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Summer Break & Take Your Poet to Work Day

By Will Willingham Leave a Comment

Summer Break Rejuvenate Daisy
Here at Tweetspeak Poetry, we love working together with you, in community, to create and share stories, essays, poems and art that enrich your lives and ours. And we also find that intentional breaks from this beautiful work to be inspiring and enlivening.

So, as we reach the midpoint of July, we are taking a two-week summer break to rest and to dream and we look forward to bringing back the wonder from our time away.

Edgar Allan Poe popsicle stickBut we are not leaving you without company. Next Wednesday, July 21, you can be surrounded with your favorite poets during the annual Take Your Poet to Work Day celebration.

Browse a diverse collection of poets, ready for you to cut and color and paste to a popsicle stick for a day of fun and poetry in your work place, whether that’s the office, a cafe, a construction site or Zoom.

We’ll see you back here, refreshed and inspired, on August 2.

Learn more about Take Your Poet to Work Day

Photo by Sean McGrath, Creative Commons, via Flickr. Post by Will Willingham.

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Will Willingham
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Will Willingham
Director of Many Things; Senior Editor, Designer and Illustrator at Tweetspeak Poetry
I used to be a claims adjuster, helping people and insurance companies make sense of loss. Now, I train other folks with ladders and tape measures to go and do likewise. Sometimes, when I’m not scaling small buildings or crunching numbers with my bare hands, I read Keats upside down. My first novel is Adjustments.
Will Willingham
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Latest posts by Will Willingham (see all)
  • Don’t Ask Why Book Club: From New York to Paris - November 10, 2021
  • Don’t Ask Why: So Many Meteorites - October 27, 2021
  • Don’t Ask Why Book Club: Dolores - October 20, 2021

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day

About Will Willingham

I used to be a claims adjuster, helping people and insurance companies make sense of loss. Now, I train other folks with ladders and tape measures to go and do likewise. Sometimes, when I’m not scaling small buildings or crunching numbers with my bare hands, I read Keats upside down. My first novel is Adjustments.

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