Adam Sol is an award-winning poet, writer, and teacher. He has published four collections of poetry, including Crowd of Sounds, which won Ontario’s Trillium Book Award. He lives in Toronto, Ontario, with his wife, Rabbi Yael Splansky, and their three sons.
“This unassuming book provides a great public service — it removes
the shroud of mystery that hovers between too many readers and the
world of poetry … Sol deserves to be read widely and freely; his
humble witness to the simple art of reading may be this book’s most
important gift. Libraries should have multiple copies.” — Library
Journal Starred Review
“Going beyond the question of what poems mean, Sol investigates how
they work — how they elicit emotion, provide or withhold
information, and construct memorable images. His selections,
largely derived from his time as a juror for the 2015 Griffin
Poetry Prize, tend toward the relatively lesser-known, making this
survey equally worthwhile for beginners who can learn from Sol’s
instruction and for more seasoned readers who will delight in the
new discoveries contained within.” — Publishers Weekly
“One wants to reread the poems, linger over Sol’s arguments … How a
Poem Moves certainly revealed exciting new work to this reader of
contemporary poetry, and it evinces the dizzying numbers and
varieties of poems produced in North America today. We need more of
this kind of thing, and Sol’s project might move more of us to make
public our readings as much as poets make public their poems.” —
Quill & Quire
“Sol is particularly sensitive to the value of the
as-yet-undefined, since giving voice to the contradictory is
poetry’s principal strength … But his greatest skill is in
underlining the potency of aural effects: He is always on the
lookout for alliteration, assonance and consonance, for hidden
rhymes and barely-there metres … This is truly a welcoming book —
at once an educational snapshot of the contemporary literary scene
and a useful example of how to teach for educators themselves.” —
Globe and Mail
“It provides a gateway for some of us to discover a new pleasure,
and others of us to take a closer look at the poetry we love.” —
Toronto Star
“Adam Sol approaches poetry with a unique sensitivity; one that
illustrates with exceptional clarity and insight, just how a poem
moves.” — Scott Griffin, founder of the Griffin Poetry Prize
“[Sol] has a likeable professor's skill for outlining complex
theories and entire literary movements in a few sentences … Each
time a chapter opens with a seemingly impenetrable poem, we wonder
how Sol is going to handle this one. But the difficulty only
energizes him: he's like a street juggler picking up sword after
flaming sword. For the most part, Sol asks questions and points
things out … Each question opens a door into a once inaccessible
text.” — Literary Review of Canada
“In short, conversational essays that tease out music and meaning
in equal measure, Adam Sol explores the living, beating heart of
poetry. With an eye to poets of diverse backgrounds and aesthetic
modes, and featuring impromptu asides on rhythm and meter, How a
Poem Moves is just as at home in the university classroom as the
doctor’s waiting room. Rich with lively commentary and shrewd
insight, these essays trace a sharp and considerate mind at work.
Sol is a thoughtful and affable guide to ignite — or reignite — a
love of poetry.” — Cassidy McFadzean, award-winning author of
Hacker Packer
“There is in our wounded world a great need for the balm and
challenge poetry can provide. These beautiful, rich, and often
surprising meditations get the reader excited about the gift that
poems contain. Adam Sol trains the ear as much as the mind's eye.
He is the Roger Tory Peterson of poetry. This is a book I will pass
out like religious tracts to my friends. I am grateful for it.” —
Shelagh Rogers, Host and Producer at The Next Chapter, CBC Radio
One
“How a Poem Moves is the perfect antidote to the condition commonly
known as Fear of Poetry. And Adam Sol is the perfect companion on
this tour of the sounds, sights, and emotional delights of poetry.
As someone who’s spent most of her life reading and writing poems,
I’m thrilled by Sol’s ability to describe what he loves in a way
that teaches me to see it, too.” — Tracy K. Smith, U.S. Poet
Laureate and Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Life on Mars
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