Books

  1. What Is This Thing Called Love: Poems
    What Is This Thing Called Love: Poems

  2. Horace's Satires and Epistles
    Horace's Satires and Epistles

  3. Poems
    Poems

  4. Part of My Soul Went with Him
    Part of My Soul Went with Him

  5. Time's Power: Poems, 1985-88
    Time's Power: Poems, 1985-88

  6. Frameless Windows Squares of Light: Poems
    Frameless Windows Squares of Light: Poems

  7. The Silence Now: New and Uncollected Earlier Poems
    The Silence Now: New and Uncollected Earlier Poems

  8. Between Angels: Poems
    Between Angels: Poems

  9. William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked
    William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked

  10. My Secret Boat: A Notebook of Prose and Poems
    My Secret Boat: A Notebook of Prose and Poems

  11. Upstairs in the Garden: Poems Selected and New, 1968-1988
    Upstairs in the Garden: Poems Selected and New, 1968-1988

  12. A Nostalgist's Map of America
    A Nostalgist's Map of America

  13. Sub Rosa: Poems
    Sub Rosa: Poems

  14. Bread Without Sugar: Poems
    Bread Without Sugar: Poems

  15. Two Trees: Poems
    Two Trees: Poems

  16. A Woman Kneeling in the Big City
    A Woman Kneeling in the Big City

  17. Greed
    Greed

  18. The Wrestlers Cruel Study - A Novel
    The Wrestlers Cruel Study - A Novel

  19. This I Cannot Forget: The Memoirs of Nikolai Bukharins Widow
    This I Cannot Forget: The Memoirs of Nikolai Bukharins Widow

  20. Our Dead Behind Us (Reissue)
    Our Dead Behind Us (Reissue)

  21. Sphere
    Sphere

  22. Coming into Eighty
    Coming into Eighty

  23. The Coral Sea
    The Coral Sea

  24. Odd Mercy: Poems
    Odd Mercy: Poems

  25. The Poet's Handbook
    The Poet's Handbook

What Is This Thing Called Love: Poems
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • A Girlfriend's Guide to Poetry
  • another fine book!
  • another winner from addonizio
  • And she rocks again.
What Is This Thing Called Love: Poems
Kim Addonizio
Manufacturer: W. W. Norton & Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

20th Century20th Century | Poetry | United States | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Poetry | United States | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Poetry | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Inspirational & ReligiousInspirational & Religious | Poetry | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
United StatesUnited States | Single Authors | Poetry | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Similar Items:
  1. Tell Me: Poems (American Poets Continuum Series, Vol. 61)
  2. In The Box Called Pleasure
  3. The Poet's Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry
  4. Facts About the Moon: Poems
  5. Little Beauties: A Novel

ASIN: 0393057267

Book Description

A new collection of poetry from the author of Tell Me, a finalist for the National Book Award. From lilting lines about a love that "dizzies up the brain's back room" to haunting fragments betokening death and decline in a suffering world, Kim Addonizio articulates the ways that our connections—to the world, to self, and to others—endure and help make us whole.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Girlfriend's Guide to Poetry.......2006-02-19

It is rare to find a modern free verse poet whose work is lucid and yet does not open itself to the accusation of being "prose with linebreaks." Kim Addonizio, however, manages to produce poems which do not sacrifice any clarity and yet remain musical, moving and often surprising. Kim is a poet who somewhat refreshingly writes mostly in complete sentences, but she uses those sentences to go somewhere unusual. In a poem like "Miniatures," which is entirely in complete grammatical sentences, a train of thought is followed through to a huge, unexpected conclusion. In many of her poems, the narrative itself is a metaphor or an allegory.

The poems are grouped into themed sections: Section 1 = Sex, 2 = Death/Sickness/Old Age, 3=Birth/Human Nature, 4 = Decadence, 5 = Writing Poetry/Creation. There are also several formal poems in here, including Kim's own joke form, the sonnenizio, and a paradelle that is better than Billy Collins. But regardless of theme or style, the voice is always Addonizio, that of a wise, tough, sassy older sister or girlfriend. I would recommend these poems to anyone who is disillusioned with reading poetry that is either too superficial or too incomprehensible. I would also recommend these poems to anyone who has never read poetry and does not see its relevance. Read this book: you'll be surprised.

3 out of 5 stars another fine book!.......2004-08-12

I love this book, not as much as Tell Me, which freaking ROCKED, but still...no one now writes as sassy and real as Addonizio does. eagerly waiting ANOTHER!

4 out of 5 stars another winner from addonizio.......2004-02-27

I very excitedly waited for Addonizio's latest collection of poetry to come out, and even though I didn't have the money, I bought it within a couple of weeks of its publication. And I read slowly so that I could savor this collection. Addonizio is a phenomenal poet--probably the best of her generation--a mix of Anne Sexton and Edna St. Vincent Millay. I will admit that this is the weakest of her collections (though it would be hard to top Tell Me and The Philosopher's Club). Even so, it is great work, especially "First Kiss" and "Stolen Moments" which are classic Addonizio. Also of note are "Dear Reader" and "Fever Blues" and "California Street" which is definitely one of the best in the book. She also writes a well done sonnenizio (it's explained in the book) and a very workable paradelle. I can never say enough good about the work of Kim Addonizio, and her latest collection is no exception.

4 out of 5 stars And she rocks again........2004-01-22

I am a devote fan of Kim Addonizio, gobbling up all of her work as fast as I can. And while I love that this collection continues her voice and her stuggle against the world, I do think that this collection is weaker than Tell Me or The Philospher's Club. This collection is divided into 5 sections corresponding to love, death, ways of the world, booze, and other. Her writing is very confessional and bluesy. She even refers to Sharon Olds, and a "form" of Billy Collins. I recommend this book to anyone who loves to read about love and heartache,the pains of mourning, the efforts of raising a daughter and the difficulties of minor celebrity.

Books:

  1. Collected Poems
  2. What Is This Thing Called Love: Poems
  3. Loosestrife: Poems
  4. Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest: Poems
  5. Full Court Press
  6. How to Read A Poem (Meridian S.)
  7. W.B. Yeats: Selected Poems
  8. Dear Diary
  9. Wisdom's Way
  10. After All

Books