âA breezy and nostalgic collection reflecting on the quotidian and the momentous. . . . Padgett remains charmingly whimsical, and the more heartfelt entries are a testament to his status as one of the great living American poets.â âPublishers Weekly
âA refreshing read for its wisdom and levity, or perhaps for the wisdom in its levity. . . . Padgettâs loose associations feel both delightfully surprising and completely natural.â âSarah Barch, The Arkansas International
âThough the work is comforting, itâs an ode, not a lullabyâthis read is a page turner. The real magic of the collection stems from its ability to fully immerse the reader in a fantastical yet familiar world. . . . A fulfilling and immersive experience from cover to cover and somehow still manages to leave readers wanting more.â âAiden J. Bowers, The Harvard Crimson
Praise for Ron Padgett
âWonderful, generous, funny poetry.â âJohn Ashbery
âReading Padgett one realizes that playfulness and lightness of touch are not at odds with seriousness. . . . As is often the case, leave it to the comic writer to best convey our tragic predicament.â âCharles Simic, The New York Review of Books
âFor decades now, Ron Padgett has built up a body of work that, like the tenderly deadpan ballads of Jonathan Richman, has at its heart a sort of wry, pickled innocence. . . . The charm of his linesâand their power, because his work has a way of disarming you and pulling you in again and againâoften comes from his allergy to anything pretentious or even âpoetic.â He makes plain niceness look like the most radical stance of all.â âJeff Gordiner, The New York Times
âPadgettâs plainspoken, wry poems deliver their wisdom through a kind of connoisseurship of absurdity.â âThe New Yorker
âDeeply pleasing to read.â âThe Paris Review
âI can think of no other poet Iâve read over the past 40 years who embodies Williamsâs spirit and his great heartâs aesthetic. . . . Iâm willing to put money on Padgett, in two or three generations (it takes that long) to be counted among the best poets of his generation, to be counted among the best American poets, period.â âThomas Lux, Poetry Society of Americaâs William Carlos Williams Award
âForty-five years after Great Balls of Fire, Padgettâs poems still fuel our capacity for joyful incomprehensibility and subsequent mobility of thought.â âPoetry
âPadgettâs poems are so playful, self-mocking and eager to please that it would be easy to overlook their craft, not to mention the depth and sincerity of the emotions they convey. What animates [his work] is the tension between the buoyancy of its language and the gravity of its subject.â âThe Washington Post
âEvery page is a good time. . . . Sweet, hilarious, moving and mind-bogglingly imaginative. This book is for anyone who likes writing or who thinks itâs interesting to have a mind (or simply a forehead).â âRichard Hell, The Wall Street Journal
âThese poems mingle the nervy sophistication and cosmopolitan experimentalism of a thriving international avant-garde art tradition with a kind of hillbilly twang thatâs unmistakably American.â âTom Clark, San Francisco Chronicle
âA twentieth-century Great who is still producing superlative verse today. . . . And thatâs exactly what Padgett is: a virtuoso.â âSeth Abramson, Huffington Post
âPadgettâs sense of romantic joy is undiminished, as is his thoughtfulness about language and the ways in which time changes meaning, and sense can morph into eloquent absurdity.â âKen Tucker, Entertainment Weekly
âThe poet makes superlative use of the directive writing consciousnessâoften automatic pilotâto tap the unconscious for memory, vision, emotion, and the unexpected and indefinable. The poems speak backwards and forwards in time, to self, to family and friends, to poetic technique, to the birds caged in the chest. It is so lovely.â âAlice Notley
âRon Padgett makes the most quiet and sensible of feelings a provocatively persistent wonder.â âRobert Creeley
âThe Ron Padgett of yore is still with usâas charming, unpretentious, and surprising as everâbut there is a new Ron Padgett in this book as well: a poet of heartbreaking tenderness and ever-deepening wisdom.â âPaul Auster
âRon Padgettâs poems sing with absolutely true pitch . . . agile and lucid and glad to be alive.â âJames Tate
âAlways discovering new pleasures and reviving old ones, full of what, in Frank OâHaraâs phrase, âstill makes a poem a surprise,â Ron Padgettâs poems, among those of our times, are in the small company of authentic works of art.â âKenneth Koch
âRon Padgett has that âLubitsch touchââa whimsical grace that is full of wisdom and self-possession complete with mother-wit and, in his case, American invention.â âPeter Gizzi

Dot
Poetry by Ron Padgett
November 1, 2022Â âą 6 x 9 âą 120 pages âą 978-1-56689-655-9
In this new poetry collection, Pulitzer Prize finalist Ron Padgett illuminates the wonders inside things that donât even existâand then they do.
In Dot, Ron Padgett returns with more of the playfully profound work that has endeared him to generations of readers. Guided by curiosity and built on wit, generosity of spirit, and lucid observation, Dot shows how any experience, no matter how mundane, can lead to a poem that flares like gentle fireworks in the night sky of the readerâs mind.
About the Author
Ron Padgettâs How Long was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in poetry, and his Collected Poems won the LA Times Prize for the best poetry book of 2014 and the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America (PSA). He has also received the Shelley Memorial Award and the Frost medal from the PSA. His translations include Zone: Selected Poems of Guillaume Apollinaire and Blaise Cendrarsâs Complete Poems. Seven of his poems were used in Jim Jarmuschâs film Paterson. New York City has been his home base since 1960.
Praise for Dot
âA breezy and nostalgic collection reflecting on the quotidian and the momentous. . . . Padgett remains charmingly whimsical, and the more heartfelt entries are a testament to his status as one of the great living American poets.â âPublishers Weekly
âA refreshing read for its wisdom and levity, or perhaps for the wisdom in its levity. . . . Padgettâs loose associations feel both delightfully surprising and completely natural.â âSarah Barch, The Arkansas International
âThough the work is comforting, itâs an ode, not a lullabyâthis read is a page turner. The real magic of the collection stems from its ability to fully immerse the reader in a fantastical yet familiar world. . . . A fulfilling and immersive experience from cover to cover and somehow still manages to leave readers wanting more.â âAiden J. Bowers, The Harvard Crimson
Praise for Ron Padgett
âWonderful, generous, funny poetry.â âJohn Ashbery
âReading Padgett one realizes that playfulness and lightness of touch are not at odds with seriousness. . . . As is often the case, leave it to the comic writer to best convey our tragic predicament.â âCharles Simic, The New York Review of Books
âFor decades now, Ron Padgett has built up a body of work that, like the tenderly deadpan ballads of Jonathan Richman, has at its heart a sort of wry, pickled innocence. . . . The charm of his linesâand their power, because his work has a way of disarming you and pulling you in again and againâoften comes from his allergy to anything pretentious or even âpoetic.â He makes plain niceness look like the most radical stance of all.â âJeff Gordiner, The New York Times
âPadgettâs plainspoken, wry poems deliver their wisdom through a kind of connoisseurship of absurdity.â âThe New Yorker
âDeeply pleasing to read.â âThe Paris Review
âI can think of no other poet Iâve read over the past 40 years who embodies Williamsâs spirit and his great heartâs aesthetic. . . . Iâm willing to put money on Padgett, in two or three generations (it takes that long) to be counted among the best poets of his generation, to be counted among the best American poets, period.â âThomas Lux, Poetry Society of Americaâs William Carlos Williams Award
âForty-five years after Great Balls of Fire, Padgettâs poems still fuel our capacity for joyful incomprehensibility and subsequent mobility of thought.â âPoetry
âPadgettâs poems are so playful, self-mocking and eager to please that it would be easy to overlook their craft, not to mention the depth and sincerity of the emotions they convey. What animates [his work] is the tension between the buoyancy of its language and the gravity of its subject.â âThe Washington Post
âEvery page is a good time. . . . Sweet, hilarious, moving and mind-bogglingly imaginative. This book is for anyone who likes writing or who thinks itâs interesting to have a mind (or simply a forehead).â âRichard Hell, The Wall Street Journal
âThese poems mingle the nervy sophistication and cosmopolitan experimentalism of a thriving international avant-garde art tradition with a kind of hillbilly twang thatâs unmistakably American.â âTom Clark, San Francisco Chronicle
âA twentieth-century Great who is still producing superlative verse today. . . . And thatâs exactly what Padgett is: a virtuoso.â âSeth Abramson, Huffington Post
âPadgettâs sense of romantic joy is undiminished, as is his thoughtfulness about language and the ways in which time changes meaning, and sense can morph into eloquent absurdity.â âKen Tucker, Entertainment Weekly
âThe poet makes superlative use of the directive writing consciousnessâoften automatic pilotâto tap the unconscious for memory, vision, emotion, and the unexpected and indefinable. The poems speak backwards and forwards in time, to self, to family and friends, to poetic technique, to the birds caged in the chest. It is so lovely.â âAlice Notley
âRon Padgett makes the most quiet and sensible of feelings a provocatively persistent wonder.â âRobert Creeley
âThe Ron Padgett of yore is still with usâas charming, unpretentious, and surprising as everâbut there is a new Ron Padgett in this book as well: a poet of heartbreaking tenderness and ever-deepening wisdom.â âPaul Auster
âRon Padgettâs poems sing with absolutely true pitch . . . agile and lucid and glad to be alive.â âJames Tate
âAlways discovering new pleasures and reviving old ones, full of what, in Frank OâHaraâs phrase, âstill makes a poem a surprise,â Ron Padgettâs poems, among those of our times, are in the small company of authentic works of art.â âKenneth Koch
âRon Padgett has that âLubitsch touchââa whimsical grace that is full of wisdom and self-possession complete with mother-wit and, in his case, American invention.â âPeter Gizzi
Original: $16.95
-65%$16.95
$5.93Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Poetry by Ron Padgett
November 1, 2022Â âą 6 x 9 âą 120 pages âą 978-1-56689-655-9
In this new poetry collection, Pulitzer Prize finalist Ron Padgett illuminates the wonders inside things that donât even existâand then they do.
In Dot, Ron Padgett returns with more of the playfully profound work that has endeared him to generations of readers. Guided by curiosity and built on wit, generosity of spirit, and lucid observation, Dot shows how any experience, no matter how mundane, can lead to a poem that flares like gentle fireworks in the night sky of the readerâs mind.
About the Author
Ron Padgettâs How Long was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in poetry, and his Collected Poems won the LA Times Prize for the best poetry book of 2014 and the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America (PSA). He has also received the Shelley Memorial Award and the Frost medal from the PSA. His translations include Zone: Selected Poems of Guillaume Apollinaire and Blaise Cendrarsâs Complete Poems. Seven of his poems were used in Jim Jarmuschâs film Paterson. New York City has been his home base since 1960.
Praise for Dot
âA breezy and nostalgic collection reflecting on the quotidian and the momentous. . . . Padgett remains charmingly whimsical, and the more heartfelt entries are a testament to his status as one of the great living American poets.â âPublishers Weekly
âA refreshing read for its wisdom and levity, or perhaps for the wisdom in its levity. . . . Padgettâs loose associations feel both delightfully surprising and completely natural.â âSarah Barch, The Arkansas International
âThough the work is comforting, itâs an ode, not a lullabyâthis read is a page turner. The real magic of the collection stems from its ability to fully immerse the reader in a fantastical yet familiar world. . . . A fulfilling and immersive experience from cover to cover and somehow still manages to leave readers wanting more.â âAiden J. Bowers, The Harvard Crimson
Praise for Ron Padgett
âWonderful, generous, funny poetry.â âJohn Ashbery
âReading Padgett one realizes that playfulness and lightness of touch are not at odds with seriousness. . . . As is often the case, leave it to the comic writer to best convey our tragic predicament.â âCharles Simic, The New York Review of Books
âFor decades now, Ron Padgett has built up a body of work that, like the tenderly deadpan ballads of Jonathan Richman, has at its heart a sort of wry, pickled innocence. . . . The charm of his linesâand their power, because his work has a way of disarming you and pulling you in again and againâoften comes from his allergy to anything pretentious or even âpoetic.â He makes plain niceness look like the most radical stance of all.â âJeff Gordiner, The New York Times
âPadgettâs plainspoken, wry poems deliver their wisdom through a kind of connoisseurship of absurdity.â âThe New Yorker
âDeeply pleasing to read.â âThe Paris Review
âI can think of no other poet Iâve read over the past 40 years who embodies Williamsâs spirit and his great heartâs aesthetic. . . . Iâm willing to put money on Padgett, in two or three generations (it takes that long) to be counted among the best poets of his generation, to be counted among the best American poets, period.â âThomas Lux, Poetry Society of Americaâs William Carlos Williams Award
âForty-five years after Great Balls of Fire, Padgettâs poems still fuel our capacity for joyful incomprehensibility and subsequent mobility of thought.â âPoetry
âPadgettâs poems are so playful, self-mocking and eager to please that it would be easy to overlook their craft, not to mention the depth and sincerity of the emotions they convey. What animates [his work] is the tension between the buoyancy of its language and the gravity of its subject.â âThe Washington Post
âEvery page is a good time. . . . Sweet, hilarious, moving and mind-bogglingly imaginative. This book is for anyone who likes writing or who thinks itâs interesting to have a mind (or simply a forehead).â âRichard Hell, The Wall Street Journal
âThese poems mingle the nervy sophistication and cosmopolitan experimentalism of a thriving international avant-garde art tradition with a kind of hillbilly twang thatâs unmistakably American.â âTom Clark, San Francisco Chronicle
âA twentieth-century Great who is still producing superlative verse today. . . . And thatâs exactly what Padgett is: a virtuoso.â âSeth Abramson, Huffington Post
âPadgettâs sense of romantic joy is undiminished, as is his thoughtfulness about language and the ways in which time changes meaning, and sense can morph into eloquent absurdity.â âKen Tucker, Entertainment Weekly
âThe poet makes superlative use of the directive writing consciousnessâoften automatic pilotâto tap the unconscious for memory, vision, emotion, and the unexpected and indefinable. The poems speak backwards and forwards in time, to self, to family and friends, to poetic technique, to the birds caged in the chest. It is so lovely.â âAlice Notley
âRon Padgett makes the most quiet and sensible of feelings a provocatively persistent wonder.â âRobert Creeley
âThe Ron Padgett of yore is still with usâas charming, unpretentious, and surprising as everâbut there is a new Ron Padgett in this book as well: a poet of heartbreaking tenderness and ever-deepening wisdom.â âPaul Auster
âRon Padgettâs poems sing with absolutely true pitch . . . agile and lucid and glad to be alive.â âJames Tate
âAlways discovering new pleasures and reviving old ones, full of what, in Frank OâHaraâs phrase, âstill makes a poem a surprise,â Ron Padgettâs poems, among those of our times, are in the small company of authentic works of art.â âKenneth Koch
âRon Padgett has that âLubitsch touchââa whimsical grace that is full of wisdom and self-possession complete with mother-wit and, in his case, American invention.â âPeter Gizzi











