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Poets and Poems: John Dorsey and “Your Daughter’s Country”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

“Your Daughter’s Country” by poet John Dorsey takes readers back to their childhoods, and to the relatives and other people who were considered “characters.”

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, Family Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Poetry Prompt: Begin with Your Feet Poems

By Callie Feyen 10 Comments

How does learning a new skill help free us to become more ourselves? Join author Callie Feyen as she begins with her feet in a Zumba class. Then write a poem!

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

Book Club Announcement: “The Art of the Essay”

By Megan Willome 4 Comments

book club

Get ready to join Tweetspeak Poetry for some essay-writing! Join us next month for a book club about Charity Singleton Craig’s ‘The Art of the Essay.’

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Book promotion, Essays, writer's group resources, Writing, writing prompts

Farmacology Book Club: Good Tilth for the Land, the Body and Our Writing

By Charity Singleton Craig 7 Comments

Farmacology good tilth

Whether it’s the soil where food is grown, the food we put in our bodies, or the writing we put on the page, we need good tilth. Charity Singleton Craig discusses the natural and self-sustaining nutrient cycles in our Farmacology book club.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Farmacology, Patron Only, poetry prompt, writing prompt, writing prompts

A Live Tweetspeak Poetry Party with Sara Teasdale, Part 2

By Glynn Young Leave a Comment

Five additional poems resulted from the Tweetspeak Poetry retreat, with “Flame and Shadow” by Sara Teasdale providing the prompts.

Filed Under: article, Poems, poetry, Sara Teasdale

Poetry Prompt: Wasps as Metaphor

By Callie Feyen 5 Comments

What metaphors can you find in your life to explore in your writing? Join author Callie Feyen as she considers a tree outside her home, and also, wasps.

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

Children’s Book Club: “Dear Evan Hansen”

By Megan Willome 7 Comments

Author Megan Willome considers the power of trees in “Dear Evan Hansen” for Tweetspeak’s Children’s Book Club, which this month, is all about teenagers.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, book reviews, Children's Book Club, Tree Poems

The Writing Life: Somehow Beginnings

By Callie Feyen 6 Comments

Callie Feyen reflects on coming to the place in our writing life where we are both ready and willing and can “somehow begin.”

Filed Under: Patron Only, Writing Life

Flame and Shadow: A Live Tweetspeak Poetry Party with Sara Teasdale, Part 1

By Glynn Young 5 Comments

Autumn Blooms Flame and Shadow

In August, Tweetspeak Poetry hosted a retreat and undertook the first Tweetspeak Twitter Poetry Party without Twitter. Sara Teasdale provided the prompts.

Filed Under: Poems, poetry, Poets, Sara Teasdale, Twitter poetry

Celebrating 10 Years: Announcing the Inaugural Poet Laura

By Will Willingham 19 Comments

Tweetspeak Poet Laura Pink Flower

We’re turning 10 years old. It seemed like the perfect time to announce an inaugural Poet Laura. What’s that, you say? Come and see. (And discover the honoree.)

Filed Under: 10th Year Birthday Celebration, Poet Laura

Reader, Come Home: “Because Internet”

By Megan Willome 7 Comments

Gretchen McCulloch

The internet made me do it. Come learn the secrets of being a deep reader as author Megan Willome reads “Because Internet.” And share your August pages.

Filed Under: book reviews, Citizens for a Saner Internet, Reader Come Home, Writing

Where Foreshadowing and Symbolism Meet: Adumbration

By Charity Singleton Craig 10 Comments

Train tracks adumbration

Create layers and depth in your writing by trying the technique of adumbration, which occurs at the intersection of foreshadowing and symbolism. Charity Singleton Craig explains how.

Filed Under: Become a Better Writer, writing prompts, Writing Tips

Un-writing the Fairytale, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast 2017: The Feminist Implications of Failed Deconstruction and the Lack of Fairytale Logic

By Sara Barkat 7 Comments

Disney's Beauty and the Beast Dance Scene Movie Review

The reviews of Disney’s live action Beauty and the Beast 2017 never did end up raving. Here’s a suggestion as to why a movie (and story) with such potential fell short. Writers, take note.

Filed Under: Blog, Fairytales

Poets and Poems: Justin Hamm and “The Inheritance”

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

The poems and photographs of “The Inheritance” are about the people, places, and things that shape us. They may be ghosts, but they’re powerful ghosts.

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

Stairs & Ascensions Poetry Prompt: Beginnings

By Callie Feyen 13 Comments

What do first steps in a new season look like for you? How do they feel? Join author Callie Feyen as she navigates unravelings and beginnings.

Filed Under: Blog, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, Stairs & Ascensions, writer's group resources, Writing, writing prompt, writing prompts

By Heart: “I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud” + New Poetry Challenge

By Megan Willome 2 Comments

couch

Join author Megan Willome as she learns Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud” By Heart and considers authorship.

Filed Under: Blog, By Heart, nature, Nature Poems, Poems, Poets

Book Club Announcement: Farmacology

By Charity Singleton Craig 5 Comments

Farmacology bowls on stone wall

What’s good for the land—its soil, its vegetation, its animals—is also good for us. Starting September 16, join Charity Singleton Craig for a book club discussion of Daphne Miller’s Farmacology and the connection between farming and health.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Farmacology

Poets and Poems: Ali Nuri and “Rain and Embers”

By Glynn Young 6 Comments

“Rain and Embers” by Ali Nuri is a poetry collection telling a story of flight, a refugee camp, and new existence where past and present are never separate.

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

Poetry Prompt: Your Queen Mab—What Helps Or Haunts You?

By Callie Feyen 1 Comment

Brilliant Purple Flower Haunts

Join author Callie Feyen as she shares an excerpt from The Teacher Diaries, and explores the dreams we have that both help and haunt us.

Filed Under: Blog, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare, shakespeare sonnets, The Teacher Diaries, william shakespeare, writer's group resources, Writing, writing prompt, writing prompts

Naomi Shihab Nye: Young People’s Poet Laureate

By Megan Willome 7 Comments

Naomi Shihab Nye

Author Megan Willome takes a trip to the library with Young People’s Poet Laureate Naomi Shihab Nye. Refreshments will be served.

Filed Under: Childhood Poems, children, Children's Activities, Children's Authors, Children's Poetry, Children's Stories

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