Announcing the Indie Next List Poetry Top Ten

Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version

Here is the 2009 Indie Next List Poetry Top Ten, based on the enthusiastic nominations of independent booksellers nationwide. A full-color PDF of the list is available for download on BookWeb.

The list features the work of writers who have won Pulitzer Prizes, National Book Awards, a Lannan Literary Award for Poetry, a T.S. Eliot Prize for Poetry, and a Yale Younger Poets Award, not to mention the latest from a former U.S. poet laureate. The Poetry Top Ten is the result of strong support from booksellers, reflecting a deep level of knowledge and commitment.

Once again, the publication of the list is timed to coincide with April's designation as National Poetry Month. The annual event was inaugurated by the Academy of American Poets in 1996 to bring together publishers, booksellers, literary organizations, libraries, schools, and poets nationwide to celebrate poetry and its vital place in American culture. Thousands of businesses and nonprofit organizations participate through in-store events, special book displays, workshops, and other activities.

For more on National Poetry Month, visit www.poets.org.

The 2009 Indie Next List Poetry Top Ten

1. Evidence: Poems by Mary Oliver
(Beacon, $23, 9780807068984 / 0807068985)
"Simple and unadorned, Evidence invites the reader to pass through the transcendent beauty of the natural world and the mysteries of life, love, and death. Oliver lightly places uncomplicated images, unfastening a complex world, inviting imagery that falls quietly onto the heart like the music of a summer rain." --Dianne Bruhin, Colorado State University Bookstore, Fort Collins, CO

2. Fire to Fire: New and Selected Poems by Mark Doty
(Harper Perennial, $15.99 paper, 9780060752514 / 0060752513)
"This career-spanning collection showcases fleeting moments and fragile memories, as Doty explores lights and bodies that touch fire and change. Tattoos rewrite flesh, cities shine with surprising grace, and men hold hands at the edge of an abyss. Read this and remember that poetry can change the angle of your eyes and the reach of your gaze as you look out onto a kindled, golden world made familiar and new." --Mark David Bradshaw, Watermark Books, Wichita, KS

3. The Romantic Dogs: Poems by Roberto Bolano, Laura Healy (trans.)
(New Directions, $15.95 paper, 9780811218016 / 0811218015)
"Roberto Bolano's star is so ascendant right now that there is no need for me to point out anything but his name on the cover of this book. Let me simply say that Bolano was a poet before he was ever a novelist, and it shows here. The work is insouciant, literary, and historically nihilistic. It's been one of my favorite books of the past year." --Dustin Kurtz, McNally Jackson Books, New York, NY

4. Ballistics: Poems by Billy Collins
(Random House, $24, 9781400064915 / 1400064910)
"I love the self-consciousness and humor Billy Collins brings to poetry. His poems are alive with a friendly, kind regard for what it means to be human. He has the great talent to not only craft memorable lines, but also to achieve what all great poets do, to tug on us and remind us to appreciate the moment we're in right now. A delight to read and read again." --Drea Firth, Maria's Bookshop, Durango, CO

5. In Search of Small Gods by Jim Harrison
(Copper Canyon, $22, 9781556593000 / 1556593007)
"In Search of Small Gods is Jim Harrison's twelfth book of poetry -- and my favorite so far. This collection exhibits a fine sense of humor along with a sharp awareness of the tragic human condition. The poems contain fish, birds, death, peonies, many beloved dogs, various wacky speculations, and a few regrets and tall tales that wander off into strange dreams. Harrison skillfully calls all this to our attention, and the world and all these things shine through this book." --Karl Pohrt, Shaman Drum Bookshop, Ann Arbor, MI

6. A Foot in the Mouth: Poems to Speak, Sing, and Shout by Paul B. Janeczko, Chris Raschka (illus.)
(Candlewick, $17.99, 9780763606633 / 0763606634)
"A Foot in the Mouth features great poems for reading aloud. With tongue-twisters and poems for one voice, two voices, or more, these poems will get kids moving and loving poetry. (And this is an excellent recommendation for teachers to bring poetry alive in their classroom.)" --Shelly Plumb, Harleysville Books, Harleysville, PA

7. In Praise of the Unfinished: Selected Poems by Julia Hartwig, John and Bogdana Carpenter (trans.)
(Knopf, $25, 9780307267207 / 0307267202)
"In her only collection available in English, Julia Hartwig's In Praise of the Unfinished is a profound meditation on life at the boundaries of History and Time. In exquisite distillations of experience and perception, Hartwig -- one of the brilliant poetic masters from Poland -- explores philosophical and emotional depths without losing herself or her readers in obscurantism or trite turns of phrase. She is a poet of the universal rather than the narrow, and we should be grateful for her words." --Shawn Wathen, Chapter One Book Store, Hamilton, MT

8. Bicycles: Love Poems by Nikki Giovanni
(Morrow, $16.99, 9780061726453 / 0061726451)
"A new book of poetry by my favorite contemporary poet is immediately cause for celebration. Her strong, clear voice shines on every page. A fantastic collection!" --Michael Burns, Howard's Bookstore, Bloomington, IN

9. What Goes On: Selected and New Poems 1995 - 2009 by Stephen Dunn
(Norton, $24.95, 9780393067750 / 0393067750)
"Stephen Dunn addresses issues large and small, though mostly large: love, death, divinity, morality, responsibility. Words are perfectly chosen, and so many of these poems deserve to be read out loud, and often. A perfect introduction to the work of this Pulitzer Prize winner." --Leslie Reiner, Inkwood Books, Tampa, FL

10. Bucolics by Maurice Manning
(Mariner, $14 paper, 9780156034753 / 0156034751)
"My absolute favorite collection of poetry this year! These poems effloresce with wonderment for the natural world. They are rich with agrarian imagery and soulful inquiry; they are joyful, reflective, and heart-achingly lovely." --April Nabholz, Grass Roots Books & Music, Corvallis, OR