Posts Tagged ‘Marilynne Robinson’
Attention Span 2010 – John Palattella
Elizabeth Arnold | Effacement | Flood | 2010
Günter Eich, trans. Michael Hofmann | Angina Days: Selected Poems | Princeton | 2010
Manny Farber, ed. Robert Polito | Farber on Film | Library of America | 2009
Graham Foust | A Mouth in California | Flood | 2010
Ruth Harris | Dreyfus: Politics, Emotion and the Scandal of the Century | Metropolitan | 2010
Tony Judt | Ill Fares the Land | Penguin | 2010
Gabriel García Márquez, trans. Asa Katz | Clandestine in Chile | New York Review Books | 2010
Marilynne Robinson | Absence of Mind | Yale | 2010
Frances Stoner Saunders | The Woman Who Shot Mussolini | Metropolitan | 2010
Ben Sonnenberg | Lost Property: Memoirs & Confessions of a Bad Boy | Summit | 1991
More John Palattella here. Palattella’s Attention Span for 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005. Back to directory.
Attention Span 2009 – John Palattella
C.P. Cavafy, trans. Daniel Mendelsohn | Collected Poems | Knopf | 2009
Edmund and Jules de Goncourt, trans. Robert Baldick | Pages from the Goncourt Journals | New York Review | 2006
Fanny Howe | The Winter Sun | Graywolf | 2009
Devin Johnston | Creaturely and Other Essays | Turtle Hill | 2009
Devin Johnston | Sources | Turtle Hill | 2009
Jim Linderman | Take Me to the Water | Dust-to-Digital | 2009
Jennifer Moxley | Clampdown | Flood | 2009
Marilynne Robinson | The Death of Adam | Houghton Mifflin | 1998
Andrew Rice | The Teeth May Smile But the Heart Does Not Forget | Metropolitan | 2009
Ned Sublette | The Year Before the Flood | Lawrence Hill | 2009
Jefffrey Yang | An Aquarium | Graywolf | 2008
More John Palattella here.
Attention Span 2009 – Joel Bettridge
Linh Dinh | Jam Alerts | Chax | 2007
Tom Bissell | The Father of All Things | Pantheon | 2007
Michael Frayn | Copenhagen | Anchor Books |1998
Lyn Hejinian | Saga/Circus | Omnidawn | 2008
Devin Johnston | Sources | Turtle Point Press | 2008
Hank Lazer | Lyric & Spirit | Omnidawn | 2008
Nathaniel Mackey | Splay Anthem | New Directions | 2006
Marilynne Robinson | Gilead | FSG | 2004
Cole Swensen | Ours | University of California Press | 2008
Rodrigo Toscano | Collapsible Poetics Theater | Fence | 2008
Andrew Zawacki | Petals of Zero Petals of One | Talisman House | 2009
More Joel Bettridge here.
Attention Span 2011 | John Palattella
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Annie Dillard | Pilgrim at Tinker Creek | Harper | 1974
The electron is like a muskrat; it cannot be perfectly stalked.
T.S. Eliot, eds. Valerie Eliot and Hugh Haughton | The Letters of T.S. Eliot, Volume 2: 1923–1925 | Faber | 2009
…the Editor has to combine and reconcile principle, sensibility, and business sense. That is why an editor’s life is such a bloody sweat.
Merrill Gilfillan | The Bark of the Dog | Flood | 2010
Sprigs for sunrise,
sprigs for Taos, and soldiers
on the steep blue sea.
Peter Gizzi | Threshold Songs | Wesleyan | 2011
And my body also
a commotion of sound
and form. Of tides.
Tony Judt | Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 | Penguin | 2005
The much-anticipated transition from capitalism to socialism had been theorized ad nauseum in academies, universities and coffee bars from Belgrade to Berkeley; but no-one had thought to offer a blueprint for the transition from socialism to capitalism.
James Longenbach | The Iron Key | Norton | 2010
Hephaestus, carve me a hollow cup!
The dark earth drinks, and the trees drink the earth.
The sea drinks the wind,
The sun drinks the sea.
Jennifer Moxley | Coastal | The Song Cave | 2011
A muggy sunny day, better for plants than people.
Lorine Niedecker, ed. Jenny Penberthy | Collected Works | California | 2002
Ruby of corundum
lapis lazuli
from changing limestone
glow-apricot red-brown
carnelian sard
Greek named
Exodus-antique
kicked up in America’s
Northwest
you have been in my mind
between my toes
agate
David Rieff | Swimming in a Sea of Death | Simon & Schuster | 2008
My mother’s “default mode” had always been the transcendental, or, perhaps more accurately, that of the exemplary student who also aspires to be the exemplary soul. Don’t laugh or smile condescendingly, dear reader: there are more ignoble ambitions.
Marilynne Robinson | The Death of Adam: Essays on Modern Thought | Houghton Mifflin | 1998
Economics, the great model now among us, indulges and deprives, builds and abandons, threatens and promises. Its imperium is manifest, irrefragable—as in fact it has been since antiquity. Yet suddenly we act as if the reality of economics were really reality itself, the one Truth to which everything must refer. I can only suggest that terror at complexity has driven us back on this very crude monism. We have reached a point where cosmology permits us to say that everything might in fact be made of nothing, so we cling desperately to the idea that something is real and necessary, and we have chosen, oddly enough, competition and market forces, taking refuge from the wild epic of cosmic ontogeny by hiding our head in the ledger.
W.B. Yeats | The Poems | Macmillan | 1983
We had fed the heart on fantasies,
The hearts grown brutal from the fare;
More substance in our enmities
Than in our love; O honey-bees,
Come build in the empty house of the stare.
§
John Palattella is the Literary Editor for The Nation. Palattella’s Attention Span for 2010, 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005. Back to 2011 Directory.
Written by Steve Evans
September 17, 2011 at 2:09 pm
Posted in Attention Span 2011, Commented List
Tagged with Annie Dillard, David Rieff, James Longenbach, Jennifer Moxley, Jenny Penberthy, John Palattella, Lorine Niedecker, Marilynne Robinson, Merrill Gilfillan, Peter Gizzi, T.S. Eliot, Tony Judt, W.B. Yeats