Outside the L Talking with Contemporary Gay Poets | 
| Author: Christopher Matthew Hennessy Publisher: University of Michigan Press Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $12.27 You Save: $7.68 (38%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1409335
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 232 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 0472068733 Dewey Decimal Number: 811.54099206642 EAN: 9780472068739 ASIN: 0472068733
Publication Date: June 22, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new book! Delivered direct from our US warehouse by Expedited (4-7 days) or Standard (usually 10-14 days but can be longer). Expedited shipping recommended for speedier delivery. Over 1 million satisfied customers
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Product Description
"Outside the Lines explores the personal and historical forces that have shaped the work of a dozen gifted poets. The answers given to Hennessy's astute, perfectly tailored questions remind a reader how exciting poetry can be, and how writers create, through language, the world as we have never known it. These adventuresome interviews will stir anyone who cares about the making of art." ---Bernard Cooper, author of Maps to Anywhere
Editor Christopher Hennessy gathers interviews with some of the most significant figures in contemporary American poetry. While each poet is gay, these encompassing, craft-centered interviews reflect the diversity of their respective arts and serve as a testament to the impact gay poets have had and will continue to have on contemporary poetics.
The book includes twelve frank, intense interviews with some of America's best-known and loved poets, who have not only enjoyed wide critical acclaim but who have had lasting impact on both the gay tradition and the contemporary canon writ large, for example, Frank Bidart, the late Thom Gunn, and J. D. McClatchy. Some of the most honored and respected poets, still in the middle of their careers, are also included, for example, Mark Doty, Carl Phillips, and Reginald Shepherd. Each interview explores the poet's complete work to date, often illuminating the poet's technical evolution and emotional growth, probing shifts in theme, and even investigating links between verse and sexuality.
In addition to a selected bibliography of works by established poets, the book also includes a list of works by newer and emerging poets who are well on their way to becoming important voices of the new millennium.
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| Customer Reviews:
Twelve Angry Men June 30, 2006 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I don't think it's fair of Publishers Weekly to compare Christopher Hennessy, the brainy Boston-based editor who conducts these twelve interviews, to a figure of fun like James Lipton. That leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Hennessy isn't a flatterer like Lipton, though he gives his respondents the respect of attention and really, isn't that all any of us want?
The reviews are craft centered and that's a good thing and a bad. It makes for a certain similarity so that whatever differences these poets may have is occluded, and their responses are limited to a finite number of answers to the same questions. But on the plus side, at least these twelve men are being treated as seriously literary figures and not just as Merrill-eqsue epigones, eye candy for the light of heart. As a xonsequence, nearly everyone puts his best foot forward with Hennessy, almost as if they were wishing to please him and to further his line of thought. He gets nearly confrontational when asking Carl Phillips about his recent turn to the "stony" and "obdurate" but Phillips doesn't blink, he just answers the question like a mensch. Doug Powell on the other hand seems constantly to be sighing as though he were being asked all the wrong questions--no--better yet, questions that are so nearly perfect as to be a shame that perfection hasn't been achieved. And yet by the end Powell has produced the objective correlative the interview eeeks, as he holds out a piece of paper taped into a mobius strip, a poem written over it. "That's the greatest compliment that you can pay to someone else's work; it makes me want to write." Reading OUTSIDE THE LINES made me want to go out and interview someone, which is just as important a task.
What about the photos? Well, they all look good. Master anthologist JD McClatchy's perfect hair is a little scary, and Henri Cole could use a brush up, but Tim Liu could be acting in a Whit Stillman movie, his hips seeming to disappear into this super high style Breuer kind of office chair, his cigarette ajaunt, just the kind of thing they will have to airbrush out of the postage stamp when they honor Liu with his own stamp; he could sit on my face any old time, in fact maybe he did and I forgot.
Finally, how many gay poets are physicians anyhow? I know two of them I like, the rest of them should stick to their lasts.
Let there be volume two as soon as possible!
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