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Book Reviews of Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets

Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets
Verses That Hurt Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets
Author: Jordan Trachtenberg, Amy Trachtenberg, Christian Lantry, Nicole Blackman
ISBN-13: 9780312151911
ISBN-10: 0312151918
Publication Date: 3/15/1997
Pages: 212
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 13

4.2 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

noisechick avatar reviewed Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets on + 95 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
POEMFONE - for those that don't know, was a NYC poet's project where every day a poet called and recorded a new poem on an answering machine, and you could call and listen. The group involved all sorts of hip poets and musicians - including 3 of my favorites: M. Doughty (of Soul Coughing), Nicole Blackman (of KMFDM & other bands), and John S. Hall (of King Missile).
It's an amazing, beautiful, RAW collection of contemporary free verse, that introduces you to a host of talented poets - and includes a picture of each. I adore this book, and found an extra copy used, so others could share in this rocktacular joy. I can't recommend this book enough!
PS- they also have an audio recording (Poemfone: New Word Order) of some of the poems, but it's OOP. Still easy to find though.
reviewed Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets on + 111 more book reviews
An unusual anthology of poetry by contemporary poets from diverse backgrounds. Poets include Allen Ginsburg, Lee Ranaldo, Bob Holman, Janice Erlbaum, and Shut-Up Shelley.
reviewed Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets on + 9 more book reviews
Poetry is inviting and challenging; it invites meditation and reflection.
reviewed Verses That Hurt : Pleasure and Pain from the POEMFONE Poets on + 93 more book reviews
Just looks important, doesn't it?