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The Art of Poetry: How to Read a Poem

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In The Art of Poetry, Shira Wolosky provides a dazzling introduction to an art whose emphasis on verbal music, wordplay, and dodging the merely literal makes it at once the most beguiling and most challenging of literary forms. A uniquely comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to poetic form, The Art of Poetry moves progressively from smaller units such as the word, line, and image, to larger features such as verse forms and voice. In fourteen engaging, beautifully written chapters, Wolosky explores in depth how poetry does what it does while offering brilliant readings of some of the finest lyric poetry in the English and American traditions. Both readers new to poetry and poetry veterans will be moved and enlightened as Wolosky interprets work by William Shakespeare, John Donne, William Blake, William Wordsworth, Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, Sylvia Plath, and others. The book includes a superb two-chapter discussion of the sonnet's form and history, and represents the first poetry guide to introduce gender as a basic element of analysis.In contrast to many existing guides, which focus on selected formal aspects like metrics or present definitions and examples in a handbook format, The Art of Poetry covers the full landscape of poetry's subtle art while showing readers how to comprehend a poetic text in all its dimensions. Other special features include Wolosky's consideration of historical background for the developments she discusses, and the way her book is designed to acquaint or reacquaint readers with the core of the lyric tradition in English.Lively, accessible, and original, The Art of Poetry will be a rich source of inspiration for students, general readers, and those who teach poetry.

245 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2001

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219 people want to read

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Shira Wolosky

20 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for Maru Kun.
223 reviews574 followers
February 15, 2017
Wallace Stevens, as well as being a great modernist poet, was Head of Legal at the Hartford Insurance Company. He wrote brilliant, refined poetry while working at a boring job in an industry that actively tries to be dull. We can reasonably assume that he spent many hours in the office bunking off and editing his poems.

The twenty first century is no longer so kind to the office poet. E-mails, blackberries, on-line training, town-halls, conference calls and the rest of that corporate baggage leave us little opportunity to develop our ars poetica. These days anyone who seriously wants to develop as a poet has no choice but to combine poetry and work.

With W H Auden's Musee des Beaux Arts and John Masefield's Cargoes as my inspiration here are my first attempts at defining a new poetic aesthetic of the office cubicle:

From now on all personnel matters will be dealt with in free verse
About suffering they were never wrong,
The HR department: how well they understood
Its human position: how it takes place
While someone else is photocopying or sending an e-mail or just reading a dull memo;
How, when the downsized are litigiously, passionately waiting
For their pink slips, there must always be
Outside contractors who did not specially want it to happen, surfing
On the internet outside the conference room.

All interaction with vendor management will be rhymed with a heavy and distinct meter.
Annie of procurement from distant Twickenham
Walking down the corridor in double quick time
With a cargo of staplers,
Memo pads and sticky notes,
Glue sticks, biro pens and heavy duty twine

As an aspiring office poet I have read a number of books on how to read poetry and this is certainly one of the best. A key strength is how it breaks down the poetic experience to its most basic concepts, giving each a separate chapter – words and diction, simile and metaphor, syntax and so on – and then fits these concepts together going from the simplest most basic level but building up to a more complex but cohesive whole.

There are a few points where the book gets a little academic and the eyes begin to glaze over, but the choice of poems is good and in the main the explanations very enlightening. In fact the book was so good I might actually go and read some poems instead of reading books about how to read poems.

Recommended for people struck by the muse while switching the printer off and on again.
Profile Image for Huei-Jing.
2 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2012
I read it to help myself to write poem.
I've started to learn writing poem in English from 2010.
Actually, My native language is Chinese(major in Literature). English is second one. (Writing is better than speaking)

As a little monster and bi, mother monster inspired me to achieve something special:bilingual.
Um...can I call myself as a writer or poet? After all, I haven't published any books.

Profile Image for Ed.
157 reviews1 follower
December 23, 2011
Not a book for the faint of heart,
The poems are rendered, torn apart,
Be warned! it may take many a session
To understand each verse dissection.
Profile Image for Marbenele.
132 reviews4 followers
March 30, 2021
Very helpful and useful to learn how to read a poem and thus how to write it.
21 reviews6 followers
October 2, 2016
It was very clear and informative until about the last couple of chapters. Chapter 14 however, perhaps because of its topic as well as its relation to modernist and post structuralist issues is a bit confusing and provides rather a bad ending to an otherwise satisfactory and insightful book.
Profile Image for Gwendolyn Neal.
55 reviews14 followers
March 7, 2014
Engaging and comprehensive introduction to poetry. Very informative, highly recommended.
Profile Image for Mike Bright.
227 reviews3 followers
April 20, 2025
Full disclosure - I am deeply on the technical side of the academic world (computer engineering). So poetry has always been a struggle for me. I was talking with an English professor about how to understand poetry, and he recommended this book.

Wow! Dr. Wolosky is great. Each chapter breaks down a different piece of poetry (e.g. individual words, phrases, structure, rhyme, rhythm, etc. She gives all the appropriate technical terms (many of which seem silly to me - just call it what it is), but they do not distract from the explanations. As she explains each concept, she gives a poem (or poem fragment) to illustrate. Everything made good sense and it all held together well (for me).

I am clearly still a poetic beginner, but I think with a few more books that break down some poems, I might actually find some enjoyment in this part of literature. Thank you Dr. Wolosky.
Profile Image for ♡.
44 reviews
March 18, 2018
So here's the deal. I skipped maybe 3 chapters of this book either because we didn't cover them in class or because I was lazy. So technically I didn't read it cover to cover. BUT it took a big chunk of time because it's somewhat dense so I'm counting it toward my "read" books.

So for the actual review part. Personally, I wouldn't have picked this up to read of my own volition. Not that I don't enjoy studying literature, but I don't tend to read things like this in my free time. For the class I'm taking this book was a giant help. We've studied mainly poetry and the book has given us a lot of avenues of thought for analysis. Overall, it was a pretty useful tool to learn how to analyze poetry in greater depth.
Profile Image for Sean Connolly.
143 reviews4 followers
November 12, 2023
So I am a college student now! I’m loving my Arts and Humanities course and the main reason definitely being the people I’ve met and become friends with. This is the first thing I’ve read for my course, for help with my Poetry class and I purely read it because our lecturer strongly suggested doing so. I’ve definitely learned new things about poetry as a form of writing and I do feel that reading this has helped me to understand the intricacies of writing poems on a deeper level, so I’m grateful for that. However this book was mainly just a bit of a task to get through for me, and felt very repetitive or overly complex at times. I’ve made some notes throughout so hopefully I can apply some things I’ve learned from it.
15 reviews
Read
July 23, 2021
Very enlightening and interesting. Felt like many terms could have been explained more clearly. Outright disagreed with some parts sin the chapter on meter. Last few chapters were very dry and difficult to understand. Enjoy it a lot overall, don't recommend binge-reading in a single week.
Profile Image for chloe.
127 reviews6 followers
September 6, 2023
not bad; i learnt a couple things, but it didn’t say much that similar books don’t (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing but you probably won’t gain loads from reading it if you’ve already read another book about reading poetry)
Profile Image for Maddy.
311 reviews3 followers
Read
March 30, 2023
read 4 class 👁️👄👁️ but I liked it
Profile Image for Dila.
14 reviews
March 5, 2025
Diction, couplet, stanza nedir şiirler üzerinden örnekler vererek açıklanmış.

Öncesinde edebiyat tarihiyle alakalı bilgileri tazelemek ya da eşlikçi bi kitap bulundurmak gerekebilir.
Profile Image for Seth Arnopole.
Author 2 books5 followers
May 11, 2025
The Art of Poetry contains the best explanation (with examples) of the components, devices, and structures of poetry I’ve ever read.
Profile Image for Ellen.
124 reviews5 followers
May 21, 2009
Wolosky opens up a poem to multiples of meaning that are unimaginable in my first reading of the poem. She shows how each area of poesy helps interpret the poem, from individual words, syntax and the poetic line, images - simile and metaphor, metaphor and the sonnet, verse forms - the sonnet, poetic conventions, more verse forms, personification, poetic voice, gender and poetic voice, poetic rhythm - meter, poetic rhythm - sound and rhyme, rhetoric - more tropes, and something she calls incomplete figures in the chapter Incomplete Figures and the Art of Reading. Many of the poems she elucidates are poems I have read for years. I had no idea so very, very much was in these verses. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants a much richer experience in ready poetry.
Profile Image for Esther.
65 reviews5 followers
January 3, 2013
This book is fascinating, readable and helpful to someone (like me) who is frequently mystified by poetry. The author explains things brilliantly so you don't feel: 'That's fine for her but I'm never going to be able to understand this by myself.' She introduces concepts, gives examples and uses poems to illustrate in context. However, her interpretations of the poems are not phrased as closed or definitive. They are framed as discussions - questioning and exploratory - so you feel you are being taken on a thought-journey with her.
Profile Image for Tandava Graham.
Author 1 book64 followers
September 11, 2015
There are some good analyses of poems in here, and I think I learned something from it. I also think I would have learned more if I had more patience with the author's prose, which I found somewhat snooze-inducing.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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