Published as: Phillips, Siobhan. At War. Literary Imagination 12, no. 1 (2010): 75. For more information on the published version, visit Oxford University Press's Website.
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit The Toast's Website., Phillips, Siobhan. Beauty Work: Lessons in Ballet....
Phillips, Siobhan. Bishop's Correspondence. In The Cambridge Companion to Elizabeth Bishop, edited by Angus Cleghorn and Jonathan Ellis, 155-168. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2014., When Anne Stevenson began the...
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit Notre Dame Review's Website. and Phillips, Siobhan. "Certainty; The Storm...
Published as: Phillips, Siobhan. Cold. The Yale Review 98, no. 4 (2010): 121. For more information on the published version, visit The Yale Review's Website.
While Robert Frost's emphasis on ordinary themes has often been noted, his use of ordinary time bears further attention: his poems show how the repetitive pattern of daily living can be a creative possibility rather than an...
For more information on the published version, visit Harvard Review's Website. and Phillips, Siobhan. Don Quixote in the Hudson Valley. Harvard Review 41 (2011): 212-213.
Among the letters published for the first time in Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell is a 1970 missive from Bishop. She is reading about Thomas Carlyle, she tells Lowell, and...
Phillips, Siobhan. Food Work. The Massachusetts Review 56, no. 2 (2015): 201-217., This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published...
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit Southern Methodist University's Website. and Phillips, Siobhan. "Giving Up...
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit The Toast's Website., I’m sitting alone in Girvan, Scotland, on one of the...
Published as: Phillips, Siobhan. Inventions. Literary Imagination 12, no. 1 (2010): 73-74. For more information on the published version, visit Oxford University Press's Website.
For more information about the published version, visit Edinburgh University Press's Website., Phillips, Siobhan. Lorine Niedecker's Republic of Letters. In Letter Writing Among Poets: From William Wordsworth to Elizabeth...
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit The Southampton Review's Website. and Phillips, Siobhan. "Notes on a...
On a sunny Saturday in August, I stood at a one-room cabin near the outskirts of Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, thinking about the great American poet Lorine Niedecker. She lived from 1903 to 1970, including many years in this tiny...
Phillips, Siobhan. Photographer in a Small Town. The Southwest Review 95, no. 1-2 (2010): 281-282. and This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information...
For more information on the published version, visit Columbia University Press's Website., Focusing on the poems of Wallace Stevens, Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, and James Merrill, Siobhan Phillips positions everyday time as...
Good politics is a game of clear, unambiguous messages; good poetry, less so. How to make poetry political, then? Take “The Gift Outright,” by Robert Frost, a poem about American history and politics that occupies its own space...
For more information on the published version, visit Ecotheo Review's Website. and Phillips, Siobhan. San Francisco. Ecotheo Review (Poem published online April 29, 2015). http://www.ecotheo.org/2015/04/san-francisco/
A lot of people love personal letters now that very few people write them. We have publishing initiatives such as Letters in the Mail and The Letters Page , books such as For the Love of Letters (2007) or Signed, Sealed,...
In 1963, Ted Berrigan founded a poetry journal that would print anything the editor likes and appear monthly (Untitled). He called it C, a title taken from Wallace Stevens' poem The Comedian as the Letter C. Berrigan...
Late last fall, after the evenings of phone-banking and before the day of patriotic devotion, after the election returns and before the Women's March, after one sort of horror receded and before a different, more permanent sort...
For more information on the published, visit Yale University's Website., Biographers, critics, and readers of Stevens have by now generally agreed with the poet and ceased to wonder that a man of imagination was also a man of...
For more information about the published version, visit Duke University Press's Website., No twentieth-century poet attended more to daily routine than did Wallace Stevens. From a 1927 letter that outlines his schedule...