Today's Headline: Nic Cavell Reviews Maria Zoccola’s “Helen of Troy, 1993" For over forty years, I’ve lived in a house I built myself in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The birds are my neighbors, though more like bossy friends at this point. The owls have a way of letting me know what’s on their minds. They don’t hold back. Gary Young on "[Each night, an owl cries out from the redwoods.]" The poems in American Analects revolve around my friend and mentor, the painter Gene Holtan. He was not a poet, but he taught me more about poetry than any poet ever did. Gene was my Confucius. Gary Young on "[When Gene could no longer hold a brush, he moved into]" |
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"Helen, Writer of Her Own Myth: Nic Cavell Reviews Maria Zoccola’s Helen of Troy, 1993" "It is worth considering Zoccola’s developed Helen and contrapuntal Homeric themes alongside Emily Wilson’s accomplishments, translating the Iliad with a feminist lens. Wilson’s work has been hailed as groundbreaking, introducing contemporary cadences alongside skillful iambic pentameter, and opening room for new discussions about the role of women in the epic—all while prioritizing a fidelity to the original Greek. Zoccola’s project was born of an impulse to portray sympathetic female characters from an ancient crisis in an effort to restore a vision of justice to a contemporary epoch in crisis." viaLOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS |
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What Sparks Poetry: Henri Cole on James Longenbach's "In the Village" "Jim is not really nostalgic for his past life but in love with beginnings, 'A wish// A wish not to be removed/ From time/ But always to be immersed in it.' Yes, to be immersed in time again, like the boats that come in and out of the harbor, and to feel again the progress of the sun and the splash of green waves, to begin anew, to not be removed, and to listen to the secret vibrations of the world." |
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