May 6, 2008

Kooser’s Column 162

The former poet laureate’s recent column features Massachusetts poet, Richard Hoffman’s “Summer Job.”

Kooser introduces the poem with the following comment: “Though at the time it may not occur to us to call it "mentoring," there's likely to be a good deal of that sort of thing going on, wanted or unwanted, whenever a young person works for someone older. Richard Hoffman of Massachusetts does a good job of portraying one of those teaching moments in this poem.”

A sampling from the poem:

"The trouble with intellectuals," Manny, my boss,

once told me, "is that they don't know nothing

till they can explain it to themselves. A guy like that,"

he said, "he gets to middle age--and by the way,

he gets there late . . .

To read the entire poem, please visit Column 162 at American Life in Poetry.

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