
Posted 4.06.11

“I walk around my apartment and read aloud from The
Norton Anthology of Poetry. There are a few
favorites: Michael Drayton’s “Sonnet 61”: “Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part; / Nay, I have done,
you get no more of me”; John Donne’s “A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day, Being
the Shortest Day”: “Oft a flood / Have we two wept, and so / Drowned the whole
world, us two; oft did we grow / To be two chaoses, when we did show / Care to
aught else; and often absences / Withdrew our souls, and made us carcasses”;
and John Keats’s “This Living Hand”: “See here it is— / I hold it towards
you.” I’m a little like a character from a Whit Stillman movie when I do
this—remember the scene from Barcelona where the one guy puts on polka music (or something
similar) and dances around his apartment while he reads from the Bible?—but I know that a story isn’t too far
away when I reach for the Norton.”
—Hannah Pittard, author
of The Fates Will Find Their Way (HarperCollins, 2011)
Links:
[1] http://www.pw.org/writers_recommend