In my experience, contemporary poetry is usually the Emperor's new clothes, and the blurb writers are the tailors telling people what they ought to see. I tend to agree with Joan Houlihan's experience of blurbs. These days I trust nothing but my own reactions. If I like the actual poems, after reading around in them extensively (in a bookstore or library) I will buy the book. I used to go to a lot of poetry readings by people I didn't know, just to expose myself to a wide range of what is being written now. Some of the writers were well known, but most of them had won some awards or they would not have been published in the first place. After a few too many mind-numbing readings, I adopted the practice of tracking down a book of the poems (in the library) before attending the reading. I now attend a lot fewer readings, though I will still go out of my way to get to one by a poet I admire. There are too many styles of poetry for anyone to like all of them, so I have accepted the limits of my own taste and forged ahead from there.
Susan
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