[New-Poetry] 100 Poets You Should Know
Bob Grumman
bobgrumman at nut-n-but.net
Fri Nov 23 19:48:00 EST 2007
Here are ten for your list, Jim, each of whom is at least as important a
poet as anyone on the original list: John M. Bennett, Crag Hill, Geof
Huth, Carlos Luis, K.S. Ernst, Scott Helmes, Carol Stetser, Guy Beining,
Karl Kempton, mIEKAL aND. They aren't necessarily the best ten living
American visual poets I know, just the first ten whose names occurred to
me. I'm too lazy to keep going, but I know I could list twenty more,
none of whom is inferior as a poet to the majority of poets on the other
list. And that's sticking to poets whose forte is visual poetry. There
are many I consider at or near the level of these in other overlooked
schools--such as what I'd call the Modern Haiku school of American
haiku, because most of the best writers of conventional haiku are
published in Modern Haiku. And there are P. Inman, Clark Coolidge and
other language poets. Endwar and other infraverbal poets. Alan
Sondheim would have to be on the list. I'm not sure what school he is
most prominently in, but he's certainly prominent in several computer
and computer-language schools, with several others I don't know much
about. I'm glad you put Bob Holman on your list, but there are a good
many other important performance poets--and sound poets. All these
poets I've been mentioning are important for poetry because you can
learn things from them you can't learn from the poets of the fifties and
their current very visible imitators. I wouldn't call Coolidge obscure,
but most of the others are, certainly by Rita Dove/Billy Collins standards.
--Bob G.
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