cover image Forces of Imagination: Writing on Writing

Forces of Imagination: Writing on Writing

Barbara Guest. Kelsey Street Press, $16 (112pp) ISBN 978-0-932716-61-3

Barbara Guest may finally be getting the level of recognition accorded her differently gendered New York School peers. She, too, began in 1950s New York, taking cues from modern abstract painters; she, too, pursued a modernist version of beauty through several decades of now-influential verse. Guest collects her challenging shorter essays, talks and even some poems about poetry in the long-awaited Forces of the Imagination: Writing on Writing. Some pieces remain provocatively abstract, advising us to ""Respect your private language""; others return to the poet H.D. (whose biography, Herself Defined, Guest has written), pursue links between verse and visual art, or trace Guest's own development: ""I grew up under the shadow of Surrealism."" For Guest, ""The person inside a literary creation can be both viewer and insider. The window is open and the bird flies in.""