Tweetspeak Poetry

  • Home
  • FREE prompts
  • Earth Song
  • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • Teaching Tools
  • Books, Etc.
  • Patron Love

Book Club: The Art of Gathering: Ending and Reentry

By Will Willingham 8 Comments

The Art of Gathering sea shell in sunset

As we close our book club discussion of Priya Parker’s The Art of Gathering, we consider the closing of our events, and how to end well.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, The Art of Gathering

Book Club: The Art of Gathering: Making (and Breaking) Rules

By Will Willingham 11 Comments

Art of Gathering Barn Dance

In this week’s book club discussion of Priya Parker’s The Art of Gathering, we consider how rules can provide the structure needed to make events more experimental, whimsical and democratic.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, The Art of Gathering

Book Club: The Art of Gathering—The Kindness of Exclusion (or, Not)

By Will Willingham 27 Comments

The Art of Gathering

We begin our book club discussion of Priya Parker’s The Art of Gathering with a look at the purpose of our gatherings and the need that sometimes arises to exclude, with kindness.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, The Art of Gathering

Book Club Announcement: Priya Parker’s The Art of Gathering

By Will Willingham 12 Comments

Class of Wistaria Tea House

Priya Parker encourages us to create meaningful, transformative gatherings that shape “the way we think, feel, and make sense of our world.” Join us for our latest book club discussion of The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, The Art of Gathering

Born to Be Good: Laughter Might Be the Best Medicine

By Will Willingham 11 Comments

Born to Be Good toddler laughing

Come laugh with us as we wrap up our book club discussion of Dacher Keltner’s Born to Be Good.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Born to Be Good

Born to Be Good: The Right Kind of Smile

By Will Willingham 12 Comments

Born to be good smiling women

The smile is like social chocolate. Join us for this week’s book club discussion of Dacher Keltner’s Born to Be Good: The Science of a Meaningful Life.

Filed Under: book club, Born to Be Good

Children’s Book Club: “Days of the Blackbird”

By Megan Willome 11 Comments

How do we survive the coldest days of winter? With a blackbird! Join us as we read Tomie dePaola’s “Days of the Blackbird” with Megan Willome as our guide.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, book reviews, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Children's Stories

Born To Be Good: The Jen Ratio

By Will Willingham 11 Comments

Born to be Good book club - glasses and pear

In our first Born To Be Good book club discussion, Dacher Keltner introduces the jen ratio, a means of measuring the “millisecond manifestations of human goodness.”

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Born to Be Good

Book Club Announcement: Born to Be Good

By Will Willingham 10 Comments

Born to Be Good book club blond toddler with jewelry box

Join us for our upcoming book club where we’ll be discussing Dacher Keltner’s Born to Be Good: The Science of a Meaningful Life, and the way that positive emotions define our humanity and contribute to the common good.

Filed Under: book club, Born to Be Good

Storm in a Teacup: One Thing You Can’t Do While Spinning

By Will Willingham 4 Comments

Storm in a Teacup book club spinning

We conclude our book club discussion of Helen Czerski’s Storm in a Teacup with a look at straight lines and spinning, and a dizzying trip into space.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Storm In a Teacup

Storm in a Teacup: Slowing to the Speed of Tea

By Will Willingham 20 Comments

Slowing to the Speed of Tea floating tea kettle

In this week’s book club discussion of Helen Czerski’s Storm in a Teacup, we consider the importance of time, speed, and certain substances we’d rather not mention.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, poetry prompt, Science Poems, writing prompt

Storm in a Teacup: Rocket Post & The Ideal Gas Law

By Will Willingham 8 Comments

Storm in a Teacup Book Club blue hood ornament

Today we knock around with gas molecules and imagine flights of fancy with Gerhard Zucker’s rocket post mail delivery in our first book club discussion of Storm in a Teacup.

Filed Under: Animate, Blog, book club, Storm In a Teacup

Book Club Announcement: Storm in a Teacup: The Physics of Everyday Life

By Will Willingham 5 Comments

Storm in a Teacup book club announcement

Join us beginning November 1 for a “romp through the physical world” in our upcoming book club on Helen Czerski’s Storm In A Teacup: The Physics of Everyday Life.

Filed Under: book club, Storm In a Teacup

Children’s Book Club: “One Grain of Rice: A Mathematical Folktale”

By Megan Willome 16 Comments

Math can be beautiful, especially with tigers and elephants and gold. Join us as we read ‘One Grain of Rice’ with Megan Willome as our guide. Plus, get more great math title recommendations!

Filed Under: Blog, book club, children, Children's Authors, Children's Stories, Chocolate, Math-Science-Technology

Children’s Book Club: “The Buffalo Storm”

By Megan Willome 39 Comments

Literacy starts with children’s books. Join the inaugural edition of our children’s book club as we read ‘The Buffalo Storm’ with Megan Willome as our guide.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Children's Stories, Literacy, Literacy for Life, Literacy Starts With Love, Read for Fun

Last Child in the Woods: Place-Based Education

By Will Willingham 9 Comments

Last Child in the Woods garden

Can taking the classroom outside help students learn? Richard Louv says yes in our final discussion of Last Child in the Woods.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Last Child in the Woods, nature

Last Child in the Woods: Afraid of the Great Outdoors

By Will Willingham 10 Comments

Last Child in the Woods owl in tree

In this week’s discussion of Last Child in the Woods we consider the way fear removes us from nature, and how a desire to protect nature can contribute to that fear.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Last Child in the Woods, nature

Last Child in the Woods: Green Space

By Will Willingham 13 Comments

Last Child in the Woods Green Space

In Last Child in the Woods, Richard Louv makes the case for the importance of interaction with nature on our physical and emotional well-being.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Last Child in the Woods

Book Club Announcement: Last Child in the Woods

By Will Willingham 9 Comments

Last Child in the Woods book club autum leaves

Join us for our upcoming book club on Richard Louv’s Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Last Child in the Woods

The Wild Swans: The Patience of Water

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

The Wild Swans book club

We wrap up our group reading of The Wild Swans by Jackie Morris, considering the patience of water and things to which we will give long years of our lives.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Fairytales, The Wild Swans

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Take How to Read a Poem

Get the Introduction, the Billy Collins poem, and Chapter 1

get the sample now

Welcome to Tweetspeak

New to Tweetspeak Poetry? Start here, in The Mischief Café. You're a regular? Check out our May Menu

Patron Love

❤️

Welcome a little patron love, when you help keep the world poetic.

The Graphic Novel

"Stunning, heartbreaking, and relevant illustrations"

Callie Feyen, teacher

read a summary of The Yellow Wallpaper

meet The Yellow Wallpaper characters

How to Write Poetry

Your Comments

  • Bethany R. on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa
  • L.L. Barkat on Poet Laura: Gardens and Grandpa
  • Meera on “David Copperfield”: Why Charles Dickens Has Endured
  • An Anthology on Reading and Writing Poetry - Tweetspeak Poetry on “Poetry: A Survivor’s Guide” by Mark Yakich

Featured In

We're happy to have been featured in...

The Huffington Post

The Paris Review

The New York Observer

Tumblr Book News

Stay in Touch With Us

Categories

Learn to Write Form Poems

How to Write an Acrostic

How to Write a Ballad

How to Write a Catalog Poem

How to Write a Ghazal

How to Write a Haiku

How to Write an Ode

How to Write a Pantoum

How to Write a Rondeau

How to Write a Sestina

How to Write a Sonnet

How to Write a Villanelle

5 FREE POETRY PROMPTS

Get 5 FREE inbox poetry prompts from the popular book How to Write a Poem

Shakespeare Resources

Poetry Classroom: Sonnet 18

Common Core Picture Poems: Sonnet 73

Sonnet 104 Annotated

Sonnet 116 Annotated

Character Analysis: Romeo and Juliet

Character Analysis: Was Hamlet Sane or Insane?

Why Does Hamlet Wait to Kill the King?

10 Fun Shakespeare Resources

About Shakespeare: Poet and Playwright

Top 10 Shakespeare Sonnets

See all 154 Shakespeare sonnets in our Shakespeare Library!

Explore Work From Black Poets

About Us

  • • A Blessing for Writers
  • • Our Story
  • • Meet Our Team
  • • Literary Citizenship
  • • Poet Laura
  • • Poetry for Life: The 5 Vital Approaches
  • • T. S. Poetry Press – All Books
  • • Contact Us

Write With Us

  • • 5 FREE Poetry Prompts-Inbox Delivery
  • • 30 Days to Richer Writing Workshop
  • • Poetry Prompts
  • • Submissions
  • • The Write to Poetry

Read With Us

  • • All Our Books
  • • Book Club
  • • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • • Literacy Extras
  • • Poems to Listen By: Audio Series
  • • Poet-a-Day
  • • Poets and Poems
  • • 50 States Projects
  • • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Poems Library
  • • Edgar Allan Poe Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Blake Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Shakespeare Sonnet Library

Celebrate With Us

  • • Poem on Your Pillow Day
  • • Poetic Earth Month
  • • Poet in a Cupcake Day
  • • Poetry at Work Day
  • • Random Acts of Poetry Day
  • • Take Your Poet to School Week
  • • Take Your Poet to Work Day

Gift Ideas

  • • Every Day Poems
  • • Our Shop
  • • Everybody Loves a Book!

Connect

  • • Donate
  • • Blog Buttons
  • • By Heart
  • • Shop for Tweetspeak Fun Stuff

Copyright © 2025 Tweetspeak Poetry · FAQ, Disclosure & Privacy Policy