'probably the most informative and entertaining poetry journal in the English-speaking world' - John Ashbery
During 2023 PN Review is celebrating its jubilee. Since we started as Poetry Nation, a twice-yearly hardback, in 1973, we've been publishing new poetry, rediscoveries, commentary, literary essays, interviews and reviews from around the globe. Our vast archive now includes over 270 issues, with contributions from some of the most important writers of our times. Key contributors include Octavio Paz, Laura Riding, John Ashbery, Patricia Beer, W.S. Graham, Eavan Boland, Jorie Graham, Donald Davie, C.H. Sisson, Sinead Morrissey, Sasha Dugdale, Anthony Vahni Capildeo, and many others. We'll be celebrating throughout the year: look out for announcements of our events in the autumn, and sign up to our free newsletter to get choice morsels of archive straight to your inbox. Subscribe to the magazine to receive six issues per year and full access to the archive.Buy the current issue without a subscription here.
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Featured Article
PNR
Robyn Marsack
Like Brighton rock, the name MICHAEL SCHMIDT is embedded in PNR whenever you bite it. The name is the quality mark, from the editorial in issue 2 of Poetry Nation, in 1974 (his name was absent from no. 1), to issue 271 of PNR in 2023. Issue 6 in 1976 announces a new format, new frequency and that ‘we’ will be joined by new editors, Donald Davie and C.H. Sisson: the editorials will be ‘unsigned’. So in 1977 there is a whole new gang: the General Editor, the new editors plus Brian Cox, James Atlas as American Editor and Val Warner as Assistant Editor. Soon the editors decide to sign their editorials, taking it in turn to lay down gauntlets. In 1979 the trio of Schmidt, always the General, Davie and Sisson are unsupported for a while; co-ordinating editors come and go throughout the magazine’s history. The editorial that caught my eye in the Archive is Sisson’s from 5:5: ‘One of my worries about this magazine is that it is not doing enough for the suppression of what is called poetry’
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The Con of the Wild
Silis MacLeod
‘Deep in the forest a call was sounding, and as often as he heard this call, mysteriously thrilling and luring, he felt compelled to turn his back upon the fire and the beaten earth around it, and to plunge into the forest, and on and on, he knew not where or why; nor did he wonder where or why, the call sounding imperiously, deep in the forest.’ – Jack London, The Call of the Wild Often called ‘Europe’s Last Great Wilderness’, Highland Scotland holds great emotive power for those who know it well as much as for those who do not. We have a strong impression of the place: its mountains, lochs, coasts, the bothies. One of the most iconic images of the Highlands must be that postcard scene of a sloping hillside above a sea loch, on which is perched a small, whitewashed cottage with a red
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A Soul at the “White Heat” Poetry, the Author, and the Advent(ure) of Large Language Models
Judith Bishop
I Was the Death of the Author, announced by Roland Barthes in 1967, an ‘accident’ of thinking? Like, or unlike, the swipe of the laundry truck that killed the writer one morning in the Quartier Latin – écrasé, crushed – a brutal word, close to erase – shutting down the body of a singular man who, later in life, had fallen in love with his own human singularity? ‘What did you do, Ray? Aw, shit...’ – Dr Peter Venkman to Dr Raymond Stantz, Ghostbusters (1984) Camera Lucida, Barthes’s most poignant work, had appeared in 1980. In 1981, Yves Bonnefoy, whose work exudes a grave vitality very different from Barthes’s, was elected to the Chair at the Collège de France left open by the latter’s death in 1980. I was first attracted to Bonnefoy’s work by a poem about a lizard on
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Selected from the Archive...
Greenish Silks: Reading Eavan Boland’s ‘Silenced’
Tara Bergin
On the road from Dublin to Bray there used to be a big, dismal-looking building, which had a huge sign outside saying YARN FACTORY. I remember passing it in the car as a child, and my dad would tell me that inside there were hundreds of people all working hard making up stories. It was funny to me at the time because of the bleakness of the place, and it was also somehow hopeful to think that such a boring, depressing exterior could be hiding something so exciting. The ability to tell a story and to spin a yarn in order to create another, alternative world can be central to poetry, and Eavan Boland’s ‘Silenced’, the fifth poem in the sequence ‘Domestic Violence’, is an example of this. Really, it is an example of what poetry can do, in the sense that it tells its story
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