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Sunil Iyengar has a mission: to get us reading more narrative verse. Join me as I talk to him about the new anthology he's edited, The Colosseum Book of Contemporary Narrative Verse, and how one of the poems in the collection, Rachel Wetzsteon's "Madeline for a While," complements Hitchcock's Vertigo. It's a great conversation about the intersection of poetry and film.
Rachel Wetzsteon, “Madeleine for a While” from Sakura Park. Copyright © 2006 by Rachel Wetzsteon. Reprinted with the permission of Persea Books, Inc (New York), www.perseabooks.com. All rights reserved.
By Daniel MoranSunil Iyengar has a mission: to get us reading more narrative verse. Join me as I talk to him about the new anthology he's edited, The Colosseum Book of Contemporary Narrative Verse, and how one of the poems in the collection, Rachel Wetzsteon's "Madeline for a While," complements Hitchcock's Vertigo. It's a great conversation about the intersection of poetry and film.
Rachel Wetzsteon, “Madeleine for a While” from Sakura Park. Copyright © 2006 by Rachel Wetzsteon. Reprinted with the permission of Persea Books, Inc (New York), www.perseabooks.com. All rights reserved.