Selected Product: | The Practice of Poetry: Writing Exercises From Poets Who Teach Paperback Author: Robin Behn Publisher: Collins Release Date: 1992-09-23 ISBN-10: 006273024X ISBN-13: 9780062730244 List Price: $16.95 Average Customer Rating: | | A Poetry Handbook ISBN-10: 0156724006 ISBN-13: 9780156724005 List Price:$14.00 In the Palm of Your Hand: The Poet's Portable Workshop ISBN-10: 0884481492 ISBN-13: 9780884481492 List Price:$14.95 The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms ISBN-10: 0393321789 ISBN-13: 9780393321784 List Price:$18.95 The Poetry Home Repair Manual: Practical Advice for Beginning Poets ISBN-10: 0803259786 ISBN-13: 9780803259782 List Price:$13.95 The Poet's Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry ISBN-10: 0393316548 ISBN-13: 9780393316544 List Price:$15.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Practice of Poetry: Writing Exercises From Poets Who Teach by Robin Behn (ISBN-10: 006273024X, ISBN-13: 9780062730244). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Practice of Poetry: Writing Exercises From Poets Who Teach by Robin Behn (ISBN-10: 006273024X, ISBN-13: 9780062730244). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A distinctive collection of more than 90 effective poetry-writing exercises combined with corresponding essays to inspire writers of all levels. THE PRACTICE OF POETRY | Customer Rating: | Some of the exercises stimulate the muse, while others are a bit brief. The index at the back should have covered topics and concepts. | Long and involved | Customer Rating: | | These exercises are quite involved. I was hoping for some exercises for writing poetry in the high school classroom. These took quite a bit of time, but resulted in some good poems. | Doing the exercises in this book will help you write better poetry... | Customer Rating: | The Practice of Poetry is a book that you (sometimes as an individual, sometimes in a group) do, more than a book you read. It doesn't have a lot of data on the technical aspects of poetry (rhyme, meter, style, etc.) It also doesn't address the various schools and movements of poetry. It has a lot of exercises on various aspects of poetry (mining the unconscious, writing in images and metaphors, what voice is being used, the use/misuse of strangeness, poetic structure, the poetry/music connection, and rewriting).
I would have liked to see some of the poetry of the contributors to see if I wanted to investigate them further. There is plenty of empty space where that could be done.
As this book was published in 1992, the comment by contributor Agha Shahid Ali that ghazals are an unfamiliar form in American poetry is no longer true, as Robert Bly used them in his books "The Night Abraham Called To The Stars" and "My Sentence Was a Thousand Years of Joy." Many of the poems referenced are now available on the internet, so the references as to where to obtain the poems mentioned in the book, and the poems of the contributors, are dated. It would be great if there was a new edition of this book.
But the exercises are time-independent, and if you do them, your poetry will most likely improve. | Indispensable | Customer Rating: | I discovered this book during my MA program a few years back. At the time, I'd not seen anything quite like it, aside from Lew Turco's Book of Forms, a book that I enjoyed. But since I'm not a primarily formalist poet, I found Turco's book somewhat wanting.
Robin Behn and Chase Twichell's *The Practice of Poetry* provided a needed alternative. It's filled with great generative poetry writing exercises, each accompanied by a short discussion written by the poet/professor who contributed the piece. These introductions are at least as valuable as the assignments themselves: reading them, one sees a poet's mind in action, something very hard to describe or capture.
The most useful of these assignments gets you writing very quickly. David St. John's contribution, a dramatic monologue, for example, urges writers to find a famous person from history or literature and write from that person's perspective. I'll never forget a shy young student writing a monologue in Sherlock Holmes' voice in my workshop.
Other assignments do come off as flaky, and yet the contributors admit as such. One exercise leads poets through a chanting exercise that seems so odd that I'd fear for my job if I tried it in class. Even in a less formal workshop, I'd be reticent about chanting. Of course, if chanting is something you enjoy . . .
The book concludes with two or three essays about revision that every poet needs to read. Beginning poets especially can benefit the wisdom herein.
Perhaps the greatest strength of this book is it variety. The book includes assignments from all ends of the aesthetic spectrum--from Jackson Mac Low to Dana Gioia. So, whether you're a New Formalist, a Neo-Surrealist, or a L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E disciple, this book will prove indispensable to your library. | For Classroom use...perfect | Customer Rating: | | I teach an 8th grade Language Arts Class in rural Washington State. I found our textbook to be bland and typical. I was looking for some work for my students to actually learn how to write poetry correctly. This book does this. |
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