16 pages • 32-minute read
Ted KooserA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Holes” by Eileen Myles (1991)
As with “Selecting a Reader,” Eileen Myles’s poem “Holes” articulates an imperfect idea of beauty. In the poem, Myles feels she “looked just beautiful” (Line 4) in the 1970s when her shirts and sweaters were full of holes. Myles’s poem also touches on the pleasure of looking and the presence of desire. The diction is simple and direct and aligns with Kooser’s belief that poems can be straightforward in tone and diction.
“At the Cancer Clinic” by Ted Kooser (2004)
In “At the Cancer Clinic,” Kooser deals again with themes of looking and watching women. This time, the speaker — again, presumably Kooser himself, as he lived with head and neck cancer — observes a sick woman helped along by her two sisters. The poem features many of the elements of “Selecting a Reader.” The diction is simple, the images are precise, and the form is tidy. In this poem, published in the Pulitzer Prize-winning Delights and Shadows, Kooser shows that watching can involve the act of looking with care, concern, and empathy.
“Introduction to Poetry” by Billy Collins (1988)
In this poem by American poet Billy Collins, the speaker explores the meaning of poetry and the ways in which a reader can attempt to parse the meaning of a poem. Like Kooser, Collins does not take the writing of poetry overly seriously, as evidenced by the witty and humorous tone of “Introduction to Poetry.”
ABC of Reading by Ezra Pound (1934)
Like Ted Kooser, poet Ezra Pound also criticized the poetry of his time. In ABC of Reading, Pound’s 1934 book, Pound makes many pointed remarks that relate to the themes of "Selecting a Reader." In ABC of Reading, Pound asserts the need for clarity in writing.
“Personism” by Frank O’Hara (1959)
In his essay titled "Personism," the New York poet Frank O’Hara mocks artistic manifestos and literary movements. In this parody of a manifesto, O’Hara quips that “Personism [is] a movement which I recently founded and which nobody knows about.” According to O’Hara, “Personism” is a movement that invites poets to address their poems to a specific reader. Like Kooser, O’Hara keeps the reader at the forefront of his aims in writing poetry and keeps the themes of his poetry relatively light.
“A Conversation with Ted Kooser” by David Baker
This interview with Ted Kooser appears in the Kenyon Review. Baker, poetry editor, provides details of Kooser’s biography as well as a transcription of an interview with Kooser, in which Kooser talks about his experiences as poet laureate as well as a variety of other literary topics.
Ted Kooser reads “Selecting a Reader”
Listen to Ted Kooser read his poem “Selecting a Reader” at the University of Nebraska during 2005. He makes a brief statement about the poem and goes on to read many other poems; “Selecting a Reader” starts at the 9:43 mark.



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