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Poet-a-Day: Meet Sandra Heska King

By Tania Runyan 11 Comments

Black cap gull sea Villanelle poem

Prompted to write a villanelle, Sandra Heska King created a container for sorrow and endings. You could try it, too.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles

Poet Laura for Arbor Day: The Company of Trees

By Laura Boggess 6 Comments

Giant tree and couple in traditional japanese garb at Kanazawa

For Arbor Day, our Poet Laura reflects on the company of trees and a way of nurturing them from their infancy as backyard volunteers.

Filed Under: Blog, Nature Poems, Poet Laura, Tree Poems

Poet-a-Day: Meet Claire Bateman

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Corolla petals-Corolla flower found poem Claire Bateman

What can you find in a Field Guide? Maybe a poem with a corolla, breaking open. Claire Bateman did.

Filed Under: Blog, Found Poems, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources

Poet-a-Day: Meet Benjamin Myers

By Tania Runyan 3 Comments

Bavaria Germany Trees and Water-Calliope Muse Poem

It’s difficult to tell a story with a sestina. And that’s exactly why Benjamin Myers explored a Muse story with this hard-to-hold form.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Sestina

Reconsidering History: Natasha Trethewey and “Native Guard”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

In “Native Guard,” poet Natasha Trethewey considers what history often forgets, in this case a Black regiment that fought for the Union.

Filed Under: article, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Poet-a-Day: Meet John Poch

By Tania Runyan 1 Comment

Cape Kiwanda Oregon seascape Echo and Narcissus villanelle

What two things must your villanelle have—to make it minimally successful? Find out in this Echo and Narcissus poem from poet John Poch!

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles

Poetry Prompt: What’s Left Now

By Callie Feyen 3 Comments

What poetry comes from what's left now?

What fragments of love can you find (and write about) from what’s left now? Callie Feyen uses a poem by Marjorie Maddox for inspiration.

Filed Under: Blog, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writer's group resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

How to Write a Form Poem: Hear the Poets Read!

By L.L. Barkat 3 Comments

How to Write a Form Poem Poets Read La Jolla Rocks California

Whether you’re teaching or learning, you’ll love being able to hear the poets read from ‘How to Write a Form Poem.’ Plus, see their regional items!

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poets

Poet-a-Day: Meet Jill Baumgaertner

By Tania Runyan Leave a Comment

rolling hills and lake at Keswick and Derwent Water

The repetitive rural images of the Lake District provided inspiration for Jill Baumgaertner’s “Cumbria Pantoum.” What will inspire yours?

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching Resources, Pantoum, Pantoum Poems, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources

By Heart: ‘Choices’ + New Kate Baer Challenge

By Megan Willome 4 Comments

bamboo forest

Sometimes our choices come down to nests or mountains. Learn Tess Gallagher’s poem “Choices” By Heart and see which one you choose.

Filed Under: A Poem in Every Heart, By Heart, nature, Nature Poems

Poet-a-Day: Meet Todd C. Truffin

By Tania Runyan 3 Comments

Camper in desert

A soccer coach inspiring a villanelle? It could happen. (Indeed, it did, in this villanelle from Todd C. Truffin.)

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching Resources, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles

Poet-a-Day: Meet Gabriel Spera

By Tania Runyan Leave a Comment

Daisy White Petals Love Sonnet

Can a sonnet be funny? (Should it be, especially if a household “disaster” is in progress?) Gabriel Spera chose amusement…

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Sonnets

The Great Gatsby Book Club: Chapters 7-9—Borne Back Ceaselessly Into the Past

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

old green motor boat on shore

In the final installment of our The Great Gatsby book club, Tania Runyan explores what it means to be “borne back ceaselessly into the past.”

Filed Under: Blog, book club, English Teaching Resources, Patron Only, The Great Gatsby

Poet-a-Day: Meet Janet Aalfs

By Tania Runyan 1 Comment

Red trumpet flower-Ode to a Lost Sweater red button poem

A lost red button calls out to become an ode for a wider memory in Janet Aalfs’ touching poem about her mother and more.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Ode Poems, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources

You Can Go Home Again – to the Bookstore

By Glynn Young 5 Comments

After more than a year of pandemic-induced isolation, I was able to go home again—in this case, a bookstore.

Filed Under: article, Books, bookseller, Pandemic Journal, poetry, Poets

Poet-a-Day: Meet John Stevenson

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Crete Samaria Gorge Haiku Silence Poem

What do all Japanese poems have in common that might change how you view haiku? John Stevenson explores the answer…

Filed Under: Blog, Haiku, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources

Poetry Prompt: Choose Risk Over Cuteness —The Acrostic Poem

By Callie Feyen 16 Comments

What do you risk when write an acrostic?

Think the acrostic poem is too cute? Think again. Join Callie Feyen and Tania Runyan and see how risky the form can be.

Filed Under: Acrostics, Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writer's group resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

Poet-a-Day: Meet Murray Silverstein

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

White Rose of Sharon-Sestina to Bind a Goodbye Family Poem

What if one of your end words talked back, saying it needed to go? Murray Silverstein shows how you can be illuminated by your sestina’s own way.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Sestina

Poet-a-Day: Meet Susan Rothbard

By Tania Runyan 5 Comments

apple blossom Washington DC-apple poem Susan Rothbard

When you think you’re grounded in reality, a form like the sonnet might lead you to the imaginary. It did for Susan Rothbard in her apple poem!

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Sonnets

Poet-a-Day: Meet Richard Pierce

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Tall grass in sunset

Can the villanelle come round again? Poet Richard Pierce responds to Dylan Thomas’s famous villanelle with a powerful one of his own.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles

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