Works Poetry Stallings's poems have been published in
The New Yorker,
The Atlantic,
The New York Review of Books,
The Times Literary Supplement,
The Sewanee Review,
Beloit Poetry Journal,
The Dark Horse,
The New Criterion,
Poetry, and
Poetry Review. She also contributes essays and reviews to the
American Scholar,
The Hudson Review, the
London Review of Books,
Parnassus, Poetry Magazine, Poetry Review, the TLS, the
Wall Street Journal, and the
Yale Review. Stallings's work is widely anthologized, and has been included in the
Best American Poetry in 1994, 2000, and 2015, and in the Best of the Best American Poetry (edited by
Robert Pinsky). Stallings's poetry uses traditional form and has been associated with
New Formalism. Her first book-length collection of poetry,
Archaic Smile, was published in 1999 by
Northwestern University Press and in 2022 by
Farrar, Straus, & Giroux; it won the 1999
Richard Wilbur Award. In 2006, she published her second book-length collection of poetry, Hapax, also with Northwestern; it was awarded the 2008
Poets' Prize, awarded annually to the best book of verse published by an American during the preceding year, and the
American Academy of Arts and Letters' Benjamin H. Danks Award. Her third book-length collection, Olives, was published in 2012 with Northwestern; it was a finalist for that year's
National Book Critics Circle Award. She published her fourth book-length collection,
Like, in 2018, with Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. It was a finalist for that year's
Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. In 2022, Stallings published a selection of published poems,
This Afterlife, also with Farrar, Straus, and Giroux in the United States and
Carcanet in the United Kingdom.
Translations and essays Stallings is also a translator, and has translated works written in Ancient Greek, Modern Greek, and Latin. In 2007, she published a translation of
Lucretius'
De Rerum Natura into rhyming
fourteeners. The translation was introduced by distinguished classicist
Richard Jenkyns and was published by
Penguin; reviewing the book in the TLS, classicist and critic
Peter Stothard called it "one of the most extraordinary classical translations of recent times." In 2017, Stallings published a verse translation of
Hesiod's Works and Days, including an introductory essay and endnotes, also with Penguin. Classicist, critic, and poet
Peter MacDonald characterized it as a "superb creation" and praised Stallings's "mastery of a characteristic voice" for Hesiod, while also noting the virtues of her "persuasively argued and brilliant Introduction". Stallings has also translated the
Battle between the Frogs and the Mice, a parody of Homer widely regarded to be a
Hellenistic epyllion, into rhyming
iambic pentameters; accompanied by illustrations from Grant Silverstein, it was published by Paul Dry in 2019. In her review of the translation, poet
Ange Mlinko wrote: "It shouldn’t be so rare for a poet to be serious and to sparkle at the same time, but Stallings is one of the few." The MacArthur Fellowship committee praised her "mastery" of poetic form, declaring that: "[t]hrough her technical dexterity and graceful fusion of content and form, Stallings is revealing the timelessness of poetic expression and antiquity's relevance for today." Poet
Dana Gioia described
Archaic Smile as "a debut of genuine distinction...Stallings displays extraordinary powers of invention and delight." Her work has been favorably compared to the poetry of
Richard Wilbur and
Edna St. Vincent Millay. In a review of her collection
Olives,
Publishers Weekly stated that they were most impressed with those poems that were not responses to ancient mythology, noting, "When she unleashes her technical gifts upon poems in which she builds a new narrative instead of building upon an old one, Stallings achieves a restrained, stark poise that is threatening even by New Formalism standards." Reviewing
This Afterlife for the
New York Times, poet and critic
David Orr observed: "The main thing Stallings has going for her is that she’s good at writing poems. In particular, she’s good at writing the sort of poetry that evokes the word 'good,' rather than, for instance, 'brave' or 'disorienting.'" In its review of
This Afterlife,
The New Yorker wrote: "Stallings’s formal ingenuity lends a music to her philosophically and narratively compelling verse. She draws inspiration from daily domestic life and from the mythology and history of Greece...crafting clever yet profound meditations on love, motherhood, language, and time." ==Awards==