Tzara
Continental
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2005
- Posts
- 7,753
The rules:
- Your recommendation should be as specific as possible. "To Angeline," for example. While you can recommend books to groups ("To People Who Like Star Wars"), please try to limit the scope of who your recommendation is intended for to as small a group as possible.
- Start with WHO you are recommending the book to.
- Then explain WHAT--What is the name of the book you're recommending and the author's name.
- Tell your chosen person WHY you are recommending this book to them and why they should read it.
- GIVE enough details about the book that someone knows how to find it in a bookstore, at Amazon.com, or wherever.
- TALK about why you liked the book.
- Don't be quite this restrictive as to format, of course. Suggestions, people. Just suggestions.
- Afterthought: Recommending poetry books is preferred, but not a requirement. If you really, really think someone's consciousness would be perfectly raised by them reading Stranger in a Strange Land, then say so.
TO: greenmountaineer
WHAT: The Common Man, by Maurice Manning.
WHY/GIVE/TALK: Manning writes "story-like" poems, which are the kind of poems I associate with your writing, poems that capture what life is like in Vermont or in revolutionary France or wherever, whenever. Manning writes about life in rural Kentucky, which is where he is from. You write such good poems based around the concept of "story" that I think you'd like this book. Manning's poems sometimes seem like they're either written by a hick or are simply recording hicks, but that is part of the charm of them. They sometimes seem to me to have been written in the 1930s, they are recording what rural Kentuckians were like in the late 2000's.
Basically, I think you'd like the book because you seem to like stories.
Did I say there they're in vernacular?
WHAT: The Common Man, by Maurice Manning.
WHY/GIVE/TALK: Manning writes "story-like" poems, which are the kind of poems I associate with your writing, poems that capture what life is like in Vermont or in revolutionary France or wherever, whenever. Manning writes about life in rural Kentucky, which is where he is from. You write such good poems based around the concept of "story" that I think you'd like this book. Manning's poems sometimes seem like they're either written by a hick or are simply recording hicks, but that is part of the charm of them. They sometimes seem to me to have been written in the 1930s, they are recording what rural Kentuckians were like in the late 2000's.
Basically, I think you'd like the book because you seem to like stories.
Did I say there they're in vernacular?