 30, 2013

July 2013 Issue

June 30, 2013/ Maureen Thorson

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June 30, 2013/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Monthly Cover, Poetry
July 2013, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry, Poetry Review
June 30, 2013

Second Glance: Reticent Confessional

June 30, 2013/ Stephen Akey

Hospital 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.

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June 30, 2013/ Stephen Akey/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
July 2013, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review, Stephen Akey
April 30, 2013

Rending the Familiar

April 30, 2013/ Anthony Stewart

Shane 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.

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April 30, 2013/ Anthony Stewart/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Book Review, literary criticism, May 2013, Poetry, Poetry Review
April 30, 2013

“A Crystal Stranger Taking Off Their Mask”

April 30, 2013/ Jonathan Aprea

Constructing 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

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April 30, 2013/ Jonathan Aprea/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, May 2013, Poetry, Poetry Review
February 28, 2013

Point of Origin

February 28, 2013/ Joe Betz

"He said he would have Crispin Glover play him in a movie"--Alejandro Ventura's image-rich and always funny poetry is on full display in Puerto Rico. Joe Betz reviews.

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February 28, 2013/ Joe Betz/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, March 2013, Poetry, Poetry Review
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