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All the Fun's in How You Say a Thing: An Explanation of Meter and Versification

All the Fun's in How You Say a Thing: An Explanation of Meter and Versification

List Price: $15.16
Your Price: $10.31
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tim Steele's book leaves the others in the dust.
Review: All the Fun's in How You Say a Thing is of far greater significance and value to poets and students of poetry than any of the other "how-to" guides, handbooks, manuals and critical studies to date. It is painlessly thorough and brilliantly supported by a rich selection of examples; its author is a master of clarity, eloquence, and graceful scholarship. In 1990, Timothy Steele gave us "Missing Measures: Modern Poetry and the Revolt Against Meter." Now, in 1999 he gives us this new treasure. These works are the bookends of the decade. Poetry simply doesn't stand up without them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ALL THE FUN'S IN READING THIS BOOK!
Review: For the poetic soul, few things are more fun and pure pleasure than writing quality poetry,inspired by the best that has come before: Frost,Yeats,Hardy,Housman,Tennyson,Auden,Masefield,C.S. Lewis,Richard Wilbur,et al. The next best thing is reading great poetry for the pure enjoyment, and knowing a bit more about what you are reading. With this book, Timothy Steele does the poetry world (and hopefully some of the rest of the world) a great favor in going behind the scenes of great poets,powerful works, memorable stanzas, uplifting lines and wonderful words to show how it all fits together: that great,lasting poetry is much more than the mere sum of excellent parts such as rhyme,meter,rhythm, music,texture,tone,allusion,metaphor,idiom,word usage,form,etc. Even the greatest living New Formalist Richard Wilbur, writing for some half-century, says this has been delightful and instructive reading. How much moreso for the rest of us!

Some great lines from this book to whet the appetite: "Providence.. enables the writing of books and.. has allowed for poetry and other arts. . life was born and consciousness emerged and ramified. Not the least of the miracles in this creation is the appearance of language and development of elegant linguistic structures of verse that help us to explore,enjoy,understand and preserve our experience." "At a psychological level, it integrates our minds to experience language not only as a left-brain activity involving rhythmic patterns, but in its numerical organization,verse connects us to the larger orders of our cosmos." "Technique alone (a necessary but not sufficient precondition) will never produce a good poem. Though crucial, poets need the assistance of their Muses, the gift of inspiration, the energies and intuitions that craft supplies." "As J.V.Cunningham says in 'Predestined Space': Simplicity assuages/With grace the damaged heart,/So would I in these pages/If will were art./But the best engineer/Of meter, rhyme and thought/Can only tool each gear/To what he sought/ If chance with craft combines/In the predestined space/To lend his damaged lines/Redeeming grace."

If you enjoy reading, studying or composing quality poetry, this book is your must-have companion on the journey!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: all the fun's in paddle ball
Review: Have you ever wondered how poetry works? Well, after reading this brilliant book you won't. "All the Fun's in How You Say a Thing" is the finest expositon of meter and versification I have seen yet. It is well worth the price and is a must for any aspiring poet with a taste for serious accomplishment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: All the fun really is in how you say a thing.
Review: I am currently a student in an undergraduate creative writing program, and I love (and write) free verse. A previous reviewer criticizes Steele for his "rejection" of free verse; this reason is the basis of his/her low rating of the book. Timothy Steele doesn't have a deep admiration of free verse. He even calls it secondary to the main accentual-syllabic tradition. Although I agree with the previous reviewer about Steele's view of free verse, I do not, however, think this book is lessened by Steele's view.

Steele makes it known from the beginning that the majority of the book will be devoted to iambic verse. I bought this book for an intensive study of form and meter, and the book did not let me down. Not only does Steele cover the principles of scansion and metrical variation, Steele takes the reader into the history of our verse and how it has developed over time. He also explores the development of the English language, rhyme, stanza, elision, and grammar's relation to meter. He doesn't even stop there. He covers much more territory; and, by the end of this book, I feel that I have a firm grasp on formal poetic technique.

The only criticism I have is that Steele does have a tendency to overkill some very basic concepts (the discussion of enjambment goes on page after page, the elision chapter went on for quite a while... it could have been more concise).

If you are looking for a book to give you a thorough, clear, and engaging explanation of formal poetic technique, this is a very helpful book. I can truthfully say after reading it I am more confident of my understanding of meter and versification and that I am also more confident of my skills as a free-verse poet. I highly recommend this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: _THE_ manual of meter and versification
Review: I would definitely not recommend this book to beginners. Don't get me wrong, it's probably the best book on prosody out there, but it can be difficult reading. The book is loaded with information, and Steele's knowledge on the subject comes through. But it isn't the book I'd start with. But if you have a general idea of form and meter, then there is no better book to strengthen and teach you. Part One, on iambic verse, should be read by any serious poet. The only problem I found with the book is that Steele uses a lot of Old English, Middle English, and foreign language examples, where I think something we all can sound out would have been a better choice. Still, for anyone who is serious about poetry, this is a book that should be read and studied.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: all the fun's in paddle ball
Review: If you check out the cities of the other reviewers, you will notice they are all from around or near LA. That is because they were all, very likely, students of Steele at CAl State LA.

I wonder if their individual reviews of this book helped them get a better grade in his poetry course?

While Steele is a good poet (see his poetry books), he has made a name for himself in academia by self-righteously asserting that poetry must be written a certain way to be truly poetic. He does not merely frown on free verse; he rejects it.

Steele likens free verse to playing tennis without a net. HIs point seems to be that once the rules of a game are broken, something has been lost in the joy of playing or watching it. However, tennis without a net is called paddle ball, and unless you're a New English prig straight out of the pages of Yankee magazine, it's a heck of a lot of fun.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Immensely helpful . . .
Review: Timothy Steele's ALL THE FUN'S IN HOW YOU SAY A THING is quite simply the clearest and most comprehensive book I have ever read regarding meter and versification. "Meter," Steele writes with deft simplicity in his introduction, "is organized rhythm. The adjective in this definition is as important as the noun. Most speech is to some degree rhythmical. Common devices of sentence structure, such as antithesis and parallelism, impose rhythm on language. But meter is rhythm ordered in a conscious, specific manner. The metrical unit repeats, and once we feel or recognize, in reading a poem, this scheme of repetition, we can anticipate its continuance as a kind of pulse in the verse." Steele then teaches us how to take a poem's pulse -- how to recognize and appreciate those schemes of repetition -- by carefully analyzing lines by some of the finest metrical poets of the past and present. Though I have long been an avid reader of poetry, the breadth and variety of his examples sent me scurrying to the library to read more. And that's not all Steele does. He clearly illustrates the freedom metrical poets can exercise within the norms of organized rhythm, contrasting, say, the fourth foot trochee in Wordsworth's iambic pentameter line from "The Prelude" In silence through a wood gloomy and still with the third foot trochee in Gwendolyn Brooks' iambic pentameter line from "The Children of the Poor" To laugh or fail, diffident, wonder-starred If you don't happen to know what iambic pentameter is yet, let alone a trochee, you certainly will after you have read this book. Mind you, I have only been referring to a few matters taken up in the first hundred pages! In subsequent chapters, Steele explains the aesthetic pleasures of well-handled enjambments, caesural pauses, elisions, rhymes, and stanzas. To his great credit, Steele never leaves the reader mystified about what these terms mean or why understanding them adds so much to our pleasure when we read fine metrical poetry. I believe this book is destined to become the standard on meter and versification in the English-speaking world for a long time to come. The general reader and the specialist will both find much here of interest -- from how good poets rhyme to how Robert Frost sometimes imitated ancient Greek meter. And aspiring metrical poets of all ages will instantly recognize Steele's book as the "bible" on their favorite subject. I have read a number of rather confusing books about poetry recently, including U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky's THE SOUNDS OF POETRY, Pulitzer-prize winner Mary Oliver's RULES FOR THE DANCE, Mary Kinzie's A POET'S GUIDE TO POETRY, and Edward Hirsch's HOW TO READ A POEM AND FALL IN LOVE WITH POETRY. Not one of these books can match the readability, erudition, and profound good sense of Timothy Steele's ALL THE FUN'S IN HOW YOU SAY A THING. It is one of the most fascinating books I have read in years. END


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