On one level, this activity sounds petty and unimportant; but as a writer who also works as an editor, I can't tell you how frustrating it is to get a manuscript from an author who ignores these matters. A copyeditor is essentially a hired close reader. In most cases she is also a nonspecialist, which gives her detached view of the situation. Such detachment is necessary, although I've worked with authors who've been horrified because I didn't find their sloppy incoherence "inspirational." Frankly, an author who turns in a book filled with bloated, lurching paragraphs, confusing chapter titles, no clear idea of the needs of her audience, and a bibliography that seems to bear no relationship to the text is hardly inspirational.
It's true that many people (academic scholars and researchers, for example) must use writing as a medium for transmitting information but are not themselves facile writers. The editor helps them, and the editor is glad to do so. The editor is not glad to deal with the detritus that results from magical thinking ("My grammatical lurches are heavenly and this book will change the world!") and plain old indifference ("Who cares if the page references are missing, the note citations don't seem to match the text, and a name is spelled three different ways on three different pages? Not my problem!").
Still, there's no question that checking citations and formats is a tedious task that requires hours of close attention. I've devoted a number of recent work days to teeny-tiny cleanups of The Conversation, and I'd rather be doing something else. But one interesting side task was the work I did to create a list of recommended resources, which I've set up as an annotated bibliography of books that I find particularly useful. I'm going to reprint that list here, and if you, too, happen to love any of these resources, leave a comment or send me a note. I'd love to add your remarks to the published list.
Recommended
Resources
There are thousands of useful and
eloquent craft manuals, biographies, letter collections, and anthologies. Here
I simply list a few of my own favorite resources—books I return to again and
again for advice, explanation, inspiration, and support.
Aldington, Richard, ed. The
Viking Book of Poetry of the English-Speaking World. 2 vols. New York: Viking, 1958.
Don’t give away
old anthologies just because they’re old. As survey anthologies go, Richard
Aldington’s is completely out of date, but they I’ve always liked it because he
offers an unusually rich assortment of Elizabethan and Victorian poetry.
Recently I discovered that Aldington was a spokesman for the Imagist movement
in poetry (a group that included Ezra Pound, H.D., and Amy Lowell). From the
contents of these volumes, I never would have guessed.
Atwood, Margaret, ed. The Oxford
Book of Canadian Verse in English. Toronto:
Oxford University Press, 1982.
This anthology
chronicles, as the back cover explains, “the emergence of poetic expression in
a developing country.” Beginning with sixteenth-century poets and ending with
poets born in the 1950s, Margaret Atwood’s anthology coheres into a complex
portrait of a population coming to grips with itself and its landscape. It’s
one of my favorite poetry books.
Bate, Walter Jackson. John
Keats. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap/Harvard
University Press, 1964.
This is the best
poet’s biography I have ever read. As he traces John Keats’s growth as a poet,
Walter Jackson Bate manages to make me feel as if he is simultaneously tracing
the expansion of my own mind. It is not only a wondrous achievement but a
tremendous source of encouragement for any apprentice poet.
Borges, Jorge Luis. This Craft
of Verse. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 2000.
I always like to
find out what other people read and listened to before they began to think of
themselves as writers, and that’s much of what Jorge Luis Borges does in this
collection of lectures. He entwines these memories with beautifully articulated
explanations of the way in which craft intersects passion.
Byatt, A. S. Passions of the
Mind. New York: Vintage International,
1993.
A. S. Byatt is
primarily known as a novelist, but she is also a literary scholar and a skilled
and complex personal essayist. This collection focuses on a number of her
favorite writers, including poets such as Robert Browning, Sylvia Plath, and
Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It is an excellent model for anyone who is striving to
write prose about literature.
Carruth, Hayden. Letters to
Jane. Keene, N.Y: Ausable, 2004.
In 1994, Hayden
Carruth learned that fellow poet and friend Jane Kenyon had been diagnosed with
leukemia. His first instinct was to write her a letter, though he told her,
“Don’t think about answering this.” She never was able to answer him, but he
continued to write to her regularly until she died in 1995. This book collects
that one-sided correspondence, a moving example of the way in which a
conversation endures despite silence.
Frost, Robert. The Notebooks of
Robert Frost, edited by Robert Faggen.
Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap/Harvard University Press, 2006.
Robert Frost’s
notebooks are a mishmash of drafts, cranky polemic, opinions about poetry, and
his teaching philosophy. Spanning nearly seventy years, they are an
unparalleled window into the thought process of a poet who was also a committed
teacher of poetry. This is one of our touchstone texts at The Frost Place
Conference on Poetry and Teaching.
Lopate, Philip, ed. The Art of
the Personal Essay: An Anthology from the Classical Era to the Present. New York: Anchor/Doubleday, 1994.
If you’re
interested in writing personal essays about what you’ve been reading, Philip
Lopate’s anthology is one of the best resources available. Not only does the
book offer numerous models, but his detailed introduction illuminates many
facets of the genre, which, “unlike the formal essay, . . . depends less on
airtight reasoning than on style and personality, what Elizabeth Hardwick
called ‘the soloist’s personal signature flowing through the text.’”
Miłosz,
Czesław. The Witness of
Poetry. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1983.
Polish poetry
occupies a unique niche in the history of European literature. Since at least
the Middle Ages, Polish poets have aligned themselves with the traditions of
classical Greek and Roman literature. Yet the nation itself has been in almost
constant political turmoil—a pawn in every invasion, its borders altered, its
government usurped, its people murdered. Miłosz
was one of several twentieth-century Polish poets who brought their art to an
extraordinarily high level in this atmosphere. His lectures consider how
external events and aesthetic history influence the art of both an individual
and a generation.
Nims, John Frederick. Western
Wind: An Introduction to Poetry. New York:
Random House, 1983.
I bought this
poetry guide when I was a college student, and I have never found a better one.
Not only will it teach you everything you need to know about form, meter,
figurative language, and other technicalities, but it also includes poems,
writing exercises, philosophical talk, and even physics demonstrations.
Reynolds, David S. Walt
Whitman’s America. New York: Knopf, 1995.
This biography of
Whitman is also a biography of his times. Reynolds explores the busy, shifting
world of nineteenth-century American politics, culture, and society as it
influenced Whitman’s transformation from hack journalist to poet-sage. It’s a
wonderful portrait, overflowing with details and color.
Rilke, Rainer Maria, Letters to
a Young Poet [1929], translated by M. D.
Herter Norton. New York: Norton, 1954.
These are among
the sweetest, most patient, most sensible letters every written. Whether you
are a mentor or an apprentice (or both), Rilke’s words will be sustenance.
Sternburg, Janet, ed. The Writer
on Her Work. Vol. 2, New Essays
in New Territory. New York: Norton, 1991.
In this volume
Janet Sternburg collects twenty personal essays by women writers who talk about
how they found their way into their art. Covering a broad range of genres, the
book includes pieces by several women poets, including Rita Dove, Linda Hogan,
Maxine Kumin, and Carolyn Forché.
Woolf, Virginia. The Common
Reader. 1st and 2nd series. New York: 1948.
Virginia Woolf is,
without a doubt, my primary influence as an essayist. Although she was a
voracious and wide-ranging reader, she had no formal schooling. As a result,
her essays are extraordinarily personal, revealing their author’s obsessions,
excitements, snobberies, shyness, anxieties, and brilliance. I love them
dearly.
Wormser, Baron, and David Cappella.
A Surge of Language: Teaching Poetry Day by Day. Portsmouth, N.H.: Heinemann, 2004.
______. Teaching the Art of
Poetry: The Moves. Mahwah, N.J.: Erlbaum,
2000.
Baron Wormser
founded The Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching. In these two books,
he and his colleague David Cappella lay out a blueprint for a poetry-centered
classroom. A Surge of Language is the diary of a fictional teacher, whereas Teaching the Art of Poetry is a guide to teaching specific poetic elements.
Both, however, offer innumerable ideas for making poetry a regular part of the
school day. The books are invaluable for teachers working at all levels,
kindergarten through university.
6 comments:
Well, of course A Surge of Language and The Notebooks of Robert Frost. Hayden Carruth's Letters to Jane is more than a resource, it speaks to that power of friendship and communication that is simply so human.
Do you know Mark Doty's "The Art of Description: World Into Word"? It's part of the Graywolf series "The Art of ....", on the craft of writing.
I tend to keep it out. It's beautifully written and insightful. Doty uses a wonderful array of poems to illustrate his subject. I quote:
"The need to translate experience into something resembling adequate language is the writer's blessing or the writer's disease, depending on your point of view. . . The pleasure of recognizing a described world is no small thing."
I don't own Doty's book, but I love that quotation, Maureen.
Ruth, I'll be quoting you on the Carruth. Thanks.
I use both of Baron's books a lot, too, and the Doty volume in that Graywolf series is my favorite one after Dean Young's The Art of Recklessnes.
I'm going to stop grading and go open those up now.
Scott, if you can invent a quick quotable quote about either of Baron's books, I'll add it to the paragraph.
Working on it!
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