'Tony Hoagland is a provocateur, a brash interventionist, a deeply engaged Whitmanian poet and critic who poses, like the master, as one of the roughs.' - Edward Hirsch; '[Hoagland] walks the line between the high poetic and the mass-media idiom... His poetry expresses itself not just as a significant art, but as the best kind of entertainment.' - Los Angeles Times; 'Few [poets] deliver more pure pleasure. [Hoagland's] erudite comic poems are backloaded with heartache and longing, and they function, emotionally, like improvised explosive devices.' - Dwight Garner, The New York Times; 'He belongs to that wagon-circle of American poets who believe in a common reader...Hoagland is a poet of a ragged, half-satirical, half-lyrical intensity. If Billy Collins is Updike, Hoagland is Salinger, or perhaps Holden Caulfield...making us think we know the ground we are on, then showing us that we don't...For me, he not only pulls the rug from under my feet when it comes to the moral complacencies and platitudes that I don't notice I live by, he does the same with my given poetic certainties.' - Henry Shukman, Poetry London; 'Hilarious, searing poems that break your heart so fast you hardly notice you're standing knee deep in a pool of implications. They are of this moment, right now - the present that we're already homesick for.' - Marie Howe; 'Tony Hoagland's high zaniness always makes us laugh, but his real substance issues from the personal, aesthetic and moral risks he invokes in poem after poem... What Narcissism Means to Me shows us our age and how great poetry is still possible.' - Rodney Jones; 'A Late Night Show of poetry hosted by a high priest of irony (check out the title)... These poems are very funny, but they are also sad, sharp-edged and ambitious... confiding, consistently irreverent and, in a way, comforting.' - Carol Muske-Dukes, Los Angeles Times; 'Hoagland's central subject is the self, specifically, a prickly, grandiose American masculine poetic self, or to be more specific still, what the author ruefully labels in one poem a government called Tony Hoagland...there is something refreshing about his willingness to expose his crummier impulses.' - Emily Nussbaum, New York Times; 'It's hard to imagine any aspect of contemporary American life that couldn't make its way into the writing of Tony Hoagland or a word in common or formal usage he would shy away from. He is a poet of risk: he risks wild laughter in poems that are totally heartfelt, poems you want to read out loud to anyone who needs to know the score and even more so to those who think they know the score. The framework of his writing is immense, almost as large as the tarnished nation he wandered into under the star of poetry.' - Jackson Poetry Prize judges' citation