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The Ezra Klein Show

Best Of: How America's Poet Laureate Sees Our World

The Ezra Klein Show

New York Times Opinion

Society & Culture, Government, News

4.611K Ratings

🗓️ 30 December 2022

⏱️ 78 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

​​“One of the biggest things about poetry is that it holds all of humanity,” the poet Ada Limón tells me. “It holds the huge and enormous and tumbling sphere of human emotions.” At the end of a turbulent year, we thought revisiting this May 2022 conversation with Limón would be fitting. Just months after our conversation, Limón was named U.S. poet laureate. Limón’s work is a salve for all that the world faces: her books of poetry are filled with meditations on grief and infertility, as well as striking moments of insight about friendship, lust and our fellowship with animals. Her most recent book, “The Hurting Kind,” explores what it means to share the planet with nonhuman beings like birds and trees. Limón describes the marvels of Kentucky’s rural landscape and the dusky beauty of a New York City bar with equal care. Her writing is highly acclaimed by fellow poets and also delightfully accessible to those who have never before picked up a book of poetry. Limón is a lively reader of her own poetry, so to structure this conversation, I asked her to read a varied selection of her work. We use those readings to discuss what poetry gives us that the news doesn’t, the importance of slowing down in a world that demands speed, how the grief of infertility differs from that of losing a loved one, how to be “in community” with ancestors and animals in lonely times, why Limón loves “chatty” and humorous poems as much as serious ones, why we often have our best thoughts in cars and on planes, how Instagram and Twitter affect our relationship to the world, why Limón meditates every day, how our relationship to excitement changes as we age and more. Book Recommendations: Stones by Kevin Young Frank: Sonnets by Diane Seuss Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz Thoughts? Email us at [email protected]. Guest suggestions? Fill out this form. You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs. “The Ezra Klein Show” is produced by Annie Galvin, Jeff Geld and Rogé Karma; fact-checking by Haylee Millikan; original music by Isaac Jones and Jeff Geld; mixing by Jeff Geld; audience strategy by Shannon Busta. Our executive producer is Irene Noguchi. Special thanks to Kristin Lin, Kristina Samulewski, Rebecca Elise Foote and Jahan Ramazani.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, it says we're off through the end of the year, but this our final episode and

0:06.1

rear of the year is really one of my favorites in the past year.

0:09.2

And it's with a poet Adela Mone subsequent to this episode.

0:12.6

She was named poet laureate of the United States.

0:14.6

That is what she is now.

0:16.0

It was just such a beautiful and fun.

0:18.5

I remember how much better I felt when I walked out of the studio on this one than on the

0:23.4

day I walked into it.

0:24.4

I was came in like harried and impatient and frustrated.

0:28.4

And I walked out so much more subtle as a person.

0:30.8

It's such a lovely conversation about poetry, about life.

0:35.4

I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

0:38.0

Here are those loud pages.

0:42.1

That's the sign of a good book is when you can hear the pages turning.

0:50.9

I'm Mr. Klein.

0:51.9

This is the Ezra Concho.

1:05.1

Here's something I believe in a way it's a quiet thesis of the show.

1:10.5

In dark times when so much in the news is so unrelentingly horrible, it is a political

1:15.5

act.

1:16.5

To open yourself to the awe, joy and beauty the world still provides.

1:24.5

To sit with a poem or take a walk in the woods isn't an abdication or kind of quietism.

1:30.8

It's a reminder of what this is all for.

...

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