Browsing All Posts By

Ernest Hilbert

Poetry

“Sonnet to Insomnia” by Moira Egan

By On July 23, 2011

Moira Egan is an American poet who lives in Rome. She is the author of Cleave (WWPH 2004), which was nominated for the National Book Award and was a Finalist for the… Read More

Feature

“At the Fishhouses” by Elizabeth Bishop

By On July 21, 2011

Maybe this will cool us down a bit today . . . … Read More

Feature

“Today” by Frank O’Hara

By On July 19, 2011

"[Frank O'Hara's] work seems to me to represent the last stage in the adaptation of twentieth-century avant-garde sensibility to poetry about contemporary American experience. In its music and its language and in… Read More

Feature

“The Starvefish” by Katy Evans-Bush

By On July 18, 2011

"Poems full of life, wit, and vitality." - Linda Grant… Read More

Poetry

“After Summer Fell Apart” by Yusef Komunyakaa

By On July 15, 2011

"Winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for Neon Vernacular, but perhaps best known for Dien Cai Dau, poems chronicling his experiences as a journalist in Vietnam, Komunyakaa is one of this… Read More

Poetry

“Apprentice Work” by James Byrne

By On July 14, 2011

James Byrne is the Editor and co-founder of The Wolf poetry magazine (www.wolfmagazine.co.uk). His debut collection, Passages of Time, was published by Flipped Eye in 2003. His second collection, Blood/Sugar, will be… Read More

Feature

“Say Something that is Insanely Smart But Also Kind of Mean”: What Would Don Draper Do? Courtesy of The Oatmeal

By On July 12, 2011

New fun from the brilliant website The Oatmeal. If you're not familiar with this website, please visit right away. Also, buy the book. I have, and it's worth it.… Read More

Poetry

“Two Butterflies Went Out at Noon” by Emily Dickinson

By On July 12, 2011

"Although Emily Dickinson was a prolific private poet, fewer than a dozen of her nearly eighteen hundred poems were published during her lifetime. The work that was published during her lifetime was… Read More

Poetry

“Several Voices Out of a Cloud” by Louise Bogan

By On July 11, 2011

Thanks to Jan Schreiber who sent this in as a response to Niall McDevitt's poem. … Read More

E-Verse

Well, It’s a Start: The E-Verse Free Book Program Begins Small

By On July 6, 2011

After much planning, the first books in the E-Verse Free Book Program have landed on the shelf at Ants Pants cafe. These meager offerings will grow in time, and the peculiar range… Read More

Poetry

“An Archive of Confessions, A Genealogy of Confessions” by Joshua Clover

By On July 5, 2011

Joshua Clover is the author of two books of poems, The Totality for Kids (University of California Press, 2006), and Madonna anno domini (1997), which was chosen by Jorie Graham to receive… Read More

Poetry

“Felix Randal” by Gerard Manley Hopkins

By On June 30, 2011

Apart from a few uncharacteristic poems scattered in periodicals, Hopkins was not published during his own lifetime. His good friend Robert Bridges (1844-1930), whom he met at Oxford and who became Poet… Read More

Feature

“THUD!” by Quincy Lehr

By On June 28, 2011

Where’ve our tortured artists gone, Catullus or Syd Barrett? Chasing after the latest grant and following the carrot.… Read More

Poetry

“Amoretti LXVII: Like as a Huntsman” by Edmund Spenser

By On June 27, 2011

"Be bolde, Be bolde, and everywhere, Be bold." - Edmund Spenser… Read More

Poetry

“Silviculture” by Cecily Parks

By On June 26, 2011

Cecily Parks’s first book of poems, Field Folly Snow (University of Georgia Press 2008), was a finalist for the Norma Farber First Book Award and the Glasgow/Shenandoah Prize for Emerging Writers. Her… Read More

E-Verse

Like Kitty Porn? Then Try Cute Overload!

By On June 25, 2011

Ridiculous, we know, but if you have some time to spare, Cute Overload is a website devoted to images that press the "awwwwww" button in us all.… Read More

Poetry

“A Radio With Guts” by Charles Bukowski

By On June 24, 2011

"Sometimes you just have to pee in the sink." - Charles Bukowski, inspirational saying on Ernest Hilbert's desk… Read More

Poetry

“Museum” by Glyn Maxwell

By On June 15, 2011

"Maxwell is hardly a flashy poet. (His early work was wicked in an Audenesque way, without Auden’s demonic language or perverse views.) If you read too fast, you miss his subtlety, his… Read More

Poetry

“Calais” by Glyn Maxwell

By On June 13, 2011

"Glyn Maxwell's originality lies in his astounding ability to orchestrate asides, parenthetical quips, side-of-the-mouth ruminations into a formal verse with a bravura not dared before." - Derek Walcott… Read More

Poetry

“Ghazal” by Mimi Khalvati

By On June 12, 2011

Mimi Khalvati was born in Tehran, Iran and has lived most of her life in England. She trained at Drama Centre London and has worked as an actor and director in the… Read More

Feature

“Strawberries” by Edwin Morgan

By On June 8, 2011

"I don’t think the future of poetry is all that black. I think it will be possible to write long poems again. The space age will perhaps bring a kind of epic… Read More

Feature

“You Should Have Seen the Cover they Wanted to Do!”: Some Simply Awful Heavy Metal Album Covers

By On June 8, 2011

It’s hard to believe, but there was an era, long ago, in which CDs, cassette tapes, and even vinyl albums were purchased and carried around. These primitive objects had to be covered… Read More

Poetry

“Occupational Hazard” by Sophie Hannah

By On June 7, 2011

"Sophie Hannah is among the best at comprehending, in rhyming verse, the indignity of having a body and the nobility of having a heart." - Jeremy Noel Todd, Guardian… Read More

Feature

“And Indians” by Glyn Maxwell

By On June 6, 2011

"Poetry is words in space, representing words in time." - Glyn Maxwell… Read More

Poetry

“Valentine” by Carol Ann Duffy

By On June 5, 2011

"Poetry and prayer are very similar." - Carol Ann Duffy… Read More

E-Verse Universe

“Mrs Lazarus” by Carol Ann Duffy

By On June 4, 2011

"Like the sand and the oyster, it's a creative irritant. In each poem, I'm trying to reveal a truth, so it can't have a fictional beginning." - Carol Ann Duffy… Read More

Feature

Hilbert Heads Across the Pond

By On June 1, 2011

I'm heading out for London (antiquarian book fairs, auctions, work . . .), Oxford (a reading, spending the night at St. John's college), Leamington Spa (day off), and the Scottish highlands (where… Read More

Poetry

“The Air” by Don Paterson

By On May 31, 2011

"A poem is just a little machine for remembering itself." — Don Paterson… Read More

Poetry

“Closing” by Deborah Warren

By On May 27, 2011

Deborah Warren was born in Boston, MA in 1946. Her poetry collections are: The Size of Happiness (2003, Waywiser Press, London), runner-up for the 2000 T. S. Eliot Prize; Zero Meridian, which… Read More

Feature

One man’s junk . . . Check Out Artist Zac Freeman’s Portraits Created from the Debris You Accumulate in Your Couches and Drawers

By On May 27, 2011

Thanks to Cynthia for sending this in.… Read More