blackbirdonline journalSpring 2009  Vol. 8  No. 1
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A joint venture of the Department of English at Virginia Commonwealth University and New Virginia Review, Inc.

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FEATURED BLOG

T. R. Hummer’s Mindbook

spacer Mindbook: Poetry, Poetics, Poesis
   Mindbook: Poetry, Poetics, Poesis

On Blackbird’s foreword page, we write of Poe’s interest in joining “an international conversation about the nature of poetry, of narrative, and of criticism.” In the spirit of that conversation, and in the spirit of something of an experiment and exploration, we are, for the first time, endorsing an outside blog.

American poet T. R. Hummer writes (independent of Blackbird) Mindbook: Poetry, Poetics, Poesis. We have issued to Hummer and Mindbook a “Blackbird Featured Blog” logo formally to mark our recommendation. Blackbird’s affiliation with Mindbook is a collegial relationship between two different types of publications with Blackbird’s collective editorial voice and the singular voice of Hummer as a writer, critic, and observer. Though an endorsed affiliate, the blog's contents will not appear in our archives.

Mindbook, written and published by T. R. Hummer, opens in a separate window.  end of text


T. R. Hummer is a native of Mississippi. He earned his BA and MA from the University of Southern Mississippi and the Center for Writers and his PhD in 1980 from the University of Utah. He has served as editor of The Kenyon Review and The Georgia Review, among others, and now teaches at Arizona State University.

His publications include the poetry collections The Angelic Orders (LSU Press, 1982), The Passion of the Right-Angled Man (University of Illinois Press, 1984), Walt Whitman in Hell (LSU Press, 1996), Useless Virtues (LSU Press, 2001), and The Infinity Sessions (LSU Press, 2005). He is also the author of the essay collection The Muse in the Machine: Essays on Poetry and the Anatomy of the Body Politic (University of Georgia Press, 2005).

Among his honors are a Guggenheim Fellowship and an NEA Fellowship. He played saxophone in the Skinner Brothers Band and the Richmond-based jump blues band Little Ronnie and the Grand Dukes (Young and Evil, Planetary Records, 2001).