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71+ Works 358 Members 5 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

William Heyen was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1940. Currently Professor of English/Poet in Residence Emeritus at SUNY Brockport, he has been awarded Fulbright, NEA, American Academy of Arts & Letters, Guggenheim, and other fellowships and prizes

Includes the name: Edited By William Heyen

Image credit: Photo credit: West Side News

Series

Works by William Heyen

September 11, 2001: American Writers Respond (2002) — Editor — 37 copies, 1 review
The Generation of 2000: Contemporary American Poets (1984) — Editor — 34 copies, 1 review
Shoah Train (2003) 18 copies
The Swastika Poems (1977) 17 copies
A Poetics of Hiroshima (2008) 15 copies
American Poets in 1976 (1976) 11 copies
Lord Dragonfly: Five Sequences (1981) 9 copies, 1 review
Depth of field : poems (1970) 8 copies
The Chestnut Rain (1986) 8 copies
Ribbons : The Gulf War - A Poem (1991) 5 copies, 1 review
The City Parables (1980) 5 copies
The Football Corporations (2012) 4 copies, 1 review
Annuli (2001) 3 copies
American Poets in 1976 (1976) 2 copies
Fires 2 copies
Crazy Horse & the Custers (2015) 2 copies
The Dogwoods 1 copy
Ars Poetica 1 copy
The Ewe's Song (1980) 1 copy
Blackberry Light (1981) 1 copy
Definition 1 copy
RFD 1 copy
The Bees 1 copy
Our Song 1 copy
The Colony 1 copy
Abortion 1 copy
La quinta del 57 (1989) 1 copy
Darkness 1 copy
Auction 1 copy
Mare 1 copy
The Ash (1978) 1 copy
Last Night 1 copy
The Cat 1 copy
The Children (1979) 1 copy
The Descent (1979) 1 copy
Bean 1 copy
The Snow Hen (1979) 1 copy

Associated Works

Flash Fiction: 72 Very Short Stories (1992) — Contributor — 439 copies, 10 reviews
The Best American Poetry 1996 (1996) — Contributor — 184 copies, 1 review
War No More: Three Centuries of American Antiwar and Peace Writing (2016) — Contributor — 110 copies, 2 reviews
The Ecopoetry Anthology (2013) — Contributor — 70 copies, 1 review
The Umbral Anthology of Science Fiction Poetry (1982) — Contributor — 8 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Often reading like something of a poetic journal more so than a poem, this work has some striking moments and comes across as frighteningly current & relevant--even more than two decades after publication. Heyen's blend of nature, 'current' events/war, and personal understanding is impressive, and a fairly powerful example of what a long poetic sequence is capable of when focused in to a particular exploration.

All told, this isn't a simple read, and it's also not as dated as it should be show more given the current conflicts. If you're interested in poetry that attempts some reconciliation of personal understanding with war, or at poetry which will both take you back to the Gulf War and also telescope you forward into now, this might very well be worth picking up. show less
Penn State’s football empire is being disassembled. Aged (at 45!?) football stars are committing suicide and asking that their skulls be examined to determine how years of head-snapping, spine-jolting tackles affect players’ brains. Doping scandals, no longer simply baseball’s bane, flicker on the television and internet feeds every night.

What better time for a book of poetry about the apocalyptic role of corporate sport?

None. Which is why The Football Corporations, from renowned show more poet William Heyen, lands like a buzzer-beater—nothing but net—with a resounding thud, louder than the cheers and jeers, on the hardwood floor of the zeitgeist. Today’s concept of sport has been corrupted by not only corporations but the players, and even the fans. Heyen avoids cliché accusations or pontification by starter-pistoling the discussion into a future of packed coliseums threatened by dirty-bomb attacks and Escape From New York death matches.

Amid Heyen’s hooligan hymns of misplaced machismo and bloody doom, he drops quiet gems that glint with reflections of the soul:
From “The Reader”
Our village church bells ring to summon us
for our final communion, as was our plan.
I was reading a book for the last time—
this loss, above others...breaks my heart.

Superbly crafted poetry that dissects the more secular "opiate of the masses" known as sport.
show less
This is a brave, insightful, questing, heart-breaking, and terribly important collection of thought in response to the terrorist attack on the NYC Twin Towers. Many were called to write for this book; few were chosen. As an editor and anthologist, Heyen illustrates integrity and taste. No one should be without this book.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
71
Also by
6
Members
358
Popularity
#66,977
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
57
Languages
1
Favorited
3

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