Critics on Dark Horses . . .
Poets Katz (The Garden Room) and Prufer (Fallen from a Chariot; The New Young American Poets), both editors of the journal Pleiades,
asked over five dozen poets (ranging from some of America's most
well-known, like Billy Collins and John Ashbery, to rising talents,
like D.A. Powell and Susan Wheeler) to each pick one obscure or
underappreciated poem and to write an accompanying explanation of their
choice. The resulting anthology gathers a host of surprising
poems—works by Emily Dickinson, Sara Teasdale, Man Ray and Laura
(Riding) Jackson all find their way here—along with passionate prose.
Carol Muske-Dukes picked the tragically lush Thomas James ("...here is
my new mouth,/ Chiseled with care") and Mary Jo Bang introduces a
youthful Sylvia Plath ("I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead").
In one of the anthology's most moving moments, Stanley Plumly movingly
revisits Elizabeth Bishop's "Poem," which he calls "more 'personal' and
less 'finished' than what this inveterate writer is commonly committed
to." While the curatorial process—which involves so many other
people—ensures that few readers will like every poem, it also
guarantees that most will find new favorites. —Publishers Weekly
Creating an anthology of overlooked poems may not be original, but
editors Katz and Prufer added a clever twist by including brief essays
from the poets who submitted their personal favorites. Both
little-heard voices and well-respected titans of the poetic universe
are represented. Curiously, what becomes apparent is the randomness of
their selections. Billy Collins aptly states, "One could probably
locate a poem that deserved more attention by simply throwing a dart
blindfolded at the wall of American poetry." Katz and Prufer claim to
have simply set out to showcase forgotten works, but their anthology
achieves a nobler outcome. It demonstrates that powerful poetry can be
found anywhere. Poetry that, as Emily Dickinson so famously stated,
causes us to feel as if the top of our heads were taken off is
generated by the rarely published and the famous alike. And without
randomness, preferences, and biases, readers would not have such a wide
"wall of American poetry" at which to aim our passion-seeking darts. —BookList / American Library Association
Editor's Choice—The Chicago Tribune
In Chicago we love an underdog,
whatever its form. In this collection, dozens of poets--including Billy
Collins and Dana Gioia--select one poem that has fallen into obscurity.
Each poem is accompanied by a short essay explaining its brilliance,
why it fell from favor and why it matters.
—Elizabeth Taylor
The
premise of this book is simple: ask accomplished poets (including John
Ashbery, Billy Collins, Richard Foerster, Charles Bernstein, and
Carolyn Kizer) to recommend a forgotten or overlooked poem and explain
their choice in a few paragraphs. But the results are anything but
ordinary. The poems chosen for this delightful collection are, almost
without exception, little marvels that truly deserve to be rescued from
oblivion. The accompanying mini-essays (short enough not to overshadow
the poems) offer valuable insights into poet and poem and could serve
as a primer on poetics. Included are obscure poems by famous poets like
Whitman, Dickinson, Bishop, and Berryman as well as work by less
familiar poets Alvin Feinman, Joseph Ceravolo, Vasko Popa. One can only
hope that the collection will spark renewed interest in the latter.
Noteworthy are essays by Dean Young on Man Ray, Linda Bierds on
Margaret Avison, Wanda Coleman on Penny Gasaway, Lloyd Schwartz on
Joyce Peseroff, and Dana Gioia on lost WW I poet John Allan Wyeth. Katz
and Prufer (themselves award-winning poets) organize the collection not
by period or style or school, but instead by their intuitive judgments.
This supplies an element of surprise. Summing Up: Highly recommended. —Choice
Dark Horses is a lovingly performed excavation of poems that
have eluded canonization. A hundred poets were invited to share a
favorite neglected poem, as well as write a short essay on it. The
essayists, all published poets, are eager and passionate readers; the
format of poem-and-response lends the book an appealing intellectual
energy. It’s fascinating to see how one poem, however uncelebrated, can
nudge another poet into a swoon, and sometimes a career .... Dark Horses serves a noble purpose in rounding up loose, lost voices ... giving them a chance to meet with readers once again. —Jenny Gillespie, Time Out—Chicago
The wide breadth of the poetry, and the many ways and the conciseness with which these poets write about the work, make Dark Horses
a captivating read. The editors have put together an anthology that is
three-pronged in its successes: All of it is entertaining, most of the
poems in it warrant (for many reasons) new light in this new century,
and the prose of the poets here reveals a great deal.
—Alex Lemon, The Bloomsbury Review
Laurels to Joy Katz and Kevin Prufer, the editors of Dark Horses: Poets on Overlooked Poems.
Katz and Prufer did something simple but effective here: They
asked
75 contemporary poets to select an “unjustly neglected
poem” and write
a brief commentary on it. Those comments appear along with the poems.
The result is an excellent volume, both readable and thoughtful.
—Kansas City Star
In a culture that frequently overlooks poetry, this collection fights valiantly against the dying of the light. —The Washington Post
[T]his anthology can help us understand the ways that issues of
disregard and rescue intersect with those that underlie competing
schools of American poetry. By choosing selectors from both
traditional, referential poets on one hand and radicalized,
poststructural poets on the other, Katz and Prufer provide an
especially helpful view of the key differences between the two groups.
—The Georgia Review
The idea behind Dark Horses
started as a conversation among five poets about “wonderful, obscure
poems we’d come across over the years.” After musing on the topic and
sending poems back and forth for a couple of months, two of the poets,
Katz and Prufer, decided to send out invitations to a hundred poets,
asking them for an “unknown or underappreciated poem written by anyone,
in any language, from any era.” What ensues here are seventy-six poets
who responded and the poem each chose, followed by a brief essay about
the poem. Dark Horses reintroduces readers to both obscured
poets and obscured poems by well-known poets. “Guide to Marine Mammals
and Sentence Structure,” by Adam Hammer, chosen by Jim Daniels, is
likened to “Walt Whitman on acid” with lines like “The Teeth-Mammal was
sad, and cried real teargas, and was naked at last.” Richard Foerster
reacquaints us with the Dickinson gem “This Word is not Conclusion. / A
Species stands beyond — / Invisible, as Music — / But positive, as
Sound —.” And C. K. Williams gives a touching and generous response to
Chase Twichell’s “The Ruiner of Lives,” writing, “A poem of the
intensities of the mind, of our astounding ability to trans-figure
matter to spirit, yet, because humans never sufficiently appreciate the
responsibilities which the gift of consciousness entails, also of our
dreadful capacity to destroy both.” As a testament to the bond between
reader and poem, the anthology gives us the personal stories of many
poets who took this project on as a way to reveal how they first came
to love poetry—Lucia Perillo writes of John Logan’s “Three Moves:”
“I’ve always been a tad afraid that my enthusiasm for this poem springs
from the fact that my first hearing of it was an inaugurating moment in
my life as a poet. But, as always when I revisit this poem, I am
amazed.” —Virginia Quarterly Review
Best Books of 2007! —Kansas City Star
Dark
Horses: Poets on Overlooked Poems might seem at first glance merely another collection in the
plethora of literary anthologies that have recently become, like
the locust swarms in ancient times, a plague upon the land. Closer
inspection of this compilation by Joy Katz and Kevin Prufer, however,
reveals that Dark Horses is truly a treasure house of neglected
poems . . . both the poets and the poets who appear
as their advocates give all who wish the best for poetry a real
reason to hope that the best will be recognized and will live among
us. —Smoky Mountain News
Missing from this anthology are three poets who matter greatly to
the contemporary reader. One is Philip Larkin. The other two are the
editors themselves, Kevin Prufer and Joy Katz. Editorial etiquette may
have excluded their poetry but etiquette be damned, Prufer’s “Death
Comes in the Form of a Pontiac Trans Am” or “Ode to Rome” belong in
these pages as does Katz’s “Daffodils.” Caveats aside, Dark Horses tells us what individual poems mean to
the poets who chose them. As such, they open old, forgotten worlds—and
wounds--to those of us who can’t remember how much a single poem can
change our lives. Dark Horses resuscitates the poetry cemetery where
“Sic transit, Gloria” is buried. —The Writing Doctor
A collection of new ways of looking at and hearing poems ... In Dark Horses is found poetry, genius, and passion. —Tom Holmes, Mid-American Review
A wonderful agglomeration of eclectic tastes, ranging from formalist to
experimental, estalished to up-and-coming, academic to the
non-academic. Although, at first glance, this anthology might seem
intended for the poetry aficianado, it is diverse and accessible enough to delight any poetic ear. —Ohioana Quarterly
Dark Horses will add insight and breadth to any well-established collection of literature and enrich those who read it. —KLIATT
The community assembled
here can form a microcosm of a new history of reading .... Though
poetry is not a race, exactly—for one important thing, it lacks a
finish line—I am glad to put money on this collection.
—Angela Ball, American Book Review