With breakup and divorce rates so high in the United States, who wouldn't want to read an eclectic volume of poems on the subject? Therapeutic and transformative, edgy yet sincere, enlightening, wideranging, female and male, gay and straight, innocent and guilty, It's Not You, It's Me: The Poetry of Breakup incorporates work from as many different perspectives as possible in order to explore the exquisite pain of heartbreak. Such top-shelf contributors as National Book Award finalist Kim Addonizio, bestselling author Denis Johnson, former poet laureate Mark Strand, Edward Hirsch, Maxine Kumin, David Lehman, and many others proudly offer up their wisdom on the various pains (and humors) of heartbreak. In this stunning collection, readers will not find false hope, but the real hope of genuine sympathy in love, hate, fury, and recuperation.
The notable good ones that I won't soon forget are "Minneapolis" by Patricia Smith for being so tortured and honest, and "Charades" by Edward Hirsch for being an entire story in a few lines. This one hurt to read.
A great collection of poetry. The book is divided into 3 sections-about to, in the midst of, and the aftermath. There is a nice mix of humor, pathos, and anger.
• “Privilege of Being” by Robert Hass • “Curse Four: Orders for the End of Time” by Cynthia Huntington • “Walking Home Across the Island” by Jack Gilbert • “Reunions with a Ghost” by Ai • “Coda” by James Tate • “Terrible Love” by Kevin Prufer • “Ex-boyfriends” by Kim Addonizio • “A Man Alone” by Steve Orlen • “Goodbye” by Patricia Smith
Thie book is worth getting just to read the introduction, but the quality of writing doesn't stop with those 9 pages of prose but extend to the poetry as well, a mix of intelligent, hard-experienced, perceptive, poetry that makes you wish you had bought the book instead of just checking it out of the library.
I stumbled upon this book after a really, really bad breakup and it did wonders for me. Even now I find myself occasionally perusing its pages renewing to memory my favorite poems and reminding my heart how far we've come. Definitely a must read for anyone who has gone through the motions of heartbreak.
It's a shame that this collection has the title and cover it has, because it is actually really excellent and introduced me to several new poets. Damn you, marketing!
A collection of love, muddled relationships, and their aftermath. Not a fan of poetry but this list of poets on the process of love, lust, and hate is worth looking at.