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Stephanie Burt is a professor of English at Harvard University, coeditor of poetry at the Nation, and the recipient of a 2016 Guggenheim fellowship for poetry. Her work appears regularly in the New York Times Book Review, New Yorker, London Review of Books, and other journals. She lives in Massachusetts.
"Don't Read Poetry is for readers hunting sharp, nimble thinking
about culture, comprehension, and poems. Whether discussing an
ancestral Hawaiian language, a canonical poet like Langston Hughes,
or contemporary poets like Rodrigo Toscano and Jennifer Chang,
Stephanie Burt manages to illuminate 'the difficult process of
turning paired marks into words.' Don't read poetry, she suggests,
read poems. This is a book for anyone who reads with curiosity,
care and imagination."--Terrance Hayes, author of American Sonnets
for My Past and Future Assassin
"[An] inviting guide to an art form often seen as abstruse... At
once erudite and colloquial, the book resists prescriptive
judgments, teems with surprising juxtapositions, and evokes the
contagious enthusiasm of a cool teacher."--New Yorker
"[T]here are some empowering concepts and more than a few
compelling arguments should you decide to approach Don't Read
Poetry . . . with an open mind, a gracious ear, and a loving
heart."--New York Journal of Books
"Burt is well-suited to convince even the most skeptical readers
that poems, indeed, should be read by everybody."--Booklist
(starred review)
"Charming...Burt is a delightful companion who reminds us that
poems go down a lot better if we read them out loud and
slowly...The whole idea of Don't Read Poetry is not only to
celebrate the freedom and inventiveness in poems...but also to
connect poems to a larger world of beauty."--The Christian Science
Monitor
"For the past fifty years, poetry critics have battled over what
poetry is, which poets mattered, and which didn't. Stephanie Burt
says they had it wrong. Don't read poetry, this dedicated pluralist
tells us, if by poetry you mean one thing. If however you want to
read poems, and discover the manifold ways they can be -- and help
readers to be -- good (for Burt's aesthetic vision is ultimately
ethical), read this lucid, informed, and deeply humane
book."--Langdon Hammer, author of James Merrill: Life and Art
"In this eloquent literary primer, Burt...contends with poetry's
reputation for inaccessibility...[A] sweeping, insightful
survey."--Publisher's Weekly
"When I began Stephanie Burt's Don't Read Poetry, I fully expected
her to widen and deepen my appreciation of this art form. Burt is,
after all, a masterful poet, teacher, and literary critic. What I
didn't necessarily expect was that I'd have such a great time
absorbing what she has to say. Whether you love poetry or resist
it, you will enjoy this entertaining and enlightening book."--Wally
Lamb
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