In Two Minds, Callie Siskel reflects on the ghost of her famous father.
Delmore Schwartz is often touted as an exemplary literary tragedy. A long-overdue Collected Poems showcases his extravagant genius—and his failures.
On reading Tomaž Šalamun.
In The Invention of the Darling, Li-Young Lee presents divinity as spirit and matter, profound and quotidian, sacred and profane.
For nearly a half-century, Alice Duer Miller wrote sardonic and defiantly feminist work that found favor from Hollywood to the White House.
A career-spanning selection of C.K. Williams underscores his restless virtuosity.
Funny, convivial, chatty—a new edition of Emily Dickinson's letters upends the myth of her reclusive genius.
Tu Fu, the greatest poet of the Tang dynasty, was torn between two desires: serving the emperor and writing literature.
Perception shapes fear and desire in Gregory Pardlo’s Spectral Evidence.