Das Archiv der Lyriknachrichten | Seit 2001 | News that stays news
Richard Swigg is the editor of PennSound’s Naomi Replansky, George Oppen, WC Williams, Basil Bunting, and Charles Tomlinson pages, all among the best collections we have. He wrote this tribute to Charles Tomlinson for Michael Hennessey’s PennSound Daily*: „Charles Tomlinson was the supreme international poet… Continue Reading „Charles Tomlinson (1927-2015)“
Leben des Dichters Ezra Pound in Auszügen (5) Er mag neunzehn gewesen sein, ich war ein Jahr jünger. Maßlos intellektuell, maßlos überlegen, maßlos ungeschliffen, ein Geschöpf, das keinem der Brüder und der Brüder Freunde und der Jungen glich, mit denen wir tanzten (und er tanzte… Continue Reading „Leben des Dichters 5“
Ist eine Papierhülle schon Lyrik? Mit Flarf Disco tastet Hartmut Abendschein die Synergien zwischen moderner Lyrik und Popsong neu aus. Alle zwei Monate erscheint das Popkultur-Magazin Spex mit einer CD als Zugabe. Ausgehend von den Musiktiteln auf der Papierhülle arrangiert der Lyrikband 60 Popgedichte… Continue Reading „Ähnlich wie der Remix“
Cynthia Macdonald, whose idiosyncratic blend of humor and the grotesque made her a distinctive voice on the American poetry scene, died on Aug. 3 in a nursing home in Logan, Utah. She was 87. (…) “People forget their children in the strangest places,” the… Continue Reading „Deaths 2“
William Jay Smith, who wrote poetry with classical precision and childlike whimsy and who was a globe-trotting poetry consultant to the Library of Congress for two years, died Aug. 18 at a hospital in Pittsfield, Mass. He was 97. (…) He did not like… Continue Reading „Deaths 1“
The 2015 Janus Pannonius Grand Prize for Poetry has been awarded to Charles Bernstein and Giuseppe Conte. The prize was founded in 2012 by the Hungarian PEN Club (an affiliate of International PEN). In 2014, Yves Bonnefois (France) and Adonis (Syria) won the prize, which is modelled on the Nobel… Continue Reading „Prize for Charles Bernstein and Giuseppe Conte“
When John Ashbery, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, first learned that the digital editions of his poetry looked nothing like the print version, he was stunned. There were no line breaks, and the stanzas had been jammed together into a block of text that looked… Continue Reading „E-Books Turn Poet-Friendly“
Über die Gedichte der 23-jährigen amerikanischen Lyrikerin Mira Gonzalez, die soeben bei Hanser auf Deutsch erschienen, wird seit Tagen in sozialen Netzwerken kontrovers diskutiert. Knallhart kalkulierter Marktcoup oder herausragender Band und eine der wichtigsten jungen Stimmen ihrer Generation? Jetzt erscheinen erste Besprechungen. Fast ungeteilte Zustimmung im… Continue Reading „Marktcoup oder literarisches Phänomen?“
Richard Blanco, who was President Obama’s inaugural poet in 2013, has written a poem to honor the reopening of the U.S. embassy in Havana, Cuba on Friday, Aug. 14. The son of Cuban exiles, Blanco was commissioned to write “Matters of the Sea/Cosas del Mar,”… Continue Reading „Im Auftrag“
“No sweeter music can come to my ears,” Robert Frost once wrote a friend, “than the clash of arms over my dead body when I am down.” Frost’s ghost, then, can be grateful to New York Times poetry columnist and Cornell University prof David Orr for… Continue Reading „A close reading“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE I once knew an artist who seemed to live on those little envelopes of free sugar that one can find on tables in restaurants. And he took the little “watercolor pans” of jelly, too, stuffing his pockets. Here’s… Continue Reading „American Life in Poetry: Column 533“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE How’s this poem for its ability to collapse all the years from childhood to middle age in a matter of fifteen short lines? George Bilgere is one of this column’s favorite poets. He lives and teaches in Ohio.… Continue Reading „American Life in Poetry: Column 532“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE Many of the poems that have survived the longest are very short. Some of them are a couple of thousand years old. They have somehow managed to perfectly catch life in just a few words and we can… Continue Reading „American Life in Poetry: Column 531“
My first hours with the spiky words of T.S. Eliot’s ‘‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’’ are fixed in a precise location: the cluttered space of my teenage bedroom floor. It’s 1982. The light is low. The parquet tiles are coming unglued. Album… Continue Reading „Spiky words“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE Poets often do their best work when they’re telling us about something they’ve seen without stepping into the poem and talking about themselves. Here’s a lovely poem of observation by Terri Kirby Erickson, who lives in North Carolina.… Continue Reading „American Life in Poetry: Column 530“
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