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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The Female Poem

But there are advantages: the panel was convinced that a poet ought to be an outsider. The edge, the discomfort makes for clearer vision. Maureen Duffy reminded us of the audacity and courage of Aphra Behn in this regard. Virginia Woolf pinpointed the feeling of an outsider beautifully in A Room of One's Own: "I thought how unpleasant it is to be locked out; and I thought how it is worse, perhaps, to be locked in."
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Posted by Suzanne at 6:55 AM
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About Me

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Suzanne
Author of four poetry books including Whipsaw (Anhinga Press 2024) and Fixed Star (JackLeg Press 2022), as well as five chapbooks.

My poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in Cincinnati Review, Denver Quarterly, North American Review, Salamander Magazine, South Dakota Review, Latino Poetry: The Library of America Anthology, and elsewhere.

View my complete profile
  • suzannefrischkorn

Interviews

  • Poets in Conversation
  • Small Press Spotlight
  • Poetic Asides
  • First Book

Some Poems & Prose Online

  • A Conversation with James Hoch by Suzanne Frischkorn at The Adroit Journal
  • Best American Poetry
  • Diode
  • Ecotone
  • Juked
  • LOCUSPOINT
  • Los Angeles Review
  • Pine Hills Review
  • SWWIM
  • Terrain - Letter to America
  • The Shore
  • Verse Daily

Blog Archive

Whipsaw

Whipsaw

Fixed Star

Fixed Star

Girl on a Bridge

Girl on a Bridge

Lit Windowpane

Lit Windowpane

Chapbooks

  • American Flamingo (2008)
  • Spring Tide (2005)
  • Red Paper Flower (2004)
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