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Home / home / Challenge and Ambition: Rose Solari Releases new Poetry Reviews for WIRoB

Sep 17 2020

Challenge and Ambition: Rose Solari Releases new Poetry Reviews for WIRoB

Rose Solari's reviews this month focus on four collections that "challenge and stretch the reader’s expectations in terms of content, form, or both."

Four Reviews: Charlotte Pence (Code), Kevin Corcoran (The Republic of Song), Lauren Camp (Took house), Peter Kline (Mirrorforms)

Rose Solari's reviews this month concern books that "challenge and stretch the reader’s expectations in terms of content, form, or both." This includes Charlotte Pence's vitalizing Code with its centerfold poem written entirely in DNA, Kelvin Corcoran's The Republic of Song with its tributes to the scholar and poet Lee Harwood, Lauren Camp's soft poems based on visual artists of the 20th century in Took House, and the singular obsession with form presented in Peter Kline's Mirrorforms.

As always, Rose Solari writes with generosity and specificity when recounting the challenges and triumphs of each work. It is important also to note something unique to her reviews: her ear for the music of poetry. Solari never leaves the reader wanting for descriptions of concord and discord.

Rose Solari's is a monthly poetry review column for the Washington Independent Review of Books. You can find more of her reviews HERE.

Solari, while an excellent reviewer of poetry, is herself a regarded poet. Check out her work HERE.

Read the Reviews More from Rose Solari

Earth Day Reflections: To See for the First Time

April 22, 2019

“Our communications are profuse and immediate, as is our consciousness of the interrelationship of all that exists. We’ve seen what we often leave in our wake—homeless populations, spoiled wilderness. We can see the way the decisions and investments that we make, here, everyday, can effect just how much milk a baby in Uganda gets. Our world is a teeming, mysterious, multi-cultural mousetrap of a place where everything seems to hinge on something else. We share a new concept of this planet as a finite space, dense, and more difficult than ever to navigate. We live in an environment fraught with hazard, and it is important to have good guides, guides with insight—those who tread softly.”

Joanna Biggar’s Picks for NPM (Week 3)

April 15, 2019

Week three of National Poetry Month is here and we are still celebrating! So as the champagne continues relentlessly foaming for party-goers catching their tipsy mid-air, we asked author, Joanna Biggar, to select three poems she thinks are worthy of applause between wassails.

James J. Patterson’s Picks for NPM (week 2)

April 12, 2019

In honor of National Poetry Month, We asked author and essayist extraordinaire, James J. Patterson, to select three poems he’d like to see celebrated. Along with Walt Whitman’s “On the Beach at Night Alone” (featured above), he chose Wordsworth’s “The World is too much with Us”, And Last but not least, the famed American Poet Robert Bly performing the poem “On Being a Man” by the famed Spanish poet, Antonio Machado.

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