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Poetry Today: Victoria Kennefick and Madeleine Wattenberg « Kenyon Review Blog

Poetry Today: Victoria Kennefick and Madeleine Wattenberg « Kenyon Review Blog
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Contributors Notes & Cover Art

Contributors Notes & Cover Art
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How to Be Better by Being Worse--Justin Jannise « Kenyon Review Blog

  With the Covid-19 pandemic, there have obviously been dozens of books that haven’t received the shine they might have under normal circumstances. One in particular that I’ve recently enjoyed is Justin Jannise’s poetry collection How to be Better by Being Worse, winner of the 2019 A. Poulin, Jr Poetry Prize (as selected by Richard Blanco) and just out from BOA Editions. Endlessly quotable, packed with poignancy and humor (oftentimes within the same poem), How to be Better by Being Worse is, like a great James Schuyler poem, something to savor. The voice effortlessly shakes hand with the language and the poems seem less written than willed, ordained. Below Jannise discusses “What I’m Into,” the first poem in the volume, along with other notable

Contributors Notes & Cover Art

Contributors’ Notes Hussain Ahmed is a Nigerian poet and environmentalist. His poems and translations are featured or forthcoming in Poetry, AzonaL, Sara Backer’s first book of poetry, Such Luck (Flowstone Press, 2019), follows two poetry chapbooks: Scavenger Hunt (dancing girl press, 2018) and Bicycle Lotus (Left Fork, 2015). Her honors include the 2019 Plough Poetry Prize competition, eight Pushcart nominations, and fellowships from the Norton Island and Djerassi Resident Artists Programs. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts, lives in New Hampshire, and reads for the Maine Review. Point, Marianne Boruch’s tenth book of poetry is The Anti-Grief (Copper Canyon Press, 2019). She has written three essay collections about poetry, most recently

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