keikiqueen's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

4.0

lsparrow's review

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2.0

an anthology of new poets - one poem per poet - perhaps too little to begin to like them. there were a few poems that I liked most of them i was only pulled in by a few lines.

bookzgirl's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

3.5

moonpeach's review

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emotional inspiring reflective relaxing medium-paced

4.0

saeverra's review

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2.0

Survived this book of poetry... but not in a good way. I got about halfway through and couldn't wait to be done. I did not relate to any of the poems and only enjoyed 2/100. When I realized the last 70 pages were just about the poets I kind of sighed with relief... :/

Feel bad for my review, but it is the truth. Not my cup of tea. Far too disjointed collection for me.

bittertea's review

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4.0

As with any anthology, some poems stood out more than others, especially Patricia Lockwood’s “Rape Joke”, “Golden Buddha” by Sandra Simonds, Jamaal May’s “Athazagoraphobia: Fear of Being Ignored”. And I enjoyed Stephanie Burt’s “Amaretto Sour (Drag Night at the Nines)”. The lines “Strike poses counterclockwise, re- / invent the youth you grieve” are going to stick in my head forever. Overall, I’m glad I read this and got a taste of the current poetic landscape.

andymoon's review

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3.0

A good collection of poetry by today's young poets.

bardic_llama's review

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challenging emotional reflective slow-paced

2.25

Some of these are genuinely great poems and some are rather simplistic yet still are well written, but then there's a chunk that are just random sentences strung together. And yea, free verse is a thing—most to all of the poems in this are—but they come across more as ramblings that have nothing to do with each other. Even in terms of imagery and other modes of figurative language. I know this is supposed to be current poets and thus it's going to cover a broad range of topics but I wish there was a certain theme/main topic that all the poems were about. Because a few of the poems I can recall vividly what they're about due to their placement being so jarring. Especially in connection with the poems that came before it instead of what is said in the poem itself.

This collection was not as satisfying to read as I thought it was going to be. That said, I did find a few poets that I want to read more of. So kudos for that. 


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xishimmerix's review

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adventurous challenging emotional hopeful inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.5

ainiali's review

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2.0

Like the title, I had to excuse a lot of poems in this collection. My only fav (much, much better than the rest, in my opinion) are Rape Joke by Patricia Lookwood, Ghost Story by Matthew Dickman, The Wait for Cake by Melissa Broder & Race Change Operation by Thomas Sayers Ellis. The theme of most of the poems are about sex, lust, desire (see the trend?), racism, oppression, bully and abuse(another trend?). I just too tired of reading repetition of teen angst or rebel etc because there are more important issues out there that I need concern myself with.

Some structures of the poems are what my head identified as disconnection. In my defense, I didn't study literature but when I say, "I eat.." then an hour later, I say "..apple", I dont think it will make sense in any way. Or at least to me. When this happened, I had to skip that poem entirely. I dont want to waste my time connecting the story with so few words given and a large gap in between.