the Kalliope: a consideration of contemporary American poetry.

  • On Genevieve Kaplan’s [aviary]

    On Genevieve Kaplan’s [aviary]

    I originally started this point wanting to write out my thoughts on Genevieve Kaplan’s poem, “They trail there, they trail.” But it’s difficult to write about that poem alone without setting it in the context of the overall collection, [aviary]. The poem stands on its own, of course. How it singles out some specific yellow…

  • The Hyperobjective

    The Hyperobjective

    For many years, I’ve been interested in the scope of Mei-mei Berssenbrugge’s poems. Their attention to limits. Their expansion beyond limits, but in this way where acknowledging how limits exist is the life of the poem. Both inside and outside of that limit. For instance, her book, Nest, is about the concept of nests. Or…

  • Diana Khoi Nguyen on Wheaton Campus

    It was my pleasure to welcome Diana Khoi Nguyen to Wheaton for a reading last week. And I just thought to include my introduction here. Thanks so much to Diana! The students were absolutely enthralled by her presentation. I have always been fascinated by poems that account for the enormity of their subject matter. An…

About this site

For many years, I’ve kept a database about poetry books, prizes, teaching positions, and literary journals. I’ve called it Kalliope, because that’s the Greek muse of epic poetry. And, well, I like thinking of the epic scope of American poetry!

And while all that data is still alive and well, I’m changing it so it’s private now. In its place, a blog! Where I’d like to relate some of my personal thoughts about poems, poetry books, literary journals, poetry criticism. Visual art. For a few years I was writing book reviews, which I loved. And then I didn’t love, because reviewing poetry books gets little respect. And every few years there’s going to be someone writing about how dumb book reviews are. Then that person’s friend will probably write something about how poetry is dying.

Consider this site an idiosyncratic aside to those conversations. I am a poet. My wife is a poet. And we are raising a daughter who has assured us she will never be a poet. I like conversations about poetry, and this site is my small contribution to those conversations.