I recently listened to a performance of Billy Collins
reading a collection of his poems. Not all poets read their own poems well, but
Collins's readings are superb, the cadence and tone of his voice a perfect
vehicle for the poems on the page. Listening to his poems, it is no surprise to
me that Collins is so wildly popular. His poems speak of the ordinary and the
everyday in a new and often very ironic way that illicits laughter and delight.
Humor is one of the most distinguishing characteristics of his poetry. He knows
how to be both clear and mysterious, simple and profound. Whether he is
spoofing love poems that pile on excessive metaphors on the beloved - as he
does in "Litany," or describing the poignant vulnerability of a
building ruined by an explosion - as he does in "Building With Its Face
Blown Off," he is a master of his craft.
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