PN Review Online
News and Notes
W.S. Di Piero wins the Ruth Lilly Prize
The 2012 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize for 'lifetime accomplishment' has been awarded to W.S. read more
American Academy of Arts honours three PNR contributors
Michael Palmer, Christopher Middleton, and Michael Hofmann have received Arts & Letters Awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for the contribution to literature. read more
Most Read... Marjorie PerloffWhat We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Poetry
(PN Review 115)
Donald DavieA Comment
(Poetry Nation 1)
Anne StevensonTwo Poems
(PN Review 202)
John AshberyFifteen Poems
(PN Review 191)
Poems Articles Interviews Reports Reviews Contributors
Next Issue David Herman: Zweig's Cafe Goes Online John Lucas on the First (Fatal) Poetry Competition Andrew Motion goes Gospel Jason Guriel looks through William Logan Danilo Kis on A Piano and a Dead Horse
Welcome to PN Review, one of the outstanding literary magazines of our time. Keep up with the many worlds of poetry in this independent and always stimulating journal. For four decades PN Review has been a place to discover new poems in English and in translation as well as interviews, news, essays, reviews and reports from around the world. Subscribers can explore the complete, uniquely rich digital archive.

A PN Review subscription makes an excellent gift, with a new magazine every two months and full access to the archive. Reduced rates are available for students; gift subscriptions to students are available at student rate.
Featured Interview
In Conversation with Frederic Raphael William Boyd Literature

WILLIAM BOYD: When someone asks you, 'What do you do?' do you reply 'Novelist', or 'Writer', or 'Novelist and screenwriter'? Or something else?

FREDERIC RAPHAEL: I never answer 'screenwriter'. What is vital to me is the capacity to work alone and without having to apply for a licence. Robert Graves (who went to Charterhouse and disliked it almost as much as I did) wrote a book called Occupation: Writer, which will, as they say, do me.

Is there a favourite novel amongst your work? (I'm always asked this question).

I don't spend much time in narcissistic retrospection. I am rather proud of Like Men Betrayed (1970), which Paul Theroux described as 'Proust with machine-guns' (I am almost happy to recall that it also occasioned a reviewer in ... read more
Three Poems
Cristina Navazo-Eguía Newton Drop Dead, Bakhtai

Die, Bakhtai, so you can go home, set yourself free.
I know you don't like this game of wars. You think
the stoning would mess up your clothes
and make your little feet dirty; but look at me:
I am still walking, caked in mud and straw,
a small buddha, after the giant ones the Taliban blew up.
You see, the buddhas' graves are still standing,
hollow with the shadow of their shape.
I think they went down in shame for all the sticks,
... read more
Merely Reading?
MARJORIE PERLOFF, Unoriginal Genius: Poetry by Other Means in the New Century (Chicago).
Marjorie Perloff is concerned with how we read.

In a discussion of the intriguing work of Yoko Tawada, Perloff notes a significant transcription error in Internet versions of a Goethe poem (changing a pronoun's gender) and writes, 'so careless are our usual reading habits...'. This might seem overwrought - it was a typo - but it also seems warranted: Perloff's remarkably attentive readings shed light, linguistic and historical, on all sorts of texts. But at key moments in Unoriginal Genius she uses her forensic skills - and sometimes her own mistakes of transcription and omission - to distort what's in front of her.

In 'One-Way Street', Walter Benjamin writes: 'The power of a country road is different when one is walking along it from when one is flying over it by airplane. In the same ... read more
Selected from the Archive...
In Conversation with Kenneth Koch David Herd
The interview took place in Kenneth Koch's New York apartment on Tuesday 18 April 1995. This is an edited transcript of the conversation.

DAVID HERD: Who were the first poets you read?


kenneth koch: The first time that I remember being influenced by poetry, beyond being influenced by the form of poetry itself, was when I was fifteen. One of my uncles took me down to the family business and opened up a big safe and showed me some of the poems he'd written when he was nineteen years old, and he gave me a big book of Shelley. It was a hard-cover book with, I remember, a red cover and a picture of Shelley with long hair and an open collar, the collected poems of Shelley, which I still have. And I immediately started ... read more
Searching, please wait... animated waiting image