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Susan Wheeler (1) (1955–)

Author of Meme (Kuhl House Poets)

For other authors named Susan Wheeler, see the disambiguation page.

8+ Works 90 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Susan Wheeler's first collection of poetry, Bag 'o' Diamonds (University of Georgia Press), received the Norma Farber First Book Award of the Poetry Society of America and was short-listed for the Los Angeles. Times Book Award. Her second, Smokes, with an afterword by Robert Hass received the Four show more Way Books Prize for 1998. Her awards include fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundarion and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and her work has appeared in six editions of the Scribner anthology Best American Poetry, and in The Paris Review, New American Writing, Talisman, The New Yorker and other journals. On the graduate faculty in creative writing at the New School and the creative writing faculty at Princeton University, she has also taught at the University of Iowa. New York University and Rutgers University. She lives in New York City show less
Image credit: Photo by Jeffrey Goldman

Works by Susan Wheeler

Meme (Kuhl House Poets) (2012) 20 copies
Ledger (Iowa Poetry Prize) (2005) 15 copies
Smokes (1998) 13 copies
Record Palace (2005) 13 copies
Assorted Poems (2009) 12 copies
Bag 'o' diamonds : poems (1993) 9 copies

Associated Works

The Future Dictionary of America (2004) — Contributor — 630 copies
The Best American Poetry 2005 (2005) — Contributor — 177 copies
The Best American Poetry 2003 (2003) — Contributor — 174 copies
The Best American Poetry 1996 (1996) — Contributor — 171 copies
American Religious Poems: An Anthology (2006) — Contributor — 164 copies
The Best American Poetry 1998 (1998) — Contributor — 162 copies
The Best American Poetry 1993 (1993) — Contributor — 129 copies
The Best American Poetry 2012 (2012) — Contributor — 84 copies
American Poets in the 21st Century: The New Poetics (2007) — Contributor — 39 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Wheeler, Susan
Birthdate
1955-07-16
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Occupations
dichter

Members

Reviews

The extent to which one accepts T.S. Eliot’s dictum that genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood is a good measure of how one will react to Susan Wheeler’s Assorted Poems. Wheeler’s poetry is thrillingly hallucinatory, a dense verbal jungle where “a cowboy is / coming after you, calmly askew, promising breath,” a place whose “inhabitants” are “burly and wild in their cars.” About the closest Wheeler gets to a simple lyric is when she observes that from the air the Midwestern prairie is “all a flat board hatched / for a ghost’s game on the earth’s odd rim.” Her allusions run from classical mythology and art to advertising jingles and the aggressive banality of common speech. Her verse is highly musical, often trickily rhymed, with a superior ear for consonance and rhythm. Whether such prosodic skill is a sufficient anchor for her wilder flights of free-associative whimsy is an open question. At times, the poetry careens off into the purely private, unmoored from meaning or coherence. Encouragingly, there is a subtle progression over the four volumes collected here, starting with 1993’s Bag o’ Diamonds and concluding with Ledger, from 2005. As the years and books mount, Wheeler’s verse feels increasingly grounded, its more excessive moments tamed without sacrificing rhetorical force. Ledger ends with “The Debtor in the Convex Mirror,” the longest poem collected here and a work of impressive imaginative consistency. She uses Quentin Massys’s painting “The Moneylender and His Wife” as the starting point for a sustained meditation that skips nimbly between contemporary Manhattan and Renaissance Antwerp. “Genuine” poetry, in Eliot’s definition, must adhere to an internal coherence, a formal logic—no matter how oblique—if it is to achieve unity and resonance. About half of Wheeler’s poems pass this test, the other half remaining resistant to even patient exegesis. One can, of course, be content to let the vivid language sluice through one’s consciousness, hypnotized by the rhythms and perfectly balanced phrasing. Those looking for a more conventional literary payoff, however, have their work cut out for them.

From Boston Review, July 2009
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MikeLindgren51 | Aug 7, 2018 |
This is a short collection of three series of poems the explore relationships. The first uses cliche after cliche that you hear parents trying to use as leverage to get kids to do what they wish. They also are used in adult relationships also, The third series evokes a split between adults and the hurtful things that are said to gain an upper hand against someone we once loved but now but now want to hurt. The book was a finalist for the National Book Award and I believe was chosen not for the triteness of the phrases but for a realistic look some of the things people say to get their point across with or without knowing the cumulative affect (Many times hurtful) it has on people in out lives.… (more)
 
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muddyboy | Jan 29, 2013 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
8
Also by
10
Members
90
Popularity
#205,795
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
2
ISBNs
28

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