PoemHunter.com   
Selecting A Reader by Ted Kooser   
Search:     
Home Poets Poems Lyrics Quotations Music Forum Member Area Poetry E-Books
 
Ted Kooser
Poems   Comments   More Info   Stats  
 
<< prev. poem Poems by Ted Kooser : 5 / 5 next poem >>
  
 
Share |

 
Selecting A Reader

  First, I would have her be beautiful,
and walking carefully up on my poetry
at the loneliest momen .........
........................
........................
read full text >>

Ted Kooser


Share |


 
  Comments about this poem (Selecting A Reader by Ted Kooser )
Click here to write your comments about this poem (Selecting A Reader by Ted Kooser )
 

Page: 1 2

next page >>

 
  Ben Colling  (3/4/2009 7:35:00 PM)

I love this poem for its Kooser-style simplicity. His humility in saying that the majority of the public finds a clean coat more important than a book of poetry is satirically refreshing. His Puritan-esque view of Concrete>Abstract is quite interesting, and ironically entertaining. He's not arrogant; quite the opposite. He's poking fun at the vanity of the arts and even the ridiculousness of a bohemia ideal.
  Terri Kirby Erickson  (11/7/2007 12:11:00 PM)

The lovely thing about this poem is how it flows from image to image...the beautiful woman...walking carefully...the loneliest moment of the afternoon...her hair still damp at the neck. You can see it clearly, feel it in a visceral way. Ted Kooser is a master at the art of story telling. And the thing is, if you are a writer...to inspire a woman to have her raincoat cleaned seems miracle enough. Every decision counts-every act, however small, changes the world.
  Old Poet  (1/18/2007 9:38:00 PM)

Short, simple and definitely Ted Kooser.
Some comments show that they did NOT get this poem in spite of its simplicity.
He's poking fun of his own work AND vanity people!
Its a great poem!
  John Tiong Chunghoo  (9/24/2006 4:22:00 AM)

first date
he asks her what book
she reads
  Anne Marie  (8/1/2006 1:18:00 PM)

I can imagine Kooser lurking in the aisles of the bookstore, watching to see who is picking up his books. Of course he wants it to be a hot, sexy, yet intellectual girl who his poetry attracts. He is a MAN after all! And when she puts the book down, he makes into someone who is petty and obviously doesn't appreciat the art anyway. She's not quite as cute as she looked at first. It's about rejection. The dude got shot down!

Annie
  Joyce Chelmo  (4/18/2006 3:37:00 PM)

*huge smile* Masterful write
  Reva Hill  (11/25/2005 3:56:00 PM)

Oh—arrogance, I see. Deathless? How earnest, how arrogant such commentary strikes me.

I do like the poem and enjoy Mr. Kooser’s longing for a beautiful reader and his acceptance of the shabby raincoat. He is a man who takes his art so lightly as to let her leave without buying a book.
  Oliver Brookshore  (9/9/2005 3:28:00 AM)

Great poem! ! I absloutly love it! so simple and such a joy to read.

Its one of my favourite
  Jessica Brick  (7/13/2005 10:42:00 AM)

Oh, to have Billy Collins back as the Poet Laureate... this poem, especially, reminds me of a better one by Collins- Marginalia, one of the best lines of which is, 'Pardon the egg salad stains, but I'm in love.' Kooser definitely borders into the arrogant in not a few of his poems, something about his tone. He seem to feel that as a poet, the world waits on him. I agree with a comment made earlier by Lamont- if anything Kooser, instead of inspiring me, heartens me in believing that I too perhaps am capable of winning a prize for my poetry one day. (Although I myself have shared the wish that a reader of my poetry would be beautiful...)
  Leanna Stead  (4/5/2005 11:58:00 AM)

This is lovely... I am definitely impressed. : -)

I found out about Mr. Kooser only today, when I read of his Pulitzer Prize-winning book entitled 'Delights and Shadows.' In searching this site I then found 'Selecting a Reader, ' which has captured my fancy as do few poems I read.

I would have to cite Kooser's use of imagery - visual, emotional, and sensual - as my favorite feature of this poem. It does make the poem highly accessible and easy to interpret, though I must add that I find its emotional impact somewhat more difficult to describe. This is definitely a good thing - the emotions are complex, rather than vague.

The tone shifts from wistful at the beginning ('I would have her be beautiful, ' 1) to an air of self-deprecating humor at the end ('...And she will, ' 13) . This encourages both reminiscence and laughter - which, at least for me, is uniquely charming - and makes the experience of reading the work that much more enjoyable.

I'm definitely reading more Ted Kooser.
 

Page: 1 2

next page >>

 
  People who read Ted Kooser

 
 
  Classic poets in PoemHunter.Com:

      The complete list >>

 
  Top 500 Poems

  1. Phenomenal Woman by Maya Angelou
  2. Still I Rise by Maya Angelou
  3. If You Forget Me by Pablo Neruda
  4. Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein
  5. Dreams by Langston Hughes
  6. i carry your heart with me by ee cummings
  7. I Do Not Love You Except Because I Love You by Pablo Neruda
  8. Annabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe
  9. The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
  10. I Crave Your Mouth, Your Voice, Your Hair by Pablo Neruda
  11. Television by Roald Dahl
  12. One Inch Tall by Shel Silverstein
  13. Warning by Jenny Joseph
  14. As I Grew Older by Langston Hughes
  15. A Dream Within A Dream by Edgar Allan Poe
  16. Fire and Ice by Robert Frost
  17. If by Rudyard Kipling
  18. On the Ning Nang Nong by Spike Milligan
  19. Dream Deferred by Langston Hughes
  20. "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" by William Wordsworth
  21. Alone by Edgar Allan Poe
  22. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost
  23. The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes
  24. Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
  25. All That is Gold Does Not Glitter by JRR Tolkien
The complete list of Top 500 Poems >>
  Top 500 Poets

  1. Pablo Neruda
  2. Langston Hughes
  3. Maya Angelou
  4. Charles Bukowski
  5. ee cummings
  6. Shel Silverstein
  7. William Shakespeare
  8. Dylan Thomas
  9. Spike Milligan
  10. Billy Collins
  11. Emily Dickinson
  12. Khalil Gibran
  13. Sylvia Plath
  14. Dorothy Parker
  15. Elizabeth Bishop
  16. Ted Hughes
  17. Roald Dahl
  18. Robert Frost
  19. Walt Whitman
  20. Allen Ginsberg
  21. William Blake
  22. Edgar Allan Poe
  23. Mary Oliver
  24. Robert Browning
  25. William Wordsworth
The complete list of Top 500 Poets >>
 
 
  E-MAIL THIS PAGE TO A FRIEND
Found this page interesting? Recommend it to your friend!     Your E-mail:    Friend's Email:      
 

(c) Poems are the property of their respective owners. All information has been reproduced here for educational and informational purposes to benefit site visitors, and is provided at no charge..  About Us | Copyright notice | Privacy statement | Help
11/23/2009 8:21:27 AM. #.34# You Are Here: Selecting A Reader by Ted Kooser

Home | Poets | Poems | Free Poetry eBooks | Contests | Sites | Submit a Poem | Manage Your Poems | GameGar | Contact Us

Christmas Poems | Love Poems | Pablo Neruda | Death Poems | Sad Poems | Birthday Poems | Wedding Poems | Annabel Lee | Sorry Poems