A publisher of poetry offers a sample of its contributors’ work and analysis by other poets.
As Carmen Giménez, Graywolf’s publisher, writes in an introduction, the press is dedicated to championing “work and voices that don’t always fit traditional notions of poetry” and “are in conversation” with major issues of their day, from global crises and state violence to border atrocities and more. For this book, they “invited fifty Graywolf poets to select and write about poems they love by other Graywolf poets,” with accompanying essays that “are like ekphrastic poems, or odes, or elegies, or fan letters.” Each brief essay offers either a technical analysis of the chosen work, as when Fred Marchant notes the “iambic feel” of Nick Flynn’s “Saint Augustine,” or a more personal reflection, as when Katie Ford writes that Tess Gallagher’s “Trace, in Unison” makes her “feel like I’m in the poem’s small boat, and she is both gust and sail at once.” Some of the appreciations read like academic papers: Mary Jo Bang notes that Matthea Harvey’s “The Crowds Cheered as Gloom Galloped Away” “takes the abstract and ineffable state of sorrow” and “concretizes it through a series of unlikely pairings of things,” and Jeffrey Yang says Fanny Howe’s poetry displays “her indwelling similization of the world around us.” Most of the poems are first-rate and provide useful introductions to the poets. In one of the better essays, Threa Almontaser writes that, despite its intimations of grief, Tarfia Faizullah’s “Because There’s Still a Sky, Junebug” is a work “of wonderment and conviction” and “encourages us to express both the tragic and the poignant as one, to open our eyes and look.” The same is true of the many other outstanding works in this collection.
An enjoyable volume featuring a diverse contingent of artists.