Simply the Best: Cordite's 2010 Top Thirty

30 December 2010

Following in the grand tradition of Simply The Best: Cordite’s 2008 Top Thirty and Simply the Best: Cordite’s 2009 Top Thirty, please peruse at your leisure our celebration of the top thirty posts on the Cordite website for 2010, courtesy of the erstwhile WordPress stats pluginamijig.

ps – check out the entry at #3. Who knows, maybe “Simply the Best: Cordite’s 2010 Top Thirty” will make number 1 next year. Heh heh.

1. Zombie Haikunaut Renga I

2. Zombie Haikunaut Renga II

3. Simply the Best: Cordite’s 2009 Top Thirty

4. Ex Machina and the Creative Commons

5. Zombie Sex

6. J.H. Prynne and the Late-Modern Epic

7. On Creative Commons

8. Who are the Children of Malley II?

9. David Musgrave’s Sting poem earns blog wrath

10. Uncouth days never will abolish gravity

11. Simply by Sailing in a New Direction

12. Zombie 2.0

13. Sing to me of the woman, plaintive Muse,

14. π.O’s 24 Hours: Ulysses in Fitzroy

15. The Death of Poetry in Australian Classrooms

16. Blinky ‘Bill’ O’Malley: F#!* Yeah

17. Ryan Scott reviews The Best Australian Poetry / Poems 2009

18. So the story goes: Glámis, the bride

19. A Void in the Windscreaming

20. John Kinsella’s Poetics of Distraction

21. On Creative Commons II

22. Vicki Viidikas Rediscovered: Ali Alizadeh interviews Barry Scott

23. Text and Paratext: Ern Malley and the Function of the ‘Author’

24. The sea alone is so irreverent

25. Ali Alizadeh reviews John Mateer

26. not to mention harpur his prophetic dream of lawson exhuming

27. the dam

28. Soil of Brie

29. A New Ballade of the Words of Yesteryear

30. You saw me first Isabella

This entry was posted in BLOG ARCHIVES. Bookmark the permalink.
David Prater

About David Prater


David Prater was Cordite’s Managing Editor from 2001 to 2012. His first poetry collection, We Will Disappear, was published by papertiger media in 2007, and Vagabond Press published his chapbook Morgenland in the same year. His poetry has appeared in a wide range of Australian and international journals, and he has performed his work at festivals in Australia, Japan, Bulgaria, Canada, the United States, the Netherlands and Macedonia. He has also undertaken two writers’ residencies in Seoul, Republic of Korea, and has worked extensively as a teacher, editor and researcher. He currently lives in Stockholm, Sweden.



Website:
http://daveydreamnation.com

Further reading:

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts Found

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>