| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
For Fooling with Words, Moyers interviews 11 of the poets on the festival's 1998 roster. "Talking to poets about their lives," he says, "makes their poetry more accessible to me." And what a variety of poets and lives he has come up with! The youngest is New Yorker senior editor Deborah Garrison (A Working Girl Can't Win), then 32; the eldest, Stanley Kunitz, 93 years old and wearing a lime-green jacket. In between are Coleman Barks, Robert Pinsky, Lorna Dee Cervantes, Paul Muldoon, Marge Piercy, Mark Doty, Jane Hirshfield, Kurtis Lamkin, and Shirley Geok-Lin Lim. These conversations are dotted with poems. "I like to know about the experiences that produced the poet," says Moyers, and the intermingling of conversation and poetry is a wonderful, casual way to be introduced to a poet's sensibility. Doty discusses the pain of "writing about the hardest things in the world." Hirshfield talks about her Zen practice and the notion that ideas "can graze inside us like animals who reshape the landscape with their grazing." Throughout, there is the sense of lives that would not be bearable without poetry. "Poetry is what has saved me," says one poet here; "You never know when your poem will come to someone's rescue," chimes another. --Jane Steinberg --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
extremely accessible and non-pretentious,
This review is from: Fooling with Words: A Celebration of Poets and Their Craft (Paperback)
Unlike most poetry books, this one focuses on the poet's insights into his/her own work and some very accessible poems by modern poets. Moyers refuses to get bogged down in the technique of poetry (rhyming, meter, scansion, etc...) and instead focuses on each author's comments and explications of his own work. Each chapter picks one poet and starts with his/her reading at the festival and then an informal Q and A that sheds light into how poets become poets. No surprises here -- most who write it can't think how they could NOT have written, even at an early age. In some cases, poetry literally rescued their authors from their borderline lives. For anyone interested in the creative process, this is an easy to follow and enlightening short volume on poetry and poems.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a GREAT book!,
By Writing Chemistry (Seoul, South Korea) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fooling with Words: A Celebration of Poets and Their Craft (Hardcover)
Hi, I am someone who has loved English Literature, and struggled with it during the high school years, as English was not my mother tongue. Poetry was always the hardest to grasp. I've always wished I could get to know it better, but I've felt the high barriers time and again. Over time, I began to distance myself from Poetry and secretly hated The Art. Until this book that is! =o) Bill Moyers is such a wonderful guide to this Difficult Land - he makes it accessible, and helps me to understand and better appreciate contemporary poetry. Each chapter is based on an interview with a certain poet. He starts off by describing each individual; how he or she looks, acts, and what type of influence(response) they have on the audience. It is like meeting someone in real life. Then the interview unfolds into a discussion about what the poet's life is like, how they began to write, and what their main themes are. But the virtue of this book lies in that the book doesn't stop at being a gossipy interview. It remains focused on getting to know their poems. Each chapter is punched in by several poems and the poet explains them, which is just so much better than the Cliff's Notes! Bill Moyers writes so beautifully, and with ease - I read this book in the subway during my commute. This is certainly a book to have for the leaves-falling autumn.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A delightful excursion into the minds of some great poets.,
This review is from: Fooling with Words: A Celebration of Poets and Their Craft (Hardcover)
I grabbed this book on a whim from my local library - oh, I haven't seen this one before, what the heck, I've got the weekend free. And proceeded to spend the next two days riveted to the pages.Bill Moyers makes 230 pages go a long way. Each section is an interview with a different poet, a mixture of general discussion on poetry and specific details about their own work methods and beliefs with commentary on a couple of their own poems. In essence, you get to listen in to someone asking all those questions that you would like to ask! It manages to be both informative and very entertaining. A little more accessible than Lehman's "Ecstatic Occasions, Expedient Forms", it is also an excellent introduction to a facinating variety of poets. Thoroughly reccommended! If only it were longer ...
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|