This highly respected anthology presents the works of 70 poets who have shaped the contours and direction of mainstream American poetry from 1960 to the present. Designed to provide a rich reading experience for both undergrad and graduate courses, more than 500 selections illustrate the variety and vitality of American poetry over the last few decades. For each poet, the collection features a generous sampling of their work along with a photo, biographical sketches, and bibliographies.
I own many books of poetry and a few poetry anthologies. It is rare that an anthology includes all of the poets whose work I admire, but this is one of those. As is the case for many anthologies, for those who are looking for samples of more experimental work, this is not for you. This includes the typical major players like Robert Hayden, Galway Kinnell, and Philip Levine, but it also offers work by culturally varied poets like Gary Soto, Kimiko Hahn, and Naomi Shihab Nye. There really wasn't a single poem which was not deeply felt. I would recommend this for anyone needing an introductory book into contemporary American poetry.
I'm admittedly unaware of the modern poetry scene (is there one!?!?!??) but this remains the best compilation of all the heavy-hitters and essential poets from our country.
Great anthology (3rd edition) of American poetry published from 1945 to 1979, nicely limited to 40 poets with 7 to 16 poems from each, allowing selections from each poet's work over a period of years. Biographies appear at the end with bibliographic information to 1980. The editor's essay "Contemporary Poetry: The Radical Tradition" appears at the end as well, along with a bibliography of critical works relating to the poets. I really enjoyed the selection of poems in this anthology. Certain poets in the book do not appear in McClatchy's Vintage Contemporary Poetry (1990), such as Imamu Amiri Baraka, Alan Gugan, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Donald Hall, David Ignatow, Maxime Kumin, Stanley Kunitz, Louis Simpson and William Stafford, despite the book's 65 poets (but often only 2 to 5 poems each). Both anthologies show the richness of American poetry in its wealth of styles and subjects.
My rating would have been higher but I'm not the biggest fan of poetry. This is an excellent collection of poets and their poems. I actually found this book in a pile that some of my college professors were giving away. I had just been in a Poetry class, and I felt the need to continue reading poetry even though it's not my favorite reading material. I am glad I read this collection of poetry, and I would recommend it to anyone who has a love for poetry.
It's very difficult for me to find a collection of poetry that I can read most of the way through. This had good work from authors I never knew, and am now a fan of. Besides that, there were good bios and acknowledgements section to find a lot of books from. A good mixture of some poets; others, I have no idea how they got into publication at all.
I loved this book when I first got it (first poetry workshop), and I love returning to it. The more years that pass, the more I realize it's a fantastic introduction to some of the most important poets we have. A great compilation!
I suppose this is the book that introduced me to contemporary American poetry. I still read it (it's on my nightstand!). So many poets to keep falling in love with.
This was a textbook in college, but I still pick it up every once in awhile and read some poems. This is the best anthology I can think of for modern poems. Amen.