Das Archiv der Lyriknachrichten | Seit 2001 | News that stays news
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE As a writer and reader, there’s hardly anything I enjoy more than coming upon fresh new ways of describing things, and here’s a sparkling way of looking at an avalanche, by Marty Walsh, who lives in Maine. The… Continue Reading „54. American Life in Poetry: Column 503“
In another spirit, Celan can truly reply with close and clear translation. A century after Emily Dickinson, he shared her solitary, baffled, spiritual yearning and her sense that death dwells close and poems speak truth, if anything can. Here is a lyric whose rhythm… Continue Reading „45. Celan als Übersetzer“
titelt Jeffrey Meyers im New Criterion und meint Sylvia’s German roots pervaded her life and work. Der Artikel referiert ihre deutschen und mecklenburgischen Wurzeln: Sylvia Plath was born into German culture. Her father, Otto Emil Plath, was born in Grabow, northeast Germany, soon after Otto von… Continue Reading „42. The German Plath“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE Many poets have attempted to describe the way in which flocks of birds fly, as if they were steered by a single consciousness. In the following poem, David Allan Evans gives us a new metaphor for the way… Continue Reading „35. American Life in Poetry: Column 502“
POEMTALK is a collaboration of the Kelly Writers House, PennSound, and the Poetry Foundation. PoemTalk’s producer and host is Al Filreis, our engineers are James La Marre and Chris Martin, and our editor for every episode has been Steve McLaughlin, who is also podcasts editor… Continue Reading „18. Poem Talk“
From: 20 modest proposals toward rethinking the act of reading a poem by Mark Yadich, The Atlantic Dispel the notion that reading poetry is going to dramatically change your life. Your life is continually changing; most of the time you’re simply too busy to… Continue Reading „16. Modest proposals“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE I love a good ghost story, and here’s one about a ghost cat, by John Philip Johnson, who lives in Nebraska, where most ghosts live in the wind and are heard in the upper branches of cedar trees… Continue Reading „9. American Life in Poetry: Column 501“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE This is our 500th weekly column, and we want to thank the newspapers who publish us, the poets who are so generous with their work, our sponsors The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln… Continue Reading „1. American Life in Poetry: Column 500“
Im März 2005 berichtete die Lyrikzeitung unter #65: U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser hat auch einen Plan. Diesen Monat startet sein American Life in Poetry Project. Es bietet lokalen Zeitungen eine freie Kolumne mit einem Gedicht eines heutigen amerikanischen Dichters, eingeleitet von Ted Kooser.… Continue Reading „92. American Life in Poetry – 500 Gedichte in 19 Jahren“
Das „ABC des Lesens“ ist Pfeffer in den Gebetsmühlen der Gelehrsamkeit. Es ist eine Apotheose der Sprache und eine Leseliste. Ein Buch mit Anregungen, über die man sich aufregen kann. Und ein literarischer Kanon, der Ezra Pound ganz alleine singt. Es ist ein Köcher… Continue Reading „91. Giftpfeil und Liebeserklärung“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE To celebrate my 75th year, I’ve published a new book of poems, and many of them are about the way in which we come together to help each other through the world. Here’s just one: Two On a… Continue Reading „66. American Life in Poetry: Column 499“
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE Here’s a lovely poem for this lovely month, by Robert Haight, who lives in Michigan. Early October Snow It will not stay. But this morning we wake to pale muslin stretched across the grass. The pumpkins, still in… Continue Reading „61. American Life in Poetry: Column 498“
Charles Simic mit seinem Gedicht „Jahrmarkt“ in der jahrzehntelang von Marcel Reich-Ranicki geführten „Frankfurter Anthologie“ der FAZ. Der Kommentar ist anscheinend von Silke Scheuermann (im Netz ist das etwas versteckt).
Aus Jan Kuhlbrodts Besprechung des neuen Bandes von Charles Bernstein bei Signaturen: Auf das Buch der Gruppe Versatorium hatte ich an dieser Stelle schon hingewiesen. Jetzt also ist (endlich) die umfangreiche Sammlung Angriff der schwierigen Gedichte der Gruppe um Norbert Lange im Wiesbadener Verlag… Continue Reading „8. Charles Bernstein“
Bei Signaturen der dritte Teil des Gesprächs, das Jan Kuhlbrodt mit Günter Plessow führte. Es geht um E.E. Cummings (im Vergleich mit Edna St. Vincent Millay und William Faulkner). Hier ein Auszug zu einem von 63 frühen Sonetten von Cummings aus „Tulips and Chimneys“… Continue Reading „6. Cummings‘ frühe Sonette“
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