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"I admire Tony Barnstone's Impure
because of the collection's unrelenting
believability and lyrical certainty.
Plain-spoken and magical, this poet
knows how to make imagination and the
real world collide softly. There is a
clarity in Impure that reaches
beyond the formlessness of modern life.
Borders are crossed in the psyche and
the flesh, and this collection seems
like an elongated song that embraces the
most elusive moments buried in language
and nuance through the pure naming of
things - a mantra of what is and what is
dreamt - that takes into the sacred
territory what no ordinary compass can
plot or unplot."
--- Yusef Komunyakaa
"Tony Barnstone has no walls. He is
alive moment to moment at the naked
center. In his shrewd double vision, the
animal self and the outside self mingle
in ecstasy and grief of flesh. He is so
surprising and fearless and cuts right
to it, and yet so delicate and lyrical.
The pure Impure! Bravo!"
---Ruth Stone
"Tony Barnstone unabashedly
celebrates bodily joy and pokes the
backside of everything prudish and
puritanical. He is a poet of profound
amusement, a spirit accountant, an heir
to Whitman, Basho and Neruda. He works
in many styles, but his hallmark is a
deep and truculent honesty, a desire to
bring secrets into the open. "Impure" is
a first book to revere."
---Rodney Jones
poetry:
Sad Jazz: Sonnets, by Tony
Barnstone. Published by the Sheep Meadow
Press in 2005.
Naked Magic:
Poems by Tony Barnstone. Tony Barnstone.
Published by Main Street Rag Press in
2002.
main street
rag press
sample poems
Impure: Poems by Tony Barnstone.
Published by University Press of Florida
in 1999.
amazon.com
translation:
Erotic
Chinese Poems.
Co-edited with
Chou Ping. Forthcoming from
Everyman Press in
October, 2007.
The Anchor Book of Chinese Poetry,
edited by Tony Barnstone and Chou Ping,
published by Anchor Books in 2005.
The Art of Writing: Teachings of the
Chinese Masters. Co-edited with
Chou Ping. Published by Shambhala in
1996.
amazon.com
Out of the Howling Storm. Edited
by Tony Barnstone. Published by Wesleyan
University Press in 1993.
amazon.com
Laughing Lost in the Mountains: Poems of
Wang Wei. Co-translated with
Willis Barnstone and Xu Haixin.
Published by University Press of New
England in 1991.
amazon.com
textbooks:
Literatures of Asia, Africa, and Latin
America. Co-edited with Willis
Barnstone. Published by Prentice
Hall in 1999.
amazon.com
links:
Web Companion for the Anchor Book of
Chinese Poetry
Read his
article
Han Shan Isn’t Dead, He’s Just Turned
into the Mountain: Some Notes on
Translation at the Cipher Journal.
Read his
article
"Letters from Dead Friends" at the
online literary journal Perihelion.
Read
sample poems from
Sad Jazz, Tony's
new book of sonnets at
The Drunken Boat
Read his
translations of Chinese poetry featured
at
The Drunken Boat
Read his
experimental poetry featured at
The Drunken Boat
Read an interview
with him at
The Drunken Boat.
Find out
what he has to say about his work in an
interview with him at amazon.com,
Read
sample poems from
The World
in Pieces: The Pacific War from Pearl
Harbor to Hiroshima
Read "Commandments,"
from Impure, Tony Barnstone's new
book of poetry.
Read his
poetry at
Exquisite Corpse
Read his
poetry featured at
Verse Daily
Read a
piece of Tony's verse fiction published
at
The Pedestal Magazine
Read Tony's
interview with former Poet Laureate of
the United States Robert Pinsky at
Poetry Flash.
Read his
article "Technology as Addiction" at
Technology and Culture
Also
check out Tony's
review of Arthur Sze's The
Redshifting Web.
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