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26 December 2009 @ 01:37 pm


Since no one ever posts anything here, I thought I would break the silence.

Plenty of end of year lists will be popping up all over the net, but you don't often see any about poetry.


So this one comes from http://weeklyrader.blogspot.com/

Let us know if any of you have any 2009 collections that you would add to the list--



Best Books of Poetry, 2009

APOLOGIES FOR CRIBBING MY own list from the San Francisco Chronicle, but deadlines and grading take precedent over originality. I'll call special attention to my stocking stuffers--excellent books of poems that may fly under the radar of most lists.

The Selected Poems of Wallace Stevens, edited by John N. Serio, (Knopf; 327 pages; $30). A gorgeous and generous selection from the most important American poet of the previous century. Stand in awe at the bling in Stevens' first book, "Harmonium," but linger longer on his final collection, "The Rock," especially gems like "The World as Meditation," "Final Soliloquy of the Interior Paramour" and "The Planet on the Table." Amazing and enduring work.

Inseminating the Elephant, by Lucia Perillo (Copper Canyon; 93 pages; $22). Perillo's insightful work is less silly and more philosophical than Billy Collins', but just as funny. Imagine William Carlos Williams poems on roller skates, holding Roman candles in each hand, wearing a Viking costume, and racing down an abandoned waterslide, and you'll get an idea of what reading Perillo is like.

Face, by Sherman Alexie (Hanging Loose Press; 159 pages; $18). Alexie's poems are razors. Watch him lather up the faces of pop culture, Indian reservations, basketball and family. Then marvel at how his crazy sharp poems scrape them clean. This collection is Alexie's least angry and his most formal.

Archicembalo, by G.C. Waldrep (Tupelo Press; 64 pages; $16.95). Limning the line between verse and prose, this ingenious book takes the form of a 19th century "gamut," a kind of self-help primer that prefaced early American sheet music. The poems, forged in music's fire, instruct the reader not just about music and language but also about what we might call the internal symphony of the self.

Chronic, by D.A. Powell (Graywolf; 78 pages; $20). San Francisco remains one of the world's great cities for poetry, and Powell is its best poet. Powell's poems map the mysterious spaces where the internal and external world overlap, ultimately calling attention to the chronic afflictions affecting both.


Stocking stuffers:
Slamming Open the Door, by Kathleen Sheeder Bonanno (Alice James Books; 80 pages; $15.95). A harrowing book about the murder of the poet's 18-year old daughter. The poems manage to be affecting and sorrowful without being exploitive, dramatic, or sentimental.

The Looking House by Fred Marchant (Graywolf; 63 pages; $15). An accomplished book about the problems of war and coming home from war. Meditative and introspective, these poems feel particularly relevant as America steps up its involvement in two wars.

The End of the West by Michael Dickman (Copper Canyon; 96 pages; $15). A better and more mature book than his brother's more lauded effort. These poems feel like they are about everything.

And How to End It by Brian Clements (Quayle; 122 pages; $14). See my previous post about Clements two recent books. Great stuff from small but outstanding presses.

Sightmap by Brian Teare (University of California Press; 96 pages; $16.95). The ghost of Robert Duncan lives on in these fragmented poems that catapult across the map of the page. I just love what Teare does with language here.
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 12:25 am
Has anyone ever written a decent sestina in the English language? And if the consensus is "No, they have not" is it time for poets to stop trying?

I found this one by Jonah Winter, which made me laugh.

 

Sestina: Bob )

 
 
28 December 2009 @ 01:45 pm
Please pray that my passport application will be acepted and processed tomorrow.It will be my fourth time going there I am in China with my visa expiring soon and i require an new passport to get a new visa.They are so nit picky and it is such a hassle.many people have to keep coming
 
 
Current Mood: distressed
 
 
 
27 December 2009 @ 11:09 pm
Fic: Submissive Wonder Boys - for [info]snapelike  
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
 
 
Current Mood: accomplished
Current Music: Battlelore - Horns of Gondor
 
 
27 December 2009 @ 05:48 pm
Please pray for Pastor Paul.
We learned today he is returning to the U.S for good.He has faithfully served us here in Asia for ten years.I have knpwn him for two.
We will all miss him very much
Please pray his family has a safe return
 
 
Current Mood: sad
 
 
27 December 2009 @ 05:43 pm
How do you distinguish a simple mistake from a sin?

Ie, when do you downplay some mistake you've made, and when do you see it's a big thing and you must ask for forgiveness?

Jesus seemed to distinguish between camels and gnats. But other christians have told me that all sins are the same, all anger God equally. I've kinda gone away from this, the route of God is angry with me. I don't believe God gets angry so quickly as some make Him out to be. Yes, sin is bad, but if you ask for forgiveness, it is easily forgiven and repaired.

Oh yes, and do you believe there are sins of thought? Or are thoughts always free, like the song says? I am trying not to value my thoughts so much. When I fall into bad thoughts I stop them and go on, I'm trying to avoid all this "I sinned so terribly, God must first forgive me before I can go on with life". When it's been really bad I say a prayer and then go on. But I'm trying not to wait for feeling forgiven. Would you say that's ok? There are many drawbacks to believing in sins of thought. The thing is, if you say to yourself that particular thought is incredibly evil ... then it happens that the mind even more cannot detach itself from such thoughts.

What do you think?
 
 
 
I shared this tradition on LJ last year. I'm doing it again this year. Because it really is an honor to receive these great gifts from a fantastic sister, with the heart of a dragon. Little Dragon, you are the best!







 
 
 
26 December 2009 @ 09:50 pm
I had such a happy time with my family this Christmas.

I joined them on Christmas Eve and stayed with them until Boxing Day afternoon.

The girls went to Midnight Mass, and then we chatted and finally went to bed. Of course, I waited until they'd fallen asleep, so that I could leave little gifts at the end of their beds.

On Christmas Morning we had our traditional boiled eggs, opened some presents, then the girls went to church (I stayed at home because I only attend church by consent of my priests - this is an issue of kindness and obedience - but I am fine because I can take eucharist at 8 o'clock on Sunday Morning). Then Liz's brother Simon arrived in time for lunch, which was of course delicious, and then we spent the afternoon and evening playing games, with intermittent snacks.

It felt so happy all of us being together. We had so much fun and it felt like I could stay there forever. They are my family, and we were a family together.

Finally everyone grew tired except my son and myself - so we nestled down to watch 'Gladiator' and then the whole household fell into a deep Christmas sleep until half past ten this morning.

My daughter's boyfriend came round on Boxing Day, and we gradually all got going. I cooked a lunch mostly consisting of the previous day's vegetables. We chatted some more. And then it was time for me to go.

Of course, I miss them loads, and I wish I didn't have to go, and I would stay with them forever if I could stay. I would so like that.

But this is part of the baptism. And, although it's not what I want, having to leave my dear ones, these two Christmas days were blessed and tender and precious, so I say Thanks be to God. And truly, this Christmas, God is with us in peace and grace and love.
 
 
Current Location: Berkhamsted, UK
 
 
27 December 2009 @ 09:55 am
I have just recently encountered the idea of the 'Blue Christmas', i.e. holding services of commiseration, rather than celebration, for the benefit of those who are hurting. Not only is this psychologically valuable to those who are suffering and are within the Church, it is also much more attractive to many outside than is the triumphalism which we see so much.

P.S. There is nothing in this which suggests that these services are replacing the traditional ones. They are, instead, additional means of reaching people not reached by the ordinary means.
 
 
Current Mood: impressed
 
 
 
25 December 2009 @ 12:41 am

Regardless of how one feels about Pope Benedict XVI, what is unmistakable is his great gift as a homilist. As with every great preacher, some of his best homilies come during the Christmas season, and especially at the Christmas vigil Midnight Mass. Following is, in my opinion, one of the best homilies I have ever read from this pope, and I've read a lot of them. If ever a message will remind us of what we celebrate in this Christmas feast, in what it means to be a Christian, this is it. Merry Christmas everyone!

Benedict XVI's Christmas Vigil Homily

"God Is Important, by Far the Most Important Thing in Our Lives"

VATICAN CITY, DEC. 24, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a Vatican translation of the homily Benedict XVI gave tonight at the Christmas Vigil Mass in the Vatican.


* *

Continue reading... )
 
 
25 December 2009 @ 08:50 pm
What is this fruit all about? Read more... )
 
 
Current Mood: awake
 
 
24 December 2009 @ 05:17 pm
Today, the twenty-fifth day of December,
unknown ages from the time when God created the heavens and the earth
and then formed man and woman in his own image.

Several thousand years after the flood,
when God made the rainbow shine forth as a sign of the covenant.

Twenty-one centuries from the time of Abraham and Sarah;
thirteen centuries after Moses led the people of Israel out of Egypt.

Eleven hundred years from the time of Ruth and the Judges;
one thousand years from the anointing of David as king;
in the sixty-fifth week according to the prophecy of Daniel.

In the one hundred and ninety-fourth Olympiad;
the seven hundred and fifty-second year from the foundation of the city of Rome.

The forty-second year of the reign of Octavian Augustus;
the whole world being at peace,
Jesus Christ, eternal God and Son of the eternal Father,
desiring to sanctify the world by his most merciful coming,
being conceived by the Holy Spirit,
and nine months having passed since his conception,
was born in Bethlehem of Judea of the Virgin Mary.

Today is the nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ according to the flesh.



May the peace and blessings of Our Lord Jesus Christ with you this Christmas and always.
 
 
24 December 2009 @ 05:04 pm

For unto us a child is born -- unto us a son is given. 
                                                              -Isaiah 9:6a

The great gift we have from God of Himself is reason to rejoice.  What wonder and mystery and grace!  May the eyes of our understanding being enlightened, that we may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, and what is the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe -- according to the working of His might.

Merry Christmas to everyone!

 
 
24 December 2009 @ 01:19 pm
Here in Casa Del Luthor we are stocked with beer and kitty grass and pizza and all the other essentials of life, I'm watching a Star Wars marathon, and settling in for a quiet xmas. Later I'll call the fam. Hope things are good with all of you and no one is stuck in snow.

And I will see you again after Marduk returns from the underworld with the sun.
 
 
24 December 2009 @ 10:01 am

Following is the second reading from the Office of the Readings for December 24. It is a portion of a Christmas sermon delivered by St. Augustine. Over the next few days I hope to post various bits of his Christmas sermons, as they typically represent some of his finest preaching. Enjoy!


Truth has arisen from the earth )
 
 
24 December 2009 @ 02:38 pm
I am going offline now, for Christmas.

This child, this baby, come to live among us: "He shall be called Emmanuel" it was said.

God with us.

May this God of all grace and goodness, be with each one of you who reads this message.

God close to us, God knowing us, God there in our sorrows and fears, God holding us.

Forever.
 
 
Current Location: Berkhamsted, UK