Cover Image: How to Be a Poet

How to Be a Poet

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Member Reviews

I am in awe of people who create blackout poetry, but Farkas books are especially awe-inspiring. I was afraid that her sophomore effort might be disappointing, but I should have not doubted her talent to create a nuanced work from another classic work.

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I wasn't a fan. I think it just wasn't something that resonated with me, I couldn't get myself into this collection.

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I have loved Julia's work right from her first book, it's always been gorgeous and this book out stands the first one it's even more. I loved the white out poems and the subsequent section which had the complete version which gave an incredible vibe to the whole experience. The galley was worse as the aesthetics hardly appeared in digital copy but the print is incredible

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I received an #ebook copy of this book via #netgalley and I enjoy poetry so I enjoyed this very much.

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I've read a very small amount of black out poetry, but the concept of it intrigues me. The description of "How to Be a Poet" pulled me in, but honestly I don't know how to rate it. I didn't really connect with the collection.

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I really enjoyed this book! I read J.M. Farkas' first book and also really enjoyed that one as well. The style is so unique, and I appreciated how the author showed her words in two different ways in this book because I think they both helped show a different side of the story/poem.

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* I received an ARC via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Thanks for the free book.*

J.M. Farkas rewrites Ovid's "Ars Armoria" in two ways. In the first part of the book, the author erased everything but their poem, made up from Ovid snippets, the second part of the book is Ovid's Ars Armoria in full with the author's take on it in bold print. The last part is the newly formed poem only. This technique is not only very interesting from an academic point of view (rewriting?), but also from what poem can be found hidden in a text.

Ovid's Ars Armoria itself is structured in Three Books, the first two telling men how to woo and behave towards women (remember her birthday, lol), and the last one is for women on how to basically be(come) a good wife (how to make up). Ovid is more nuanced than this brief summary, but it's in parts really problematic. Yes, the majority of it might be irony and it might propose a different relation between men and women, but it is certainly possible to read it as problematic.

I found the entire 'business' highly enjoying even though it was a bit hard to go back to Ovid after reading this very feminist and beautiful message. Visually the new poem is stunning. How much had to be erased to find this feminist message is a message in itself.

4,5 Stars

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I love this collection and trust me, I am sad that I got to read it in digital version first because given the structure the author incorporates, this is best devoured in print.
It's in two parts; the first half teases what the second half accomplishes and you certainly cannot help but feel lighter and motivated towards the end.
Thanks netgalley for the eARC.

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Literary, full of lovely words — this book is an enjoyable introduction to a new (to me) voice in verse. Recommended poetic work.

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