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Have women finally moved beyond the status of cultural outsiders to become full participants in American poetry and its criticism? In By Herself: Women Reclaim Poetry, contemporary women poets reconsider their art form on their own terms, and the results are both telling and fascinating…
New and Selected Essays
Collected Poems
In this wilderness classic, the quintessential Alaskan frontiersman relates his experiences from over twenty years as a homesteader. As New York Newsday has said of his work, “If Alaska had not existed, Haines might well have invented it.”
Graywolf Press is pleased to announce the latest winner of the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize: Pojangmacha People by Jung Hae Chae, which was selected from a submission pool of 750 and a shortlist of 8 manuscripts by the Graywolf editors.
Rich in sensory…
The first visual poem I loved is not really a visual poem—or rather, it was not created to be one.
I had loved George Herbert’s “Prayer”—intensely, beyond reason—for many years, and from the first moment I turned the page in Helen Vendler’s textbook Poems, Poets, Poetry…