Title | : | Poetry Magazine April 2020 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Perfectbound |
Number of Pages | : | 89 |
Publication | : | First published April 1, 2020 |
Poetry Magazine April 2020 Reviews
-
Maybe the detours of man's fall
are like the secret desertions of meteors
marked in the alphabet of storms
alongside rainbows-
And who knows
the course of becoming fertile
how seeds bend up
out of depleted soil
for the suckling mouths
of light.
(from 'Flight and Metamorphosis' by Nelly Sachs)
***
They say the Earth spins and that's why
we fall but everyone knows it's the
music.
It's been proven difficult to dance to
machine gun fire.
Still, my people made a rhythm this way.
A way.
(from 'Not Even This' by Ocean Vuong)
***
This is your anger.
This is mine.
This is me
reminding you to eat.
Turn off the stove.
Take your medication.
This is the realization
that I am yours and you are mine. This is
you
forgetting.
(from 'Forgetting' by Joy Ladin) -
There were some poems in here that were lovely and I understood, some poems that were lovely, and some poems that I did not understand. I love the cover design of these mags very much.
"A stranger always has
his homeland in his arms
like an orphan
for whom he is seeking nothing
but a grave."
-Nelly Sachs -
Several stellar poems in this issue, including: Emily Jungmin Yoon, Ocean Vuong (of course), Pascale Petit, Joshua Bennett, and Tishani Doshi.
Although I appreciate how Poetry has become increasingly diverse in its publishing non-white writers, I was appalled, like many others, by the Poetry Foundation's initial tepid response to Black Lives Matters. With their kind of money and power, they should be doing better by this, and I'm glad they were called out for it. That said, after this year, I'm canceling my subscription. I think they have enough money anyway. -
Faves from this issue: Emily Jungmin Yoon, Ocean Vuong, Pascale Petit, Joshua Bennett, torrin a. greathouse, Sally Wen Mao, Joy Ladin, John Shoptaw.
-
Decent issue of Poetry. The amazing Ocean Vuong contributes a verse, "Not Even This" that is beguiling and worthy of re-reading -- I went back and forth through it a half-dozen times finding new lines and riddles in it. Otherwise, "Two Of Cups" by Patrick Samuel offers a warped look at pop culture; "Reparation" by Joshua Bennett is dark and oddly timely; Tishani Doshi's "They Killed Cows. I Killed Them" was a good read, filled with murder and political concern.
Oh... and I even liked the art this time. -
The Gertrude Stein / Bianca Stone reimagining was great, so was Madeline Gins’ “Tranformatory Power” piece, and Sally Wen Mao’s “Nucleation” (easily the strongest piece in this collection), et al... both Joy Landin pieces (the poem and the essay) where the black hole here (oy! what a way to end... a deflating hiss...)
-
Nothing really grabbed me, it was interesting to read what poets were writing before the pandemic and in it's earliest days