cover image A Poet's Guide to Poetry

A Poet's Guide to Poetry

Mary Kinzie. University of Chicago Press, $20 (572pp) ISBN 978-0-226-43739-2

Known for her poetry (Ghost Ship) and for cogent critical essays (The Cure of Poetry in an Age of Prose), Kinzie here joins the crowd of poets explaining poetry to beginners (see ""notes"" below)--and distinguishes herself. Mixing her own theories in with more widely shared axioms, Kinzie manages to cover the basics while shedding new light on line break, syntax and sentence. ""Understanding poems as both embedded in progression and indebted to surprise,"" Kinzie shows how features like rhyme work sometimes as foreground, sometimes as background--phenomena she dubs ""recession of technique."" Anticipating the needs of students who will encounter her Guide as a textbook or reference work, Kinzie has wisely designed the book to be used alongside a comprehensive poetry anthology (and recommends several). Her quotes and references come mostly and unapologetically from a particular tradition that emphasizes form and control: Thomas Hardy, Louise Bogan, Edwin Muir and the remarkable Julia Randall turn up a lot, while Pound and Williams scarcely appear. Her Guide concludes with a set of provocative exercises, a glossary, and a very knowledgeable bibliography. But sophistication of argument, charming idiosyncrasies of taste, and a refusal to condescend are what really make Kinzie's book stand out. (Apr.)