Lists

A Poetry Collection for Every Kind of New Year's Resolution Maker

Seven amazing poetry collections released in 2023 that mirror different types of resolution-makers

January 1, 2024
Rowley by Frank Stella (1962)

The Traditionalist

You’ve had your New Year’s resolutions planned out for a few months now. These are classic and achievable goals like exercising more, better time management, or reading more books.

Couplets Maggie Millner

Cover of Maggie Millner's book Couplets.

Millner does an incredible job with rhyme and meter without it ever feeling forced. Plus, she’s writing about very raw, very modern themes around queer love and sex. This book kind of took the poetry world by storm when it first came out. And rightly so.

The GOALIE

Extremely ambitious and driven, you’re entering 2024 with a bullseye on your goals. You’re aiming for some lofty things, but you’ll damn well hit the mark this year!

I Do Everything I’m Told Megan Fernandes

Cover of book I Do Everything I'm Told by Megan Fernandes.

This book hits the heart and the head at the same time. It’s a drug, a rush, and a sweet flower. Fernandes doesn’t shy away from anything here, and her poetic voice is unnervingly confident and bold while still exuding self-love.

The REALIST

You know that not all of your New Year’s resolutions are going to translate into, well, reality. But you still have a neat, short, and sensible list that you’ll try fairly hard for (at least in the first couple of months).

To 2040 Jorie Graham

Cover of Jorie Graham's book To 2040.

She’s won the Pulitzer. She knows how to wield the short line in a long poem. She asks serious questions about the world’s insane situation today and in the future we can or cannot imagine. See what I mean:

The Serial Resolutionist

The point of setting resolutions is the setting of said resolutions. Unfinished goals are just another beautiful artefact of time. Yeah, you’ve got your resolutions for this year. Yeah, they’ll probably be abandoned. And duh, you’ll set more again for 2025. That’s the point, remember.

Water Look Away Bob Hicok

Cover of Bob Hicok's book Water Look Away.

How Bob Hicok manages to be at once irreverent, hilarious, absurd and then again deeply melancholic, serious, sincere…I don’t know if I’ll ever find out, but I’m happy to die trying if that means I can keep reading his poetry. Hard to pick favorites from this collection, which is really a novella in verse — they’re each better than the last!

The HABIT-RABBIT

You love hopping from one set of positive things to the next, trying on any hat that might help you shape up your life in the way you want it. Whether it’s mindfulness, yoga, crocheting, or poetry — you’ve got a specific set of resolutions centered around a new habit you want to integrate with your routine.

Judas Goat Gabrielle Bates

Cover of book Judas Goat by Gabrielle Bates.

This book’s central theme of betrayal is explored from every angle imaginable and you’re still left wanting to re-read Bates’ amazing collection again.

The Listless Bucket-Lister

You don’t do New Year’s resolutions. Let’s be real, you had no idea it was the new year until you read this, did you?

I Done Clicked My Heels Three Times —  Taylor Byas

Cover of book I Done Clicked My Heels Three Times by Taylor Byas.

Dr. Byas places herself in Dorothy’s sparkling red heels and whisks us away to a magical, fearsome, fierce, outrageous, beautifully reimagined Oz, exploring black womanhood, sexuality, intergenerational trauma and self-renewal along the way.

The It’s-2024-Already-Oh-Dear-God-No

You’ve had your New Year’s resolutions planned out for a few months now. These are classic and achievable goals like exercising more, better time management, or reading more books.

Sophomore Slump Leigh Chadwick

Cover of Leigh Chadwick's book Sophomore Slump.

Leigh Chadwick is your favorite poet. She’s my favorite poet. She’s the 2024 poet laureate of 2023. She is also not a poet. She is the not-iest poet of all the not-poets. She is poetry. That’s all folks. Read it. Love it. Enjoy, or whatever.

Jane Doe
Poet, Freelance Writer

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Shannan Mann

Shannan’s recent work appears in Best New Poets (2024). She has been awarded or placed for the Palette Love & Eros Prize, Rattle Poetry Prize, Auburn Witness Prize, Foster Poetry Prize, among others. Her poems appear in Poetry Daily, Black Warrior Review, Missouri Review, Poet Lore, Gulf Coast, The Literary Review of Canada, EPOCH, december, & elsewhere. Her essays appear in Tolka Journal and Going Down Swinging; they have been awarded the Alta Lind Cook Prize and the Irene Adler Essay Prize. She also translates Sanskrit poetry.

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