Episode: Ep411: Poems in Practice and in Theory

Ep411: Poems in Practice and in Theory cover

Ep411: Poems in Practice and in Theory

1 - Poems in Practice and in Theory

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Published at: 8/5/2022

Author: The New York Times

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Elisa Gabbert, the Book Review's On Poetry columnist, visits the podcast this week to discuss writing about poetry and her own forthcoming collection of poems, her fourth, ā€œNormal Distance.ā€ ā€œWhen Iā€™m writing what I would call nonfiction or an essay or just pure prose, Iā€™m really trying to be accurate,ā€ Gabbert says. ā€œIā€™m not lying, Iā€™m really telling you what I think. Thereā€™s very minimal distance between my persona on the page and who I really am. And then when Iā€™m writing poetry, that persona really takes on more weight. Iā€™m definitely creating more distance, and it really feels more like fiction or even more like theater, I might say. Iā€™m really more creating a character thatā€™s going to be speaking this monologue Iā€™m writing.ā€ Ian Johnson visits the podcast to talk about his review of ā€œGolden Age,ā€ a novel by Wang Xiaobo recently translated by Yan Yan. The novel, set against Maoā€™s Cultural Revolution, made waves in China when it was originally published there in the 1990s. ā€œIt was controversial primarily because of sex, thereā€™s a lot of sex in the novel,ā€ Johnson says. ā€œThe sex is not really described in graphic detail; this isnā€™t Henry Miller or something like that. Itā€™s more like theyā€™re having sex to make a point: that theyā€™re independent people and theyā€™re not going to be trampled by the state. And itā€™s very humorous ā€” he talks about sex using all kinds of euphemisms, like ā€˜commit great friendship,ā€™ stuff like that. Itā€™s meant to be a sort of parody, a somewhat absurd version of a romance.ā€ Also on this weekā€™s episode, Elisabeth Egan and Dave Kim talk about what people are reading. John Williams is the host. Here are the books discussed in this weekā€™s ā€œWhat Weā€™re Readingā€: ā€œTime Shelterā€ by Georgi Gospodinov, translated by Angela Rodel ā€œThe Displacementsā€ by Bruce Holsinger ā€œThe Annotated Wizard of Ozā€ by L. Frank Baum, edited by Michael Patrick Hearn We would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Reviewā€™s podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.

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The Book Review

The Book Review

The New York Times
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