On with the C section of my favorite poets.  "I think:  where would my / dog be if I had one?"  I feel little if any ambivalence toward Joseph Ceravolo.  I wish he'd written more, lived longer, were better known.  He's a favorite of David Shapiro, of Ron Silliman, of Kenneth Koch, that is, of (at least) three other poets on my list.  I originally bought "Spring in this world of  poor mutts" --as a teenager, at Serendipity Books in Berkeley -- because it had won the Frank O'Hara Prize, something I would like to win myself, if it still existed.  
The technique, the ear, is there, as in Creeley and Williams, but there is none of that extraneous theory-of-the line-break.  He doesn't need a theoretical apparatus to write.  His poems, in their pristine freshness "make no gestures or appeals outside themselves" (Kenneth Koch).  
I need to explore Ceravolo's longer sequences at greater length.  Because of my lack of ambivalence I don't have to struggle for years to find out whether I like him or not.     
   
 
 
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