What Sparks Poetry: Lloyd Wallace on Charles Simic's The World Doesn’t End "It’s days like this that I get most upset that I will one day die. It’s also days like this I feel most fortunate to have a book like Charles Simic’s The World Doesn’t End to carry with me through my days—a book which, for all the violence it contains, all the liquid strangeness, all the pain, has always seemed to me to look at death with a steady, if somewhat smoky, optimism." |
|
|
"Short Conversations with Poets: Michael Earl Craig" "Most of the time getting out of a poem involves backing away from the place at which I’ve arrived. I’ve written too much, it’s maybe going in an instructional direction, so I prune the hedges, remove the statue next to the fountain, and things begin to get interesting, to crackle. I don’t always worry when a poem feels like it’s ended too soon." via MCSWEENEY'S |
|
|
|
|
|
|