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Thursday, April 2, 2015

This Your Home Now by Mark Doty

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April 2, 2015
 

This Your Home Now

 
Mark Doty

About This Poem

 

“It’s unsettling, to lose the safety of the familiar, even when what’s disrupted is an ordinary routine. When I began this poem, I was grieving for the loss of my old barbershop in Manhattan, and wondering at the strangeness of my new one. I didn’t have any idea the poem would break into the underworld, opening a deeper subject: the continuing force of the old griefs routine helps to mediate, and my strange, sheer wonder at my own survival. Where’s home now? In the contingent present, in which anything can disappear, and where we’re sometimes granted some form of grace.”
Mark Doty

 

Mark Doty is the author of Deep Lane (W. W. Norton, 2015). He is a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, teaches at Rutgers University, and lives in New York City.

 

Photo credit: Star Black

Most Recent Book by Doty

 

Deep Lane

(W. W. Norton, 2015)

"Token Loss" by Kay Ryan

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"Heavy Summer Rain" by Jane Kenyon

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"The sun rears" by Jennifer Bartlett

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Read This Poem

 

For National Poetry Month, we’ve teamed up with 826 National to produce Read This Poem, a celebration of poets in cities with 826 chapters. Read this week’s featured poems by poets from Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, and Washington D.C.

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