A preeminent American poet, John Hollander (1929–2013) wrote over sixteen volumes of poetry and was Sterling Professor of English at Yale University. J. D. McClatchy is a poet and literary critic. He teaches at Yale University, where he also edits The Yale Review.Richard Wilbur was appointed the second United States Poet Laureate in 1987 and twice received the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, in 1957 and in 1989.
The first edition of Rhyme’s Reason was awarded the Modern Language
Association’s Mina P. Shaughnessy Medal for an outstanding research
publication in the field of teaching English language and
literature
"How lucky the young poet who discovers this wisest and most
lighthearted of manuals."—James Merrill
"[Hollander] put everything he knew about the structures of
poetry—those fabled magic tricks—into a sort of guidebook for those
starting out on the trail up Mount Parnassus, as well as for those
who may already know the path but would take unusual delight in
Hollander’s marvelously ingenious blazes along the way. . . . There
are astonishments on every page."—from the Foreword by J. D.
McClatchy
"This book's wit and inventive spirit, its self-describing
embodiments of form, now offer the beginning poet a happy chance to
discover the technician in himself."—from the Afterword by Richard
Wilbur
"This virtuoso work from a master, a book which is accurate and
useful without ever ceasing to be funny."—Paul Fussell
"What the E. B. White-William Strunk The Elements of Style is to
the writing of prose, Rhyme’s Reason could very easily become to
the writing of verse . . . . Marvelously comprehensive, clarifying
and useful [and] a delight to read."—John Reardon, Los Angeles
Times Review of Books
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