Scanty Plot of Ground: A Book of Sonnets
Paul Muldoon. Faber & Faber, $22.95 trade paper (150p) ISBN 978-0-571-37344-4
Muldoon’s well-selected anthology of sonnets takes its title from a line in Wordsworth’s “Nuns fret not at their convent’s narrow room,” in which he writes of “the Sonnet’s scanty plot of ground.” Confinement, Muldoon notes, is one of the aspects that unites the history of the sonnet, that “most persistent but also the most pervasive” of forms, as he writes in his witty and illuminating introduction. He is insightful on the ways African American poets have worked with and expanded the sonnet’s boundaries, noting that poets such as Wanda Coleman and Terrance Hayes have “evoked the boundedness of the sonnet not so much to assert national or cultural belonging, as to trouble the limitations such concepts imply.” This is borne out by the defiant assertion in Claude McKay’s “If We Must Die”: “Like men we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack,/ Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!” Muldoon draws out other tropes and traditions that prove to be useful and indicative guides through this democratic anthology, which is arranged alphabetically instead of chronologically to highlight the universality of the form’s possibilities and mix of chaos and control. It’s a welcome primer on an always relevant poetic form. (Nov.)
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Reviewed on: 11/13/2025
Genre: Poetry

