Cherry Blossoms
About this Book
"A book of in-depth Poetic Analysis
Poetry interpretations and analysis generally becomes a controversial topic among literary dignitaries and celebrities. Few publications review it at all, and with continually shrinking space and column for book reviews in general, poetry gets fewer inches than ever, at least when it comes to print and publication media. And yet, there exists a long tradition of careful prose considerations of poetic analytical contributions. A poem is a piece of writing wherein the words are chosen for their sounds and the imaginary they suggest, not just for their inner meanings. The words are arranged in separate lines, usually with a repeated internal rhythm, and often with the lines rhyme at the end of the lines.
The prime purpose of poetry analysis and review is to keep the art of poetry alive, and it will be vital for our culture that we not only publish good poetry, but also, we continue to sort out for ourselves what exactly good poetry is. Much of this filtering and sorting out should take place in reviews of poetry books. This book of poetic analysis titled “Cherry Blossoms “ brings together 60 selected poems, penned by honorable Poet Cherie Sumner along with my interpretations and analysis in a thought-provoking and simple approach.
Good poetic analysis and reviews may or may not be predominantly essential to help people decide if they want to buy the book or not, since anyone who has access to the Google an author and find a pretty good sampling of someone’s poems on on-line literary magazines, especially from recently published books.
Writing an analysis requires the ability to delve deep into the questions and concepts of literary predecessors dealt with and the arguments and claims they had set forth initially. The analysis also enables you to track the intellectual progression and all major debates in the field of literature study. A properly written poetic review will be the best spokesperson for a poetic work."
Source: View Book on Google Books
No similar books found.