Home
Bookstore
Gallery
Reviews
Events
Contact
Links |
Notes, Reviews & Interviews
Review Index
Interview Index:
Interview with Nathan Leslie for Word Riot
interview by South Florida Poetry review
Interview with forgejournal.com
Interview with Andrew Lundwall for Tin Lustre Mobile
Piggpenn interview
Interview by Cindy Hochman for Clockwise Cats
Podcast of interview with Lyn Lifshin on Jane Crown Show, May 19, 2009
Interview with Tiger's Eye, Sept 23, 2003
Dancer with a Pen: An Interview With Lark Vernon Timmons
The Damned Interviews interview of Lyn Lifshin 12/2012 — view as PDF.
An e-interview with Helen Luo
Lyn answers questions of students at Rochester Institute of Technology (Rochester, NY) on October 10th, 2011
An Interview with Untitled Country Review for issue 5, and featured poems
An Interview with Emily Vogel, Ragazine.cc, April 2011 and as PDF
Interview with Melusine, or Women in the 21st Century
Interview: How Ruffian carried me through
Another general interview
Interview with Gloomcupboard blog, May 2008
An Interview With Lyn Lifshin by Stewart Grant and Lawrence Gladeview
An interview (podcast) with Brenda Subraman
Article on Ruffian book from
the Lexington Herald-Leader, Dec 27, 2005
February
2004 interview by Alice Pero, the Co Host Moonday on Montana, in Southern
California Poetix,
and PDF version
Babel Magazine
Review in four parts
Andrew
Lundwall Interview for The Tin Lustre Mobile
Doug Holder Interview
The Washington Post
Amazon.com
Borderlands
RainDog Interview
Interview for "Bear",
March, 1999
Cheryl Townsend
Tina Hess Interview, 2002
Laura
Stamps Interview, 2003
Interview
by David Herrle - editor SubtleTea
If you know of other
reviews of Lyn's work you'd like to see here, write the webmaster.
Excepts and Notes:
from Michael Hathaway of Chiron Magazine
At our Poetry Rendezvous in 1989, Lyn gave the best poetry performance
I've ever seen. She has a rare gift in that her poetry on the page lives
up to the performance.
Michael Hathaway
"Here she is! Might as well stop fighting it. Lifshin is not going
to go away. For men, she's sexy. For women she's an archetype of gutsy
independence. As a poet, she's nobody but herself. Frightening prolific
and utterly intense. One of a kind." San Francisco Review
of Books
Lyn Lifshin's poetry appears in almost every literary and poetry magazine,
from American Scholar, Christian Science Monitor and Yankee to Ms., Rolling
Stone and Ploughshares. She has edited 4 anthologies of women's writing
including TANGLED VINES (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich) now in its second
enlarged edition and chosen by Ms., magazine as one of the 60 best books
of the year. Other anthologies she edited include ARIADNE'S THREAD and
LIPS UNSEALED. "The No More Apologizing, The No More Little Laughing
Blues," included in her new book, BEFORE IT'S LIGHT from Black Sparrow
Press, has been called "among the most impressive documents the women's
poetry movement has produced," by Alicia Ostriker. "Writing
Mint Leaves at Yaddo," a prose piece was selected as one of the best
pieces of writing about writing by Writer's Digest and Story magazine.
The award-winning documentary film, "Lyn Lifshin: Not Made of Glass,"
was called "an extraordinary profile of a unique feminist,"
by Booklist and Mary McCarthy declared, "for it's passionate defense
of poetry and the written word...should be required viewing in every school
in America." Her work has been included in virtually every major
anthology of recent writing by women including, recently, DICK FOR A DAY,
UNSETTLING AMERICA, LEGACIES, MOTHER SONGS, HER FACE IN THE MIRROR, POETS
AT WORK, NEW TO NORTH AMERICA, THE HOLOCAUST, IDENTITY LESSONS.
COLD COMFORT, Lifshin's more recent work from Black Sparrow, has been
called "a wonderful work...you can not escape the emotion that falls
from these poems" by (Articulate Contemporary Art Review.) "The
most published poet in the world today, Lifshin shows here (in COLD COMFORT)
what many literary magazine editors have known for decades: she's a poet
of substance, range and invention." (Small Press Review) Other recent
books by Lifshin include BLUE TATTOO, MARILYN MONROE, and NOT MADE OF
GLASS. Writers as diverse as Robert Frost, Ken Kesey, Richard Eberhart,
and Ed Sanders have praised her work.
Her intense poems reflect a range of emotions and subjects and touch
readers because they suddenly realize that feelings they previously thought
to be theirs alone are shared. Winner of many awards including a Bread
Loaf Fellowship, The Jack Kerouac Award and New York State Caps Grant,
she gives readings, talks and workshops, often based on the books she
has edited or exhibits in museums, around the country and has been poet
in residence at many colleges, libraries and centers.
"...as always, Lifshin's poetry trawls deep waters of submerged
passion beneath the surface of everyday life, coming up with a teeming,
glistening catch..."
"Magnificently crafted poems, terse as needlework"
Choice
The 1997 Black Sparrow publication of Lyn Lifshin's selected poems, Cold
Comfort, brought to national attention, as Small Press reviewer Len Fulton
put it, "a poet of substance, range and invention," one who
"everywhere roots for that stripped piece of a life - usually her
own-that yields the bare emotional atom."
The direct, spare, largely autobiographical poems in this generous new
collection evoke memories of an unlovely girlhood ("longing to be
what every man/ would take the gum out of his mouth to whistle for");
a stormy marriage ("each separation I lost/ 10 pounds"); self-unsparing
love affairs ("we were/ like drunks, dying/ a little more/ every
time"); the pain of losing a mother ("holding her while/ she
moans my hands are/ cold, my hair a whip"). The struggle to regain
self-sufficiency after bad relationships ("some of/ us need to regrow
claws, survive/ on prey, give up safeness").
In poems exploring "the delights and pains of human relationships..as
shrewd as they are poignant" (Bill Katz, Library Journal) these poems
are intense, startling, playful and often surprising and humorous. Well
known for her love poems and mother and daughter poems, erotica and for
her poems written in the masks of Barbie, mad girls, Marilyn, Vietnam
veterans and Holocaust survivors, this collection contains many new never
published poems. What has been called her "unfailing poetic eye and
consummate lyrical skill" is clearly evident in this collection,
as well as the musicality of her poems that "come on like a stack
of Cannonball Adderly records - blowing cool, blowing hot, sometimes lyrical
and sweet, sometimes hard bop, terse and touch." (December magazine)
From her poems of place that "evoke in fantasy, but with a lot of
anthropological detail..."(New York Book Review) to poems that "flash
into emotional significance in (her) inimitable way" (Ms. Magazine)
"Lyn Lifshin wakes them up." (The Washington Post)
I have been infatuated with you from the first "lyn lifshin" poem I read--in an anthology called Psyche. So fresh, so funny, so sexy. It was like wandering the labyrinth of Crete and finding a lightbulb hanging at the end of a drop cord from an outlet in the ceiling. Before that, I'd been reading Louis Simpson and TS Eliot and Yeats to the point of memorizing them. Putting out these two books has meant a great deal to me. - A Reader (the two books referred to are BALLROOM and A NEW FILM ABOUT THE WOMAN IN LOVE WITH THE DEAD. ed.)
|