“Longenbach is a lyric poet, practical critic, and literary scholar. These are distinct roles, and there are vanishingly few people good, let alone so distinguished, in all three. In The Lyric Now, he brings a career's worth of wisdom to bear while writing with élan and urgency for both the specialist and nonspecialist reader. No one is better at explaining how poems work, how literary history happens, and why we should care about both.”
— Langdon Hammer, author of James Merrill: Life and Art
“’A poem creates the moment as we enter it,’ writes Longenbach, and with his masterful discernment and elegant prose, he illuminates the richness of that moment. Wending from Marianne Moore’s Observations to Sally Keith’s River House, Longenbach traces the entire development of modern and contemporary American poetry, even as he attends to the unique imaginations of the poets themselves, to ‘the way in which a particular poem creates the repeatable event of itself.’ I’m convinced The Lyric Now will be with us for a long time to come.”
— Peter Campion, author of Radical as Reality: Form and Freedom in American Poetry
"[Longenbach] does prove—with stylistic wit and epigrammatic verve—that close reading can be a literary art in its own right. In chapters on unfamiliar poems from familiar poets like Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, Gertrude Stein, and Marianne Moore, Longenbach delivers fresh, often-surprising insights. . . . Taken together, these essays, and those on less familiar poets, make an implicit case for the importance of syntax to lyric poetry. This is particularly evident in Longenbach's reading of Moore’s 'The Octopus,' and in masterful readings of poems by Jorie Graham and Carl Philips. When he contrasts Patti Smith’s prose and John Ashbery’s poetry with the songs of Bob Dylan, his skill as an expert close reader proves his point about the power of syntax. This volume proves a simple yet fundamental truth: 'a lyric works particularly, sentence by sentence, line by line'. . . . Summing Up: Highly recommended."
— CHOICE
"A talented poet and critic.”
— Commonweal
"The Lyric Now will give great pleasure."
— Modern Philology