by Vincent Katz
NOTES
The author would like to thank the editors of journals that published some of these poems. When not specified, poems were written in New York City.
1
“Between the Griffon and Met Life”: March 10, 2016 (Poetry Foundation website, PoetryNow, 2017)
“This Beautiful Bubble”: December 5, 2016 (Resistance, Rebellion, Life: 50 Poems Now, 2017; Resist Much, Obey Little: Inaugural Poems to the Resistance, 2017; From Somewhere to Nowhere: The End of the American Dream, 2017)
“7 a.m. Poem”: February 2, 2017
“Seasons”: February 8, 2017 (The Brooklyn Rail)
“City Tone”: February 10, 2017 (Henley Park Hotel, Carpenters Building, and street, Washington DC) (The Brooklyn Rail)
“Morning, or Evening?”: February 16, 2017 (Metro-North Railroad and Subway)
“A Song Beyond”: February 19, 2017 (Solebury, PA)
“Flows”: February 24, 2017 (The Brooklyn Rail)
“River”: February 26, 2017 (The Brooklyn Rail)
“Metro-North”: February 23, March 2, 7, 9, and April 20, 2017 (Metro-North Railroad) (Marsh Hawk Review)
“Ivanka Skirting”: March 6, 2017
“Riverside”: April 8, 2017 (The Brooklyn Rail)
“Propensities”: May 4, 2017
“A Glass”: May 7 and 10, 2017
“Walking”: May 24, 2017
“June”: June 1, 2017
“I Miss Bern Nix”: June 3, 2017, 12:21 a.m.; June 4, 2017, 2:09 a.m. and 12:08 p.m.; and June 6, 2017, 8:09 a.m. (The Steve in the poem is poet Steve Dickison.)
“Broadway for Paul”: June 9, 2017 (Marsh Hawk Review)
“Avenue”: June 14, 2017
“Shadow Avenue”: June 26, 2017
“Times Square, 2017”: July 13, 2017
“Lincoln Plaza”: August 2017
“Maine Hours & Days”: August 2017 (Washington Square Review)
“Autumn Days & Hours”: September–November 2017
2
“The Cliff”: August 15–16, 2017 (Belfast and Lincolnville, ME)
“Four Notes”: August 16–17, 2017 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Family”: August 18, 2017 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Smoke”: August 23, 2017 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Sitting”: August 28, 2017 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Four Women”: September 16, 2017 (Chicago)
“Six Figures, Fire”: September 16, 2017 (Chicago)
“Yellow Towel”: September 18–19, 2017
“Encounter”: December 29, 2017, 9:30 a.m. (Itaparica, Brazil)
“Calligraphy at the Beach”: December 29, 2017, 6:55 p.m. (Itaparica, Brazil)
“Looking at the Sea”: December 30, 2017 (Itaparica, Brazil)
“Arabesque”: December 31, 2017 (Itaparica, Brazil)
“Beginning of the Picnic”: Janury 2, 2018 (São Paulo, Brazil)
“Five Notes”: January 3, 6, and 7, 2018 (São Paulo, Brazil)
“Conversation by the Sea”: January 6, 2018 (São Paulo, Brazil)
“Morning”: January 18, 2018
“Evening, Clouds, Fire”: January 19, 2018
“Woman in Green”: January 24, 2018
“Moon and Fire”: February 2, 2018
3
“Lights”: February 12, 2018
“Hotel Empire”: February 15, 2018
“Alone”: February 21, 2018
“The Man Who Left”: August 2018
“August 2018”: August 2018 (Hanging Loose)
“Late August”: August 22, 24, and 28, 2018 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Island”: August 25 and 27, 2018 (Lincolnville, ME)
“A Longing for Bugs”: August 30, 2018 (Lincolnville, ME)
“September Poem”: August 31 and September 1, 3, 4, and 6, 2018 (Lincolnville, ME)
“Nothing Is Lost”: September 4 (Lincolnville, ME) and 8 (New York City), 2018
“A Quiet Zone”: September 12, 2018
“Two Dreams”: September 18, 2018
“A Marvelous Sky”: September 30–October 1, 2018 (Hanging Loose)
“Café with Bryan Ferry”: October 2, 2018 (Caffè Dante with Ada)
“Cavalleria Rusticana”: December 3, 2018
“Young in the Hamptons”: December 1 and 10, 2018 (New American Writing)
“A City Marriage”: November 2–December 1, 2018
A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vincent Katz is the author of the poetry collections Southness (2016) and Swimming Home (2015) and of the book of translations The Complete Elegies of Sextus Propertius (2004), which won a National Translation Award from the American Literary Translators Association. He is the editor of Black Mountain College: Experiment in Art (2002), and his writing on contemporary art and poetry has appeared in publications such as Apollo, Art in America, ARTnews, The Brooklyn Rail, and The Poetry Project Newsletter. As curator of the “Readings in Contemporary Poetry” series at Dia:Chelsea, Katz also edited the anthology Readings in Contemporary Poetry (2017). He lives in New York City.
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