Fear Less: Poetry in Perilous Times

Combining deeply personal experience and exacting professional insights, former U.S. poet laureate Tracy K. Smith demystifies the art form and argues that poetry “is rooted in fundamentally human qualities innate to our capacities to love, dream, question, and cultivate community.” Smith allows the reader to look over her shoulder as she shares her own creative process, demonstrating how poetry is uniquely suited to enable readers and writers to better confront the challenges of life’s uncertainties and better understand themselves. These personal observations are punctuated by craft and close readings of contemporary and classic poems alike, including works by Joy Harjo and Danez Smith as well as Emily Dickinson and John Keats. “Far from something to fear...poetry is an art form that allows us to redefine our relationship to fear by stepping in close to the facets of the world that we don’t like, or don’t understand,” she writes. “Often enough, these are the same things.”



























