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Reviews
Mary Kinzie, a poet-critic and Northwestern professor, isn't afraid of being forbidding in her massive practical handbook, A Poet's Guide to Poetry. Intended for serious readers and writers, her smart and rigorous survey of poetic techniquefrom syntax and diction to meter and rhymewill at least discourage dilettantes. That's no small achievement in an era of "poetry slams" and therapeutic writing groups. Her classroom-tested exercises for writing remind us that it's hard work, and informed by centuries of tradition, much of which Kinzie has at her fingertips. Unfortunately, she also tends to mystify her subject by inventing yet new technical terms and imposing an odd theoretical design on her work (which also accounts for the dizzying cross-referencing). Her notion that we should understand a poem as if we were writing it ourselves is sound, but her idea that all poems should be read as "unfinished" leads to obfuscation. Wedded to her sense of "choices on a continuum," she also over-reads the relation of sound to sense, trying to tease out meaning from every aspect of technique. Filled out with a fine glossary and an excellent annotated bibliography. Kinzie's sometimes plodding text is nevertheless worth the effort. Like Kinzie, Timothy Steele, another poet-critic and professor (Cal. State), largely ignores the predominant poetry of our timefree verse. All the Fun's in How You Say a Thing takes its title from a line by Frost, a poet whose commitment to clarity of expression Steele clearly shares in this modest, neatly organized, and lucidly written explanation of English meter. Steele incorporates into his graceful study a wealth of linguistic insight and a solid explanation of scansion; and he fully comprehends the limits of metrics. Unlike Kinzie, he doesn't always try to find some complex meaning in a poet's technical choices. Like Kinzie, he excludes free verse because it teaches us little about metrics and, as a consequence, he and Kinzie both rely on a number of underappreciated modern poets for examples (e.g., Janet Lewis, Thom Gunn, and J.V. Cunningham). Steele's sharp and witty book is the perfect Poetry Month selection: an expert guide that speaks to all levels of readers."
ELLEN
SULLIVAN
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