So
it’s time for that annual list I compile of books I’m not recommending for
Christmas. I don’t recommend them because I’m likely over-sensitive to buying (or
suggesting) books for other people. However, I can get around the
recommendation issue by simply listing those books I truly enjoyed but would
never suggest to anyone that they read them.
Makes
sense? (Not to me, either).
This
year, I’m dividing the list into two parts. Today is poetry books and
non-fiction books related to poetry or about poets; tomorrow will be books on
faith, fiction and general non-fiction.
And
here we go. (And note the number of books connected to the poets of World War I
– 2014 was the centenary of the beginning the war.)
Poetry
A
Year in the Weetamoo Woods by Chris Yokel.
Living
in the Nature Poem by Mary Harwell Sayler.
View from
the North Ten
by Dave Malone.
Idiot
Psalms
by Scott Cairns.
The
Wrecking Light
by Robin Robertson.
Love,
Etc.: Poem of Love, Laughter, Longing and Loss and The
Mischief Café by L.L. Barkat.
American
Psalm World Psalm
by Nicholas Samaras.
The
Abandoned Eye
by J.P. Dancing Bear.
Caribou by Charles
Wright.
Holy
Luck
by Eugene Peterson.
This
Day
by Wendell Berry.
Beowulf, translated by
J.R.R. Tolkien.
In the Dark
Before Dawn
by Thomas Merton.
Poetry of the
First World War,
edited by Tim Kendall.
Upon
the Blue Couch
by Laurie Kolp.
Scape by Luci Shaw.
The
Book of Goodbyes
by Jillian Weise.
Glitter
Bomb
by Aaron Belz.
Non-Fiction Related to Poetry or Poets
Up
the Line to Death: The War Poets 1914 – 1918 by Brian
Gardner.
How
to Read a Poem
by Tania Runyan.
Edgar Allen
Poe: The Fever Called Living by Paul Collins.
The Poetic
World of Emily Bronte by Laura Inman.
Some
Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew by Max
Egremont.
Wilfred
Owen: An Illustrated Life by Jane Potter.
Some
Corner of a Foreign Field: Poetry and Art of the First World War by James
Bentley.
The
Poet and the Vampyre by Andrew McConnell Stott.
Photograph by Vicky van de Kerckhoven
via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
2 comments:
So pleased I can say I've read some of these (all wonderful).
You should be given some award for most books read and reviewed, if not entirely recommended.
I put The Poet and the Vampyre on my TBR list when I read about it here, but I won't tell anyone you recommended it. Thanks for linking to the Saturday Review.
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