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Raised by Wolves: Fifty Poets on Fifty Poems, A Graywolf Anthology

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Raised by Wolves is a unique and vibrant gathering of poems from Graywolf Press’s fifty years. The anthology is conceived as a community fifty Graywolf poets have selected fifty poems by Graywolf poets, offering insightful prose reflections on their selections. What arises is a choral arrangement of voices and lineages across decades, languages, styles, and divergences, inspiring a shared vision for the future.

Included here are established and emerging poets, international poets and poets in translation, and many of the most significant poets of our time. There are extraordinary Tracy K. Smith on Linda Gregg; Vijay Seshadri on Tomas Tranströmer, translated by Robert Bly; Natalie Diaz on Mary Szybist; Diane Seuss on D. A. Powell; Elizabeth Alexander on Christopher Gilbert; Ilya Kaminsky on Vénus Khoury-Ghata, translated by Marilyn Hacker; Mai Der Vang on Larry Levis; Layli Long Soldier on Solmaz Sharif; Solmaz Sharif on Claudia Rankine. In these poets’ championing of others, fascinating threads Stephanie Burt writes on Monica Youn, who selects Harryette Mullen, who writes on Liu Xiaobo, translated by Jeffrey Yang, who chooses Fanny Howe, who writes on Carl Phillips, who selects Danez Smith, who chooses Donika Kelly, who writes on Natasha Trethewey.

With an introduction by Graywolf publisher Carmen Giménez, Raised by Wolves is an echoing outward of poetry’s possibilities.

136 pages, Paperback

Published January 23, 2024

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Carmen Giménez

32 books9 followers

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Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for Ken.
Author 3 books1,247 followers
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June 24, 2024
Fanboy poetics from the Poetry World as Graywolf Press gives us 50 Graywolf poets choosing their favorite poems from other Graywolf poets then telling us why. Is this a commercial for Graywolf, then? A design to help us seek out Graywolf titles from the past and purchase them for some likely poesie?

Cynically-speaking, maybe, though you cannot deny there's talent in the room when you visit a salon featuring the likes of Nick Flynn, Natalie Diaz, Elizabeth Alexander, Tracy K. Smith, Claudia Rankine, Tess Gallagher, Ilya Kaminsky, Diane Seuss, Monica Youn, and even a few classical gases like Rainer Maria Rilke, Tomas Tranströmer, and Jane Kenyon.

In addition to some cool poems (among some lukewarm ones), you get some pretty cool analyses (among some more mundane ones). In many cases, the poetic comments pointed out techniques and tricks of the writing trade I completely missed (as is my wont).

Worth a walkthrough? If you like poetry as I do, I'd say yes. And don't worry about any wolves. Just channel Romulus and Remus and you'll be OK.
Profile Image for Kelly.
1,334 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2024
I received this anthology less than two weeks ago and it's already a bit beat up from going back through it multiple times. This book exceeded my high expectations. I knew it would be quality bc I respect Graywolf, but they truly captured the essence of poetry to share. We, the reader, get to be part of the "tangled root system" due in large part to the brevity of the essays that accompany each poem.

Giménez likens these essays to "ekphrastic poems, or odes, or elegies, or fan letters," capturing the intimate tone and revelations unfolded by the commentary. The essays are sometimes as beautiful as the poems themselves, and always a wonderful complement.

In sum, every poem and every essay was a straight up banger, and I love this anthology.
Profile Image for Dana.
158 reviews20 followers
December 31, 2024
this book answered many of the biggest questions i had this year that i spent hundreds of dollars and hours and hours trying to resolve (more tk)
Profile Image for  Yoel Isaac Diaz.
78 reviews10 followers
July 8, 2025
Stand-outs

New Year’s Eve at the Santa Fe Hotel, Fresno, California by Larry Levis
Interrogations at Noon by Dana Gioa
Parable by Carl Phillips
Cemetery by Rainer Maria Rilke
The Miracle by Kaveh Akbar
The troubadours Etc. by Mary Szybist
Ongoing by Jennie Xie
Between strangers by Yi Lei
Hangman’s tree by Monica Youn
Profile Image for Lily Poppen.
202 reviews39 followers
May 13, 2025
Thank you Graywolf Press for bringing this anthology into existence. The commentaries themselves post-poetry are enough to write a book about and praise.
Profile Image for Antoinette Van Beck.
413 reviews4 followers
October 24, 2024
this had so many beautiful essays and poems in it. i love when good writers tell me what they like about other good writers' work. borrowed from the library, but want to buy so I can reread some of these later.
Profile Image for Kate.
622 reviews11 followers
July 30, 2024
So many good poems!
Profile Image for Elijah Benson.
103 reviews25 followers
July 26, 2024
The essayettes are hit-or-miss, but if there is a better collection of poems in one place please tell me.
Profile Image for Katie.
49 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2024
A diverse collection of poetry throughout time. The authors who commented on each poem had such reflection in their responses that you gain an even further admiration for these poems and authors. The translations being located right after the poem really help solidify the messages presented, the relevance of their works, and their influence on the author themselves.
Profile Image for Troy Tradup.
Author 5 books35 followers
July 30, 2024
Many of these poems were a bit too poetic for my tastes, but I did quite like these lines:

"A copper-faced man once called me beautiful. Stupid, stupid man." (Eduardo C. Corral)

"One day these years will be known as the space between silence & enough. I still have trouble being alone in either, which is why the radio is always on." (Nick Flynn)

'What is created by humans is almost always alien." (Fanny Howe)

"What I heard & saw were a hundred sparrows gathering in one small tree, their throats full of some ridiculous joy or misery at being sparrows, winged, striped, & handicapped for life." (Larry Levis)

"Sleep, Bee, deep and easy. Hive, heave, give, grieve. Then rise when you're ready from your soul's hard floor to sweet work or some war." (Tracy K. Smith)

And this, from my favorite poem in the collection:

"The nurse went with him through the sliding door. Without having to speak of it we left the suitcase with his streetclothes in the car." (Jane Kenyon)
Profile Image for Alexis.
622 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2024
In this anthology, Graywolf poets choose a poem from a fellow Graywolf poet, and side-by-side, they explain its brilliance.

I love the format and idea behind this book. I actually picked it up at a bookstore because I found the structure so compelling and immediately began dreaming up how I could incorporate it in the classroom. I enjoy poetry but often “don’t get it,” and as you can imagine in a collection of poems selected by professional poets, there were plenty of complex ones. If I had loved more of the poems, I think this would have been even better, but I did feel a strong appreciation for the craft by reading other poets’ admiration for their peers’ work. Definitely worth picking this anthology up if you’re info that sort is thing.
Profile Image for B Sarv.
310 reviews17 followers
April 27, 2025
I learned so much reading this book. Any lover of poetry should read this book.

My favorite poems in this collection were:

Trace in Unison by Tess Gallagher

Faring by Saskia Hamilton

To Live by Ilya Kaminsky

Sea Sonnet by Alice Oswald

Cemetery by Rainer Maria Rilke

Vita by William Stafford

The Forest by Susan Stewart

The Troubadours Etc. by Mary Szybist

Ongoing by Jenny Xie

Between Strangers by Yi Lei, trans by Tracy K. Smith and

Hangman's Tree by Monica Youn
64 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2024
I love this book. I know I will go back to it again and again. I discovered new poets to read and was reminded of others I haven't read in a while. It was interesting to see the perspectives of other poets and sometimes what the chosen poem meant to them. It's a great idea for a book and the number of poems is perfect.
Profile Image for Sasha.
1,390 reviews11 followers
June 8, 2025
While I enjoyed discovering poets like Christopher Gilbert and Cecilia Woloch, it felt like most of these poems were chosen solely because they were originally published by Graywolf Press. Was that a stipulation? I was excited to see who poets like Ilya Kaminsky admired, but I can't tell if he was given carte blanche or told to restrict his selection.
Profile Image for Nan.
716 reviews
November 19, 2024
Poets are often accused of talking to themselves. Here they include us in the conversation. The fifty Graywolf-published selections are wonderful, and each page of selection justification is more wonderful. A great tribute to a great press.
Profile Image for William.
548 reviews12 followers
December 28, 2024
I was really blown away by a few of these—the Haines, Harvey, White especially. Most were pretty good and all had moments. But as one expects from an anthology, some will enrapture, some won’t. But it’s a good place to get some new names to look up!
Profile Image for Sawyer Tennant.
35 reviews
December 17, 2025
Wonderful anthology. Favorite poems include "No More" by Mary Jo Bang, "Ceremonial" by Eduardo C. Corral, "I once fought the idea of the body as artifact" by Diane Seuss, "Lent" by Mark Wunderlich, and "Ongoing" by Jenny Xie.
Profile Image for Josie Lozano.
5 reviews
October 8, 2024
I have come back to this book so many times when I need something to fill time on the go and I love it more every time! Some gems in this one. Highly recommend this anthology.
Profile Image for Mathilda.
171 reviews
November 17, 2024
“it seems Gallagher was given not one but two imaginations at birth, that’s how innate the unfurling feels. A simile, for her, is more like a quest than a likeness, and when she sets out in these ways, I often feel like I’m in the poem’s small boat, and she is both gust and sail at once, and then when I turn to look, there she is, sitting beside me. Companioned and transformed, I arrive on the other side, having traveled a miniature distance of words the soul’s metric deems enormous.”

“the poet stands in the presence of nature and awe sends them inward.”

“the possibilities dwelling inside language.”

“Then there are days when I flail for poems like they’re footholds in the abyss.”

I just adored all of these people I didn’t know
Profile Image for Will Florentino.
111 reviews
April 11, 2025
a bit disjointed as far as anthologies go but helped me find some of my new favorite poems
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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