Incoming Resources
- The New Anthology of American Poetry, edited by Steven Gould Axelrod, Camille Roman, Thomas Travisano
- Regaining paradise, Milton and the eighteenth century, Dustin Griffin
- Poetry of the First World War, an anthology, edited by Tim Kendall
- Postmodern American poetry, a Norton anthology, edited by Paul Hoover, San Francisco State University
- American hybrid, a Norton anthology of new poetry, edited by Cole Swensen and David St. John
- American poetry, the nineteenth century, [John Hollander, editor]
- The Columbia anthology of American poetry, edited by Jay Parini
- Unpeopled eden, Rigoberto González
- The poem is you, 60 contemporary American poems and how to read them, Stephen Burt
- The Oxford book of Victorian verse,, chosen by Arthur Quiller-Couch
- Paper dance, 55 Latino poets, edited by Victor Hernández Cruz, Leroy V. Quintana, and Virgil Suarez
- The new Oxford book of English verse, 1250-1950,, chosen and edited by Helen Gardner
- Modern poetry and the tradition, by Cleanth Brooks
- The garden thrives, twentieth-century African-American poetry, edited and with an introduction by Clarence Major
- The fourth dimension of a poem, and other essays, M.H. Abrams ; foreword by Harold Bloom
- Life on Mars, poems, Tracy K. Smith
- Like thunder, poets respond to violence in America, edited by Virgil Suʹarez and Ryan G. Van Cleave
- The Penguin anthology of twentieth-century American poetry, edited with an introduction by Rita Dove
- Elizabethan poetry, a study in conventions, meaning, and expression, Hallett Smith
- The Oxford Book of Eighteenth Century Verse,, Chosen by David Nichol Smith
- Holocaust poetry, compiled and introduced by Hilda Schiff
- Modern American poetry, 1865-1950, Alan Shucard, Fred Moramarco, William Sullivan
- Stag's leap, by Sharon Olds
- The Norton anthology of poetry, [edited by] Alexander W. Allison [and others] ; with an essay on ver[s]ification by Jon Stallworthy
- Twenty-First-Century American Poets, Second Series, edited by John Cusatis, School of the Arts, Charleston
- Emily Dickinson's poetry;, stairway of surprise
- The poetry of William Carlos Williams of Rutherford, Wendell Berry
- A companion to Pablo Neruda, evaluating Neruda's poetry, Jason Wilson
- The Oxford book of American poetry, chosen and edited by David Lehman ; associate editor, John Brehm
- Plundered Hearts, New and Selected Poems, J.D. McClatchy
- Every shut eye ain't asleep, an anthology of poetry by African Americans since 1945, edited by Michael Harper and Anthony Walton
- The best of The best American poetry, 1988-1997, Harold Bloom, editor ; David Lehman, series editor
- Classical Telugu poetry, an anthology, translated, edited and with an introduction by Velcheru Narayana Rao and David Shulman
- The making of a poem, a Norton anthology of poetic forms, edited by Mark Strand and Eavan Boland
- Angles of ascent, a Norton anthology of contemporary African American poetry, edited by Charles Henry Rowell
- Poets of our time,, by Rica Brenner ..
- English verse: voice and movement from Wyatt to Yeats, [by] T.R. Barnes
- Over the river and through the wood, an anthology of nineteenth-century American children's poetry, edited by Karen L. Kilcup and Angela Sorby
- The Virtues of Poetry, James Longenbach
- The hoodwinking of Madeline, and other essays on Keats's poems, Jack Stillinger
- The complete poems, Jonathan Swift ; edited by Pat Rogers
- The collected poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010, edited by Kevin Young and Michael S. Glaser ; foreword by Toni Morrison ; afterword by Kevin Young
- The new Oxford book of war poetry, chosen and edited by Jon Stallworthy
- The Yale younger poets anthology, edited by George Bradley
- Encyclopedia of American poetry, edited by Eric L. Haralson ; John Hollander, advisory editor
- The romantic survival;, a study in poetic evolution
- [UNKNOWN]
- Ben Jonson and the cavalier poets;, authoritative texts, criticism
- Miyazawa Kenji, selections, edited and with an introduction by Hiroaki Sato
- The imagination of the resurrection:, the poetic continuity of a religious motif in Donne, Blake, and Yeats, [by] Kathryn R. Kremen