Poet Biographies
Introduction: Charles Finn & Kim Stafford.
SECTION I: "I riffed, following the language where it
led"
Chapter 1: Bedtime Story, Joe Wilkins, Linfield University,
USA.
First Draft: "My Son Asks for the Story About When We Were
Birds"
Final Draft: "My Son Asks for the Story About When We Were
Birds"
Essay: Finding the Language, Finding Story: Revising "My Son Asks
for the Story About When We Were Birds"
Chapter 2: When Thought's Slope Steepens, Jane
Hirshfield, Author and Poet.
First Draft: "Counting, New Year's Morning, What Powers Yet Remain
to Me"
Final Draft: "Counting, This New Year's Morning, What Powers Yet
Remain to Me"
Essay: Stepladder, Vinegar, Persimmons: Revising "Counting, This
New Year's Morning, What Powers Yet Remain to Me"
Chapter 3: Increasing The Stakes, CMarie Fuhrman,
Western Colorado University, USA.
First Draft: "Land Acknowledgment, Valley County, Idaho"
Final Draft: "Land Acknowledgment, Valley County, Idaho"
Essay: Rhythm, Repetition, and the Drumbeat of Poetry: Revising
"Land Acknowledgment, Valley County, Idaho"
Chapter 4: Researching The Mystery, Jimmy Santiago Baca,
Author and Poet.
Passage from First Draft: "River Run"
Passage from Third Draft: "River Run"
Essay: What it Took to Get Here: Revising "River Run"
Chapter 5: Creating a More Beautiful Story, Sean Prentiss,
Norwich University, USA.
Intermediated Draft: "The Constellations of Slate Belt,
Pennsylvania" (with notes)
Final Draft: "The Constellations of Slate Belt, Pennsylvania"
Essay: Without Myths or Constellations: Revising "The
Constellations of Slate Belt, Pennsylvania"
Section II: "My first draft was a word tornado"
Chapter 6: Inheritance, Frank X Walker, University of
Kentucky, USA.
First Draft: "InHerit"
Final Draft: "InHerit"
Essay: Revisions in Life and Poetry, Revising "InHerit"
Chapter 7: A Matter of Inquiry, Rose McLarney, Auburn
University, USA.
First Draft: "The Collectors of Local Minerals Are Likelier to Find
What They Seek"
Final Draft: "The Collectors of Local Minerals Are Likelier to Find
What They Seek"
Essay: Identifying Gems: Revising "The Collectors of Local Minerals
Are Likelier to Find What They Seek"
Chapter 8: Gift From an Older Self, Naomi Shihab Nye, Texas
State University, USA.
Final Draft: "Tears, Appropriate"
Essay: Gravity Changes: Revising "Tears, Appropriate"
Chapter 9: A Poem's Truest Expression, Yona Harvey,
University of Pittsburgh, USA.
First Draft: "Hickory Street, New Orleans"
Final Draft: "Hickory Street, New Orleans"
Essay: True Expression as the Last Trolley Stop: Revising "Hickory
Street, New Orleans"
Chapter 10: An Inward Dissection, Terry Tempest Williams,
Harvard Divinity School, USA.
Original Prose Paragraph: "When Women Were Birds"
Revision Into Poetry: "When Women Were Birds"
Essay: Once Upon A Time: Revising "When Women Were Birds"
SECTION III: "It felt clunky, false, but I knew I was
close"
Chapter 11: To See Again, Paulann Petersen, Stanford
University, USA.
Intermediate Draft: "A Furrier's Grandchild"
Final Draft: "A Furrier's Grandchild"
Essay: I Hear the Poem Speak For Itself: Revising "A Furrier's
Grandchild"
Chapter 12: Radiant Associations, Philip Metres, John Carroll
University, USA.
First Draft: "Ashberries: Letters"
Final Draft: "Ashberries: Letters"
Essay: Letters I Must Wait to Open: Revising "Ashberries:
Letters"
Chapter 13: An Act of Faith, Abayomi Animashaun, University
of Wisconsin Oshkosh, USA.
First Draft: "Exodus"
Final Draft: "Exodus"
Essay: Discipline and Unknowing: Revising "Exodus"
Chapter 14: Removing Details, Tami Haaland, Montana State
University Billings, USA.
First Draft: "Deer on Crazy Creek"
Final Draft "Deer on Crazy Creek"
Essay: Making the Local Exact: Revising "Deer on Crazy Creek"
Chapter 15: Forging Something New, Charles Finn, Author and
Poet.
First Draft: "Memory's Anvil"
Final Draft: "Memory's Anvil"
Essay: The Winch of Imagination: Revising "Memory's Anvil"
Chapter 16: Maintaining Fidelity, Shin Yu Pai, Author and
Poet.
First Draft: "Empty Zendo"
Final Draft: "Empty Zendo"
Essay: Emptying the Zendo: Revising "Empty Zendo"
SECTION IV: "I asked my dreams."
Chapter 17: What's at Stake, Kim Stafford, Lewis & Clark
College, USA.
Final Draft: "Lost in Snow"
Essay: Getting More Intimate with Pain: Revising "Lost in Snow"
Chapter 18: Zeroing in on Intent, Prageeta Sharma, Pomona
College, USA.
First Draft: "The Witness"
Final Draft: "The Witness"
Essay: The Poem's Psychic Center: Revising "The Witness"
Chapter 19: In Thick Darkness we Listen, Shann Ray, Gonzaga
University, USA.
First Draft: "God of my abandonment"
Final Draft: "God of my abandonment"
Essay: Obscuring a Formidable Power: Revising "God of my
abandonment"
Chapter 20: The Serpentine Path, Todd Davis, Pennsylvania
State University, USA.
First Draft: "Tributary"
Final Draft: "Tributary"
Essay: Following a Tributary to Find a Poem: Revising
"Tributary"
Chapter 21: Dreaming Poetry, Beth Piatote, University of
California, Berkeley, USA.
First Draft: "Because our Roots are in Rivers, Not Latin"
Final Draft: "Because our Roots are in Rivers, Not Latin"
Essay: How Not to Write A Sonnet: Revising "Because our Roots are
in Rivers, Not Latin"
Index
Features the first, in-progress and last draft of poems by 25 eminent contemporary US poets alongside an accompanying essay on the revision process to explore how the poem evolved.
Kim Stafford is Emeritus Professor at Lewis & Clark
College, Oregon, USA, where he founded the Northwest Writing
Institute and taught for over thirty years. His twelve books of
poetry and prose include, The Muses Among Us: Eloquent Listening
and Other Pleasures of the Writer’s Craft (2003) and 100 Tricks
Every Boy Can Do: How My Brother Disappeared (2012). His most
recent book is the poetry collection Singer Come from Afar (2021).
He has taught writing in the US, Scotland, Italy, Mexico, and
Bhutan. In 2018 he was named Oregon’s 9th Poet Laureate for a
two-year term.
Charles Finn is the former editor of the literary and fine
arts magazine High Desert Journal and author of Wild Delicate
Seconds: 29 Wildlife Encounters (2012) and On a Benediction of
Wind: Poems and Photographs from the American West (2022). His
essays, poems, and nonfiction have been published in a wide variety
of journals, magazines, newspapers, and anthologies across the
United States.
The Art of Revising Poetry is excellent, rigorous, useful, diverse,
and entertaining by turns. Content and style are of the highest
caliber. There is no question that this book is a compelling
addition to anthologies of writing in contemporary US poetry and
poetics, demystifying and diversifying ideas about the
all-too-important process and method of revision. This is a
wonderful companion and ally for engaged writers and readers in the
academy and beyond.
*Dr Heather Yeung, Lecturer in English Literature and Creative
Writing, University of Dundee, UK*
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