cover image The Best American Poetry 2014

The Best American Poetry 2014

Edited by Terrance Hayes; series editor, David Lehman. Scribner, $35 (240p) ISBN 978-1-4767-0815-7

Hayes, a 2014 MacArthur Fellow whose 2010 collection, Lighthead, won the National Book Award for poetry, recalls that the first book of poetry he ever bought was the 1990 edition of Best American Poetry. Given that he has "depended on [the series] so deeply for literally all of his life as a poet," it's not surprising that Hayes has applied such a discerning eye in selecting poems for this year's edition. "I'm not ashamed to say I wanted a diverse mix," he states, and the result feels like America at its best and most inclusive, with Sherman Alexie's "Sonnet, with Pride"%E2%80%94an ingenious modification of the form%E2%80%94opening the collection and setting the tone. The blues color the collection and elegies are another prominent feature; Larry Levis (1946%E2%80%931996) ghosting in with "Elegy with a Darkening Trapeze Inside It," a selection from his uncollected "late" poems. Rita Dove and Yusef Komunyakaa both meditate and comment on the complexities of the concept of N%C3%A9gritude. Hearts in need of wrenching will get theirs, particularly Sharon Olds's "Stanley Kunitz Ode" or Patricia Lockwood's viral wonder, "Rape Joke." One of the strongest volumes in recent years, Hayes makes an offering to readers: "salute what I salute, and be transformed as I have been transformed." (Sept.)