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The Best American Poetry 2004 [Hardcover]

Lyn Hejinian (Editor), David Lehman (Editor)
2.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, August 24, 2004 --  
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Book Description

August 24, 2004 Best American Poetry
The Best American Poetry 2004 celebrates the vitality and richness of poetry in the United States and Canada today. In her provocative introduction, guest editor Lyn Hejinian, herself among the most acclaimed and innovative contemporary writers, expresses the need for this anthology. "Meaning in poetry," she writes, "is created by the linking together of poems to form the large, ancient, and ever new human undertaking of thinking together about the things that matter to us." Through her selections, Hejinian has created an essential nexus -- a meeting place for readers to encounter and commune with an extraordinary range of poets. She has brought together renowned figures such as John Ashbery, Anne Carson, and Billy Collins as well as many new and unheralded voices from whom we're going to be hearing a lot more in the future.

With illuminating comments from the poets on their work, and series editor David Lehman's insightful foreword evaluating the current state of the art, "The Best American Poetry 2004" is an indispensable addition to a series that has established itself as the first word on what's new and noteworthy in the poetry of our times.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Robert Pinsky

Each year, a vivid snapshot of what a distinguished poet finds exciting, fresh and memorable: and over the years, as good a comprehensive overview of contemporary poetry as there can be.

About the Author

Lyn Hejinian is the author or coauthor of more than two dozen books of poetry, including The Fatalist and My Life. She recently received the sixty-sixth Fellowship from the Academy of American Poets for distinguished poetic achievement at mid-career. She lives in Berkeley and teaches at the University of California.

David Lehman is the editor of The Oxford Book of American Poetry and the author of seven books of poetry, including When a Woman Loves a Man. He lives in New York City. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner (August 24, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743257375
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743257374
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,993,395 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.4 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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48 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Aging Trendies, September 11, 2004
By 
Bruce McBirney (La Crescenta, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Series editor David Lehman says in his engaging forward to this book, "A poem must capture the reader before it can do anything else, and to do that it must give pleasure." But that's exactly where this volume falls short. I doubt that many people will derive much pleasure out of this book, regardless of their educational background, cultural perspective, or literary tastes. The few exceptions will likely be graduate writing students and professors, who will read the book to figure out what they must do to have a chance of getting into a future volume in the series. As a life-long reader of poetry from a whole variety of poetic schools and styles, I'm disappointed that this volume makes little attempt to recognize the rich diversity of poetry that is being written today. Most of this is from the school that holds that if it's unlike anything else (even if it has no discernible meaning), then it must be good.

One line of Bob Perelman's poem "Here 2" (one of the few poems in the book I found interesting) refers to "the studied refusals of cliche." And that sums up the book pretty well. Some highly educated people here have spent years of study and effort learning how to write poems that they hope no one will ever accuse of being cliched. And all their study and over-intellectualizing has sucked all the juice out of their writing. Does the poem use a phrase that anyone has used before in the last 200 years? Trash it--it's a cliche. Does the poem evoke a recognizable human feeling that anyone has ever felt prior to, say, twelve minutes ago. Cliche--get rid of it. Does the poem have a meaning that can be discerned after three or four readings? (Not necessarily a deep or profound meaning but, as Frost said, just "a momentary stay against confusion.") Well, meaning--the thought that a writer can or should briefly impose some order on the chaos of life--is so cliche! (I won't even go into the book's general disregard of old poetic techniques like rhyme and meter, the lack of which will be offputting to some readers. While I enjoy those things, I don't think they're essential to a good poem...a poem that might inspire feeling or reflection in many people if they found it.)

Ironically, the writing here isn't so new or avant-garde as its proponents may think. The average age of the 75 poets in this book is about 54, and over two-thirds of the poets were born in 1954 or before. There's nothing wrong with age--I'm 50 myself. My point is that the supposed meaningfulness of meaninglessness has been part of the literary and artistic scene for decades now...and has become a cliche itself. This isn't really all that fresh.

A few of the poets here do write understandable verse and have written wonderful poems elsewhere, among them Rita Dove and Yusef Komunyakaa (both of whom did a much better job of presenting the diversity of modern poetry when they guest-edited earlier volumes in this same series) and Billy Collins. But they seem represented here by less than their best work. Kim Addonizio, one of my favorite poets, has written many striking poems, alternating between burning, abrasive intensity ("Glass," "Theodicy," "For Desire") and quiet grace ("Conversation at Woodside," "At Moss Beach," "Dance"). Frankly, it's sad to see her represented here by a sub-par effort--a variation on the joke about why the chicken crossed the road.

I'd recommend passing on this year's volume and instead buying a collection by Dove, or Komunyakaa, or Addonizio, or Collins, or any of a couple dozen other poets not included here. (If you like rhyme and meter, you could pick up a book by Richard Wilbur, or Timothy Steele, or Rhina Espaillat, all masters in that.) And, David, I hope next year's volume shows more of the "pleasure" principle you advocated in the foreword!
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Ivory-tower intellectual fireworks, April 14, 2005
I read the 2002 and 2003 editions, and though obviously I would not have purchased 2004 if my curiosity had not been sparked by some of the poems, they are some things that irk me about the series:

Do you really need to have two or more advanced degrees from Ivy League institutions and eight volumes of poetry to your name to be recognized for an American poem? Because, that's what the selections imply. I mean, it strikes me sometimes that poetry has become so obscure in its meanings that the only way to judge it is via the resume and distinction of the poet. So, once again, what you have in the 2004 BAP is a collection of the work of ivory tower intellectuals. Almost every selection is heavily informed by 'critical theory' tropes and studies of other avante-garde poets.

That said, I love difficult poetry, and a lot of the poems this year are absolutely mesmerizing. Also, in year's past, the poems have not necessarily fit together very well, and this year, I was able to read 5 or 10 in a row without being made to cringe by a self-concious stinker or feel like I was cruising on a rumble strip of nonsense.

I guess the nation's tiny poetry audience is somewhat attracted by the cache of hyper-educated poets. I sense that many of poems are missing that hardcore grit that I look for, but all the same, this is very intelligent poetry and the process of seeing through some of it may be valuable to poets and readers.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars a rather unbalanced look at a year's poetry, January 26, 2005
i agree with the reviewer who missed poems speaking to the heart and mind of the reader ... i don't think it's necessary for all poetry to do that ... i wouldn't object to a few of these expirimental poems being in an anthology, as i realize it's valid and important for people to play with the language and perception of it ... it is valuable work to perform, but this book goes overboard in the space it's been given

on my blog, as a joke and experiment, i took some of the nonsense phrases i got in spam e-mail to defeat anti-spam filters, put a few together and made a poem out of them because i liked the sound of the words ... that poem wouldn't have been a bit out of place in this anthology ... most of the poems here make a little more sense than that ... but only a little

what i'd really like to know is how does one tell a "good" one of these language poems from a "bad" one? ... the strangeness of the words? ... the sound? ... the distance from logic and sense? ... the avant-gardeness of them? ... how do we tell what the "best" language poems are? ... for this is what this anthology seems to be ... not the best poetry, but the "best" language poetry

readers who are expecting an overview of the year's poetry will be surprised at this ... and many won't understand it ... it's the same academic experimentalism that's been going on since the 60s ... and it hasn't changed much ... a few of the poems communicated to me ... most of them didn't
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