Jason Guriel on Poems, Poetry, Criticism and Critics

Published: April 2, 2018, 7:45 p.m.

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Jason Guriel is a poet and critic whose work has appeared in such publications as Poetry, Slate, Reader\'s Digest, The Walrus, Parnassus, Canadian Notes & Queries, The New Criterion, and PN Review. His poetry has been anthologized in The Best Canadian Poetry in English, and in 2007, he was the first Canadian to receive the Frederick Bock Prize from Poetry magazine. He won Poetry\'s Editors Prize for Book Reviewing in 2009. His essays and reviews are collected in The Pigheaded Soul (The Porcupine\'s Quill, 2013). Guriel lives in Toronto, Ontario.\\xa0 \\xa0

We met at the Toronto Public Library on College in rooms where the Osborne Collection is kept. The collection was donated in 1949 by the English librarian Edgar Osborne in recognition of the Library\'s outstanding service to children. \\xa0

We talk among other things about The Pig Headed Soul, the key to being a good critic, poems not poetry, obsessing, \'The Case Against Reading Everything\', Carmine Starnino, \'culture\' writing, confessional criticism, pop culture essays, the adoration of poet Peter Van Toorn, \'world class\' poet Robyn Sarah, the importance of pleasure, thoughts the culture wont allow itself to have, "I don\'t care about your Life\', literary community, honesty in criticism, response to reviews, Chris Wiman, Clive James, Michael Hoffmann\'s Behind the Lines, William Logan, Jill Bialoski and plagiarism, the Griffin Prize, dirty money, and diapers.\\xa0

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