Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Of “Release from Stella Maris,” Nurkse writes: “Soul, ego, neural network, illusion? I'm the person who reads the first hundred pages of a book on neuroscience or theology, then skips to the last ten. The answers must be in the middle. I'm comfortable being clueless. But the years roll.”
S
HARON
O
LDS
is the author of nine books of poetry, including
The Dead and the Living
, which received the National Book Critics Circle Award, and
Stag's Leap
(Alfred A. Knopf, 2012), which won both the T. S. Eliot Prize and the Pulitzer Prize. She teaches at New York University's Graduate Program in Creative Writing, where she has been involved with NYU's outreach workshops, including the Goldwater Hospital workshop, in its twenty-eighth year, and the workshop for veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Of “Stanley Kunitz Ode,” Olds writes: “When I visited Stanley, I would go home and write down in my diary what had happened, what he had said, how he had looked. I was storing up Stanley memories. Years before, with Muriel Rukeyser, and George and Mary Oppen, I had done the same thingâalways in prose. But on this particular day, after I wrote the first five words, it had the feeling of a poem, ready to shape itself, gathering itself around the totem creature of the bobcat. So (with pen and ink) I moved the words out of paragraph position, over to the left margin, and we were off. And as I just read it over, I noticed more than usually the four-accent Anglo Saxon lineâthe old story line. Whatever Stanley said and did had such a glow of significance, my wish was to try to transpose it whole into a narrative poem form.”
G
REGORY
P
ARDLO
was born in Philadelphia in 1968 and raised in Willingboro, New Jersey. He is the author of
Totem
(2007), which received
The American Poetry Review
/ Honickman Prize, and
Digest
(Four Way
Books, 2014). He has received a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and a fellowship for translation from the National Endowment for the Arts. He is an associate editor of
Callaloo
and teaches undergraduate writing at Columbia University.
Pardlo writes: “ââWishing Well' is a true, which is to say, âNew York,' story.”
K
IKI
P
ETROSINO
(b. 1979 in Baltimore) is an assistant professor of English at the University of Louisville. She has written two poetry collections:
Fort Red Border
(2009) and
Hymn for the Black Terrific
(2013), both from Sarabande. She holds an MA in humanities from the University of Chicago and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.
Petrosino writes: “My poem âStory Problem' came from an assignment I gave myself: to compose a poem that sounds logical but doesn't really know where it's going. As a youngster, I found mathematical word problems especially baffling to solve. Each problem contained just enough of a narrative stem (âTwo trains depart from Chicago at precisely 12:23 PM, traveling in opposite directions') to spark my interest, but I never found the main task of âgetting an answer' through arithmetic or algebra very rewarding. Instead, I wanted to think and write about the people on those afternoon trains, speeding away from Chicago and into mystery. In poems, sentences are like that: wonderful locomotives that lead us across landscapes of new thought.”
D. A. P
OWELL
was born in 1963 in Albany, Georgia, but has lived most of his life in California. He knows how to hunt, fish, plow, prune, and butcher, but doubts that he could make a living at any of these things. He therefore has taught for a living since 2001. His books include
Chronic
(Graywolf Press, 2009) and
Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys
(Graywolf, 2012), recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry.
Powell writes: “ââSee You Later.' is part of a series of six-line poems inspired by the language of murder mysteries, along with other forms of puzzles.”
R
OGER
R
EEVES
was awarded a 2013 National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and Ruth Lilly Fellowship.
King Me
, his first book of poems, was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2013. He is an assistant professor of poetry at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Reeves writes: “ââThe Field Museum' began when my partner and I took our niece to the Field Museum in Chicago. While folks go to museums with children all the time, the visit was strange and disconcerting for me, because it was the first time that I was in a museum not as a gawker or a man on a reconnaissance mission but as a guardian, as a parental surrogate. I wanted my niece to âlearn' something. But I knew, from past experience with my own parents and guardians, that my self-consciousness could ruin the whole visit. As we walked through the bird wing of the Field Museum, I began to pronounce all the strange bird names, and my niece slowed her hurried pace and became mesmerized as well. I wrote down as many of the bird names as I could. I remembered that in
Crush
Richard Siken had a poem that began as a celebration of names, and I am fascinated with the way listsâgrocery lists, to-do lists, rostersâcan sound like poems. So the poem began to take shape around the names of the birdsânightjar, grebe, artic loon, pewitâand from the experience of walking with my niece through the museum. I began to think about what it might be like to raise a child, particularly a daughter, without a mother; the fatigue of grief and loss. I created a persona that more fully allowed me to think through the inability to reckon and explain death not only to a child but also to oneself.”
Born in the Bronx, New York, in 1954, D
ONALD
R
EVELL
was educated at Harpur College (BA 1975) and the University of Buffalo (PhD 1980). He is the author of twelve collections of poetry, most recently
Tantivy
(2012) and
The Bitter Withy
(2009), both from Alice James Books. He has published six volumes of translations from the French, including Apollinaire's
Alcools
(Wesleyan), Rimbaud's
A Season in Hell
(Omnidawn), Laforgue's
Last Verses
(Omnidawn), and Verlaine's
Songs without Words
(Omnidawn). His critical writings have been collected as
The Art of Attention
(Graywolf) and
Invisible Green: Selected Prose
(Omnidawn). Winner of the PEN USA Translation Award and two-time winner of the PEN USA Award for Poetry, he has also received the Academy of American Poets' Lenore Marshall Prize and is a former Fellow of the Ingram Merrill and Guggenheim Foundations. He has twice been awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. A former editor-in-chief of
Denver Quarterly
, he now serves as poetry editor of
Colorado Review
. He is director of graduate studies and professor of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He lives with his wife, the poet Claudia Keelan, and their children, Benjamin and Lucie, in the Spring Mountains of Nevada.
Of “To Shakespeare,” Revell writes: “Since my graduate school days, I've been an ardent if amateur Miltonist. Whenever granted a respite from poetry workshops and thesis guidance, I have opted to teach Miltonâin seminars, in surveys, in any academic setting at all. For ten happy years, I fancied myself to be the city of Denver's Municipal Miltonist, offering classes on
Paradise Lost
at both Denver University and the University of Colorado, Denver, often concurrently. When ambition and dollars lured me away to a different city, my students presented me with a beautiful wooden chair, painted all over with images and passages from the clamorous, baroque epic of disobedience and renovation. The chair is my most valued possession.
“About a year ago, a glitch in scheduling found me teaching, for the first time in thirty years, a course in Shakespeare: the Other Poet; the Crowd-Pleaser; the King's Man to my Regicide; the Macy to my Gimbel. And then I was surprised by joy. I cannot speak for the students, but to me, the course became a rapture. I'd chosen to cover the late romancesâ
Pericles, Cymbeline
, and
The Winter's Tale
âand in them I found such true bliss of reunion and reconciliation, particularly between fathers and their children, that my soul rejoiced. I immediately wrote my poem âTo Shakespeare' in gratitude.”
P
ATRICK
R
OSAL
was born in Belleville, New Jersey, in 1969. He is the author of three full-length collections of poems:
Boneshepherds
(Persea Books, 2011),
My American Kundiman
(Persea, 2006), and
Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive
(Persea, 2003). A former Fulbright fellow in the Philippines, he teaches in the MFA program at Rutgers University-Camden.
Of “You Cannot Go to the God You Love with Your Two Legs,” Rosal writes: “This poem, several years in the making, was triggered by a short passage from the book
On Love
by José Ortega y Gasset, an early-twentieth-century Spanish philosopher. (Ortega y Gasset edited a magazine called
Revista de Occidente
that published the likes of Federico GarcÃa Lorca and Pablo Neruda.) This is the passage in its entirety: âYou cannot go to the God that you love with the legs of your body, and yet loving Him means going toward Him. In loving we abandon the tranquility and permanence within ourselves, and virtually migrate toward the object. And this constant state of migration is what it is to be in love.'
“It's difficult to remember the exact process, but I think I picked up on the implications of the words âlegs of your body' and âmigration.' One could read that first sentence as having to borrow legs or put into
use some legs that aren't of your conventional body. Perhaps one's animal self has another pair of legs that we aren't always aware of. Perhaps the âconstant state of migration' that is the experience of love requires us to engage our animal selves.
“That was the lyric data for the poem's inception. I finished two thirds of the text in early drafts. Perhaps five years later, I completed the poem just as a particularly violent incident was everywhere in the news. The poem has reverberations of particular personal sorrow as well as the public grief of that time.”
M
ARY
R
UEFLE
was born in McKeesport, Pennsylvania, in 1952. Her latest book is
Trances of the Blast
(Wave Books, 2013). Her
Selected Poems
was published in 2010, and a collection of essays,
Madness, Rack, and Honey
, appeared in 2012. She lives in Vermont and teaches in the MFA Program at Vermont College of Fine Arts.
Of “Saga,” Ruefle writes: “A friend gave me a copy of one of the great Icelandic sagas; I felt bad that I couldn't finish it, but not so bad that I couldn't write a poem! Another friend told me about the geological riftâsome kind of fault line, I supposeâthat runs the length of Iceland, and I was struck (once again) by how our human narratives replicate or echo the narratives of our physical planet. On another note, so many things seem both clear and unclear at the same time; can you really
see
what you can
see through
? Of course the poem is not âabout' any of this, but these back thoughts bubble up. And this: all things have to go on much longer than a single story, generations and eons have to pass before anything can be said to have an end.”
J
ON
S
ANDS
was born in 1983 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He is a poet, essayist, and the author of
The New Clean
(Write Bloody Publishing, 2011). He starred in the award-winning web series
Verse: A Poetic Murder Mystery
from Rattapallax Films. He is an adjunct with the City University of New York, is a Youth Mentor with Urban Word-NYC, and heads creative writing programs at Bailey House in Harlem (an HIV/AIDS service center) and The Positive Health Project (a syringe exchange center located in Midtown Manhattan). He is the cofounder of Poets in Unexpected Places. He lives in Brooklyn and tours regularly.
Sands writes: “In âDecoded,' I wanted to produce an effect similar to what you get when you examine a photograph beside its negative. I am struck by how much of what I see in life containsâor is a direct result ofâwhat I don't (or won't) see. There is a blindness, and thus a
danger, in privilege, deriving often from what one does not know, or does not wish to know. The creation of the form of this poem helped me to excavate and spotlight ideas or narratives around racial identity that were previously hidden from me. I could not have written âDecoded' without the work and personhood of Eboni Hogan.”
S
TEVE
S
CAFIDI
was born in Virginia in 1967. He is the author of four books of poetry:
Sparks from a Nine-Pound Hammer
(2001),
For Love of Common Words
(2006),
The Cabinetmaker's Window
(2014), all from LSU Press, and
To the Bramble and the Briar
(University of Arkansas Press, 2014). He works as a cabinetmaker and lives with his family in Summit Point, West Virginia.
Of “Thank You Lord for the Dark Ablaze,” Scafidi writes: “This poem took me a few years to write, because I didn't know what I was doing for so long. To write it was to spin and spin and be lost. If you put an irregular or lopsided chunk of wood on the lathe, it will spin and break off if the speed is too high. I had to slow this thing down enough to work on it properlyâto understand what I was doing. Once you work that irregular chunk into balanceâinto a formâthen you can speed up the lathe again and it will go beautiful and blurry. I like that. For me, writing poems (and reading them) always involves being lost. I like it that the word âbewildered' echoes the first syllable in âwilderness.' I like it that the word âwilderness' has an anagram for the word âdeer' near the center of it. In this poem that deer is dead and death always bewilders. I write this poem constantly.”