Derek Walcott Reads at the 92nd St Y

I heard Derek Walcott read at the 92nd St Y last night (and ran into some poets from NYU I met at Calabash back in May, including Dante Micheaux). The British poet Glyn Maxwell introduced Walcott, and I have to say Maxwell gave one of the best introductions I’ve ever heard. His homage to the Read More …

Margaret Garner

I saw the new opera Margaret Garner last night at New York City Opera, popping my opera cherry here in New York (long overdue given how long I’ve lived here). The opera’s libretto was written by Toni Morrison and the music was composed by Richard Danielpour. Morrison based her famous novelBeloved on the historical events concerning Read More …

Derek Walcott’s The Prodigal

I was disappointed in this “last” book (did I read somewhere that he claimed this would be his last poetry collection?) if anything for its self-indulgence. Just when I couldn’t handle another scene of light likened to some painter, he parenthetically breaks in and makes fun of himself for his knack for making such a Read More …

Mimi Khalvati’s The Chine

I heard Marilyn Hacker read poems from this collection back in March at the PSA’s “Tribute to Carcanet Press and Michael Schmidt.” Khalvati’s a master of the poem sequence. Highlights of this book for me included the sequence “The Inwardness of Elephants” and her corona, or sonnet cycle “Love in an English August”–not only deft Read More …

Lorna Goodison’s Turn Thanks

I thought I had finished reading this about five years ago and realized I stopped half-way through…missing all the good poems in “Part 3: The Mango of Poetry” such as “County, Sligoville” and “Letter to Vincent van Gogh.” A happy Sunday discovery to read/re-read. I’m working on an “homage” poem to Lorna called “Workshops with Read More …

Elizabeth Bishop’s (Alice Quinn’s, really) Edgar Allan Poe & The Juke-Box

Clearly a labor of love for Alice Quinn. I found her copious endnotes far more pleasurable than the fragments and abandoned poems. Remind me to destroy my fragments folder before I die. My favorite quotes: “Translating poetry is like trying to put your feet into gloves.” “…the situation of the poet: the difficulty of combining Read More …

Ray McDaniel’s Murder, A Violet

I was cleaning and reorganizing my poetry shelves and every time I see this cover I just have to sit and admire it for many moments. I read a draft of the manuscript the year it won the NPS and it turned into a beautiful book. It’s a fabulous feeling, to see the raw poems Read More …