Here at last is a comprehensive anthology of one of the world's most fascinating literary hybrids. This strange sub-genre encompasses the history of modern poetry, from its beginnings in romanticism (Bertrand, Turgenev, Baudelaire), its adolescence in Symbolism (Mallarme, Rimbaud, Trakl), its maturity in high modernism (Stein, Williams, Kafka, Montale, Follain, Char, Vallejo, H.D., and others), and its middle age in post-modernism (Cortazar, Bishop, Ashbery, Simic, Edson, Bly...) up to the present.
Great anthology of one of those genres I've never quite believed in. Are they poems? Especially the ones by those who are not otherwise poets. And now we have the "lyric essay" to further muddy the waters. But as a moniker, I don't suppose "Thoughtfully Written Prose" would hold up.
Great examples here from the expected sources: Borges, Elisabeth Bishop, Francis Ponge, Ginsberg, Kafka. But also many Europeans who have previously been only names to me.