From the Stacks: Geoffrey Brock

 In this installment, Geoffrey Brock shares some of his favorite books from our collection. Listen to the reading he gave following on Voca.

Here’s a note from Geoff about his process of selecting books.

“The task I was given was daunting: to recommend only 20 books of poetry from the Poetry Center's amazing shelves in 20 minutes. To make the task more manageable, I quickly and somewhat arbitrarily decided to limit myself to the last fifty years, to exclude translations and anthologies, and to include no more than one volume per poet. The result is an idiosyncratic (and incomplete!) list of wonderful books that have happened to make particularly deep impressions on me over the course of the last 20 years or so.”

The Dream Songs, John Berryman

Poems, Elizabeth Bishop

Autobiography of Red, Anne Carson

The Man with Night Sweats, Thom Gunn

Somewhere Is Such a Kingdom, Geoffrey Hill

Collected Poems, Donald Justice

The One-Strand River, Richard Kenney

Collected Poems: Robert Hayden, ed. Frederick Glayster

Collected Earlier Poems, Anthony Hecht

Collected Poems, Philip Larkin

Potscrubber Lullabies, Eric McHenry

Hinge & Sign, Heather McHugh

Fredy Neptune, Les Murray

The Homeplace, Marilyn Nelson Waniek

Complaint in the Garden, Randall Mann

Ariel, Sylvia Plath

Hapax, A.E. Stallings

Green, Sidney Wade

Sakura Park, Rachel Wetzsteon

Collected Poems, 1943-2004, Richard Wilbur

Every Riven Thing, Christian Wiman


From the Stacks features writers from our Reading & Lecture Series sharing favorite items from our library of contemporary poetry.

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