<p>‘Reading Ben Lerner gives me the tingle at the base of my spine that happens whenever I encounter a writer of true originality. He is a courageous, immensely intelligent artist who panders to no one and yet is a delight to read.’<br /> — Jeffrey Eugenides, author of <em>The Marriage Plot</em></p>
<p>‘Lerner argues with the tenacity and the wildness of the vital writer and critic that he is. Each sentence of The Hatred of Poetry vibrates with uncommon and graceful lucidity; each page brings the deep pleasures of crisp thought, especially the kind that remains devoted to complexity rather than to its diminishment.’<br /> — Maggie Nelson, author of <em>On Freedom</em></p>
<p>‘Loathing rains down on poetry, from people who have never read a page of it as well as from people who have devoted their lives to reading and writing it ... Mr. Lerner skates across this frozen lake of pique with delicate skill ... The book achieves its goal in the most circuitous of ways: by its (lovely) last sentence, Mr. Lerner might get you longing for the satisfactions of the thing you’re conditioned to loathe.’<br /> — Jeff Gordinier,<em> New York Times</em></p>
<p>‘Superbly written, with a kind of soft-shoeing élan that wants to project humility but also delight.’<br /> — Katy Waldman, <em>Slate</em></p>
<p>‘[A] wonderful read ... [Lerner] begins hating poetry and urges us, in a Beckett-like way, to ‘hate better’. In between these almost identical poles there lies a fecund meditation on poetry.’<br /> — <em>Manchester Review of Books</em></p>
<p>‘The hatred of poetry, Mr Lerner shows, can suddenly and revealingly become a vehicle for bitter politics. Yet he also sees communal redemption in the strange bond people have with this ancient art form: if we constantly think poetry is an embarrassing failure, then that means that we still, somewhere, have faith that it can succeed.’<br /> — <em>The Economist</em></p>
<p>‘An important essay ... it doubles as a self-conscious ars poetica from a major American writer.’<br /> — <em>Flavorwire</em></p>
<p>‘<em>The Hatred of Poetry</em> doesn’t have a problem with gravity; it’s a heavyweight belter which demands concentration and patience. This longform essay by the noted novelist, poet and academic on the doomed, but precious, enterprise of poetry does, however, reward effort.’<br /> — Jane Graham, <em>The Big Issue</em></p>