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Today's poem is "Final Exam"
from Final Exam

Accents Publishing

Andrew MertonAndrew Merton is a journalist, essayist, and poet. Publications in which his nonfiction has appeared include Esquire, Ms. Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Boston Magazine, and The Boston Globe. His book Enemies of Choice: The Right-To-Life Movement and Its Threat to Abortion, was published by Beacon Press in 1980. His poetry has appeared in Bellevue Literary Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, The Rialto (U.K.), Comstock Review, Louisville Review, Vine Leaves, the American journal of Nursing, and elsewhere. Merton's book of poetry, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs, with a foreword by Charles Simic (Accents Publishing, 2012) was named Outstanding Book of Poetry for 2013-2014 by the New Hampshire Writers' Project. His book of poetry Lost and Found was also published by Accents Publishing in 2016. He is a professor emeritus of English at the University of New Hampshire.

Other poems by Andrew Merton in Verse Daily:
April 6, 2012:   "Your Date with Death" "starts with low expectations...."

Books by Andrew Merton:

Other poems on the web by Andrew Merton:
"coming out of a depression"

Andrew Merton's Website.

About Final Exam:

"Echoing the work of Kenneth Koch, Billy Collins and Albert Goldbarth, here comes another poet primed to tickle and provoke. Simultaneously wise and hilarious, Merton somehow plumbs issues like depression, self-loathing, regret, grief and finds its funny lining. With plainspoken lyrics and huge sense of humor, Merton allows us to pass his Final Exam on the playground of language."
—Julia Shipley

"The poems in Andrew Merton's Final Exam stake out an imaginative territory that's equitably shared by God, Elmer Fudd, Yevgeny Yevtushenko, tubas, pianos and a menagerie of animals. Merton's work is as spare and lethal as grenades, blowing up easy assumptions in favor of something much more incendiary—a truth-telling that's located in the ambiguous, shape-shifting that is this moment's reality."
—Sarah Freligh

"If Andy Merton's poems were baseball caps, they wouldn't say "Make America Great Again," they'd say 'Make America Sane Again.' Lord knows, we are in desperate need of their wry wit, unconventional wisdom, and spirited kindness. Something in the tone of this book reminds me of Szymborska and her gift for turning human delusion and bad behavior into a life that can be forgiven because it's simply human. I'm putting my hat on now, so these funny, smart poems can warm my brain."
—David Rivard



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