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Today's poem is "The revolution starts at home"
from Empire Wasted

Bloof Books

Becca Klaver's biography is the author of the poetry collections LA Liminal (Kore Press, 2010) and Empire Wasted (Bloof Books, forthcoming 2016), and several chapbooks. She's the cohost of the Real Wives of Bohemia podcast with comedian Lauren Besser, and the curator of a new series of Tiny Talks currently underway at Berl's Brooklyn Poetry Shop.

Other poems by Becca Klaver in Verse Daily:
November 18, 2014:   "Open Season" "I get all my news from the weather report or..."

Books by Becca Klaver:

Other poems on the web by Becca Klaver:
"Fall Parties"
Six poems
Two poems
"Everything's Been Recruited"
"Harmony of the Worlds"

Becca Klaver's Website.

Becca Klaver on Twitter.

Becca Klaver on Facebook.

About Empire Wasted:

"EMPIRE WASTED is an astonishing book, anthemic in its catchiness and the power of its arguments. From the suite of "Decade Zero," the years so vacant they don’t even have a name, and the concomitant attraction of the very dreariest productions of the 90s, through to the neo-di Prima fervor of the revolutionary letters, it hits all the right notes."
—Kevin Killian

"Get out your Ozymandias hotpants and your Warhol tote bag: Becca Klaver is throwing a rooftop party for the end of the world. Everyone’s there, scrolling through the Pentagon’s Instagram feed and moshing to the sound of TV going digital. These poems whiplash through the last three decades, through the American landscape, through the songs stuck in your head, Klaver taking us from the last nostalgia to the New Quotidian. These are our anthems, bitches. Turn them up."
—MC Hyland

"Where is America And where is New York City Where are we in history, and how will these days, years and decades live on With EMPIRE WASTED, Becca Klaver asks these impossible-to-answer questions and more, taking us on a road trip across America and across the shaky threshold from the last century to the present one. Recalling Notley and Didion, Klaver gets “bad directions” that lead through a portal to a "diorama / of small-town America Past.” In “At Night the States,” Notley writes, “at night the states. I forget them or I wish I was there.” In a decade in a century in a country when we were told to “never forget,” Klaver remembers more than what she’s instructed to. Like pictures in a shoe box or a Facebook album, she shuffles through memories and snapshots both personal and country-sized, looking for truth, looking for home, finding it nowhere and everywhere."
—Marisa Crawford

"Becca Klaver’s EMPIRE WASTED is an ode to a forever evolving and surviving New York City. These poems waltz with nostalgia. Along with Klaver, we slouch back towards the 1990s. We get drunk in dark bars when all the electricity goes out. We count down to the year 2000. Dead cell phone in hand, Klaver celebrates the writers and revolutionaries who inhabited the city before her. The television has gone to static and we’re out on the fire escape, the whole world heating up below our dangling feet."
—Lily Ladewig



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