Australian-born John Kinsella is the author of more than thirty books of poetry, fiction and nonfiction, and editor of the international literary journal Salt. His volume of poems The New Arcadia appeared from Norton in 2005
Elizabeth Spires of Baltimore is the author of two books of poetry, Globe and Swan\u27s Island, the ...
Albert Goldbarth\u27s most recent book is Across the Layers: Poems Old and New (Georgia). Winner of ...
In John Kinsella's new collection, 'Sack' not only refers not only to the shocking title poem, where...
Review essay on two books by John Kinsella, The Jaguar's Dream and Jam Tree Gully (peer reviewed
THERESA KISHKAN of Victoria, B.C. has published three collections of poetry, the most recent being...
This essay suggests that Douglas Livingstone's long poem 'A Littoral Zone' (1991), an explicit conv...
Michael Salcman has published recent poems in such magazines as Barrow Street, Harvard Review, and R...
This thesis focuses on Thomas Kinsella's poetry between 1952 and 1979 and discovers a stylistic deve...
This collection of poetry depicts landscapes and experiences of loss. The poems occur in various loc...
If we were to pick one poem to sum up the sense of Thomas Kinsella's work, it would be 'Leaf-Eater' ...
At the turn of the century, sometime between 1898 and 1906, the Rector of Drummondville, a small tow...
Rivers are important to us in all sorts of ways: usefully symbolic for poets, often loved in childho...
JOHN DITSKY has published widely in both American and Canadian periodicals, including Prairie Sch...
Four poems considering eels, tides, deer, dragonflies, species science, and time
This essay considers the major New Zealand installation artwork Āniwaniwa, by Māori New Zealand arti...
Elizabeth Spires of Baltimore is the author of two books of poetry, Globe and Swan\u27s Island, the ...
Albert Goldbarth\u27s most recent book is Across the Layers: Poems Old and New (Georgia). Winner of ...
In John Kinsella's new collection, 'Sack' not only refers not only to the shocking title poem, where...
Review essay on two books by John Kinsella, The Jaguar's Dream and Jam Tree Gully (peer reviewed
THERESA KISHKAN of Victoria, B.C. has published three collections of poetry, the most recent being...
This essay suggests that Douglas Livingstone's long poem 'A Littoral Zone' (1991), an explicit conv...
Michael Salcman has published recent poems in such magazines as Barrow Street, Harvard Review, and R...
This thesis focuses on Thomas Kinsella's poetry between 1952 and 1979 and discovers a stylistic deve...
This collection of poetry depicts landscapes and experiences of loss. The poems occur in various loc...
If we were to pick one poem to sum up the sense of Thomas Kinsella's work, it would be 'Leaf-Eater' ...
At the turn of the century, sometime between 1898 and 1906, the Rector of Drummondville, a small tow...
Rivers are important to us in all sorts of ways: usefully symbolic for poets, often loved in childho...
JOHN DITSKY has published widely in both American and Canadian periodicals, including Prairie Sch...
Four poems considering eels, tides, deer, dragonflies, species science, and time
This essay considers the major New Zealand installation artwork Āniwaniwa, by Māori New Zealand arti...
Elizabeth Spires of Baltimore is the author of two books of poetry, Globe and Swan\u27s Island, the ...
Albert Goldbarth\u27s most recent book is Across the Layers: Poems Old and New (Georgia). Winner of ...
In John Kinsella's new collection, 'Sack' not only refers not only to the shocking title poem, where...