Each Wednesday, Editor's Choice brings you a poem from a new book selected as a must-read. Our feature editor this week is Brian Teare.
Samuel Ace

She carries the garden tools to the hill and starts to beat a hole    she finds a garland of roses full of ears and salvage      a shield bush       a crown of peas and a glass of juice     she has to drink that first     crown the girl!     crown the two of us     heart and right arm hair and toe    lip and anus     a chord trembles light from belly to belly   it shakes in the wind but can't be broken    oh girl     I choose you     see?     it is ours to step forward     ours to heal the run of the wheel     a simple sound     a coo     a clavichord     ear to breast ear to field and sleep

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Head shot of Harold Bloom in 1990
Harold Bloom, Critic Who Championed Western Canon, Dies at 89

"Professor Bloom was frequently called the most notorious literary critic in America....Chiefly he argued for the literary superiority of the Western giants like Shakespeare, Chaucer and Kafka—all of them white and male, his own critics pointed out—over writers favored by what he called 'the School of Resentment,' by which he meant multiculturalists, feminists, Marxists, neoconservatives and others whom he saw as betraying literature’s essential purpose."

via NEW YORK TIMES
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Cover of Louise Gluck's book, Poems 1962 - 2012

"Living as I do, phone pressed against my body most of the day, it’s strange to me how tragedy, especially, can feel farther and farther away. It’s so easy to vacillate between feeling overly affected and totally numb. How, I keep wondering, did Louise Glück write a poem inside and outside of the massiveness of 9/11, a poem that migrates, necessarily, between the body and the mind, a poem moved by unanswerable questions, in which repetition is as likely to halt as it is to heal?"
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