"The best poets make demands, and Heartwall is Richard Jackson's best and most demanding book so far. In its range of emotion, in its rich, ruminating prosody, in its capacity to contain all that it imagines, and especially in its power to place the corruptions of the world against those of the heart, it represents a poetry of scale, in fine yet compelling excess, informed—indeed exalted—by intelligence, irony, and vision."—Stanley Plumly
"'Even the skeptic / David Hume, 1711–1766, begins to believe in my love,' Richard Jackson says in 'Do Not Duplicate This Key.' He insists on this love. It is what gives the poems their language, and it is what gives the poems their outrage. It is not decorative, this love, not formal. It is, as he says, 'a key that cannot be duplicated.' I love his mind—Rick Jackson—I love his heart."—Gerald Stern
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