Elizabeth Willis's poetry has been widely praised.
Jacket Magazine reported that
Meteoric Flowers "offers the reader a strange and at times almost overwhelmingly pleasurable world." Poet
Ron Silliman wrote that the collection "is filled with brief, well-balanced, brilliantly written prose poems."
Susan Howe wrote, "Elizabeth Willis is an exceptional poet, one of the most outstanding of her generation, and
Meteoric Flowers is her most compelling collection to date."
Rosmarie Waldrop said that the collection "is a remarkable investigation of our experience and language."
Cole Swensen wrote, "What drives Willis’s incisive commentary into stunning poetry are her gorgeous lines...Despite a distinctly
noir atmosphere and the unsettling quality that always attends the
sublime, Turneresque comes off as affirmative, even jocularly courageous. It seems - to borrow one of its phrases - "to imply or intone whole possibility of human sun." Reviewing
Second Law, Susan Howe wrote, "The poems in Second Law are terse, precise, ecstatic and luminous. White letters serve as lures and traces through gaps of ordered scientific discourse, the rapture of the poet's will remains captive and rejoicing. In these linked fragmentary linguistic structures Elizabeth Willis enters Bunyan's emblematic river another time; singing." Her 2024 collection,
Liontaming in America, was longlisted for the
National Book Award for Poetry. ==Awards==