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Top 10 Poems by Invitation

By Will Willingham 4 Comments

Top 10 Poems by Invitation - mail slot on brick wall

Have you tried our 5-day poetry prompt mini-series? We’re featuring 10 of our favorite community contributions based on prompts from How to Write a Poem.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Poem, Poems, poetry prompt

Poets and Poems: Leon Stokesbury and “You Are Here”

By Glynn Young 8 Comments

Twilight field Leon Stokesbury

“You Are Here” by Leon Stokesbury combines new poems and previously published poems to provide insight, emotion, and even humor.

Filed Under: Blog, Funny Poems, Humorous Poems, Poems, Poems about poetry, poetry, poetry humor, poetry reviews, Poets

Jen Karetnick: Pondering the Often Invisible

By Glynn Young 6 Comments

Seashore Jen Karetnick

In two new poetry collections, poet Jen Karetnick asks us to consider the reality behind what is often invisible, be it illness or climate change.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Fishing Poems, Nature Poems, Poems, poetry reviews, Poets, Sea Poems

More than a Broken Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen

By Glynn Young 10 Comments

Red Sky Leonard Cohen

Songwriter Leonard Cohen is also a poet, and in “Songs and Poems, ” he mixes song lyrics with poetry, suggesting there’s little difference.

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Books, love poems, Music, Music Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Top 10 Best Science Poems

By Will Willingham 8 Comments

Top 10 Science Poems - bottle at Heidleberg Apothacary Museum

Is it possible that without science there might be no poetry? Or could the opposite be true? Test the hypothesis with 10 best science poems.

Filed Under: Poems, poetry, Poetry at Work, Science Poems

Coloring Page Poems: The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Longfellow The Tide Rises coloring page - boat by seaside

Our coloring page poems series brings the fun stress relief of coloring pages and poetry together, today with Longfellow’s “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls.”

Filed Under: Blog, Coloring Page Poems, Nature Poems, Poems, Sea Poems

A Mistake Becomes a Discovery: John Holmes

By Glynn Young 5 Comments

John Holmes

A wrong shipment by Amazon turned into a discovery of poet John Holmes (1904-1962), who wrote his own poetry and encouraged other poets.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Top 10 Best Tea Poems

By Will Willingham 15 Comments

Tea Poems - gold rimmed elegant teacup

Tea and poetry go together like sand and surf, like wine and cheese, like Bogey and Bacall. Or is it the other way around? Enjoy these 10 best tea poems…

Filed Under: Blog, Poems, poetry, Tea, Tea Poems

Reading ‘Spoon River Anthology’ for the Third Time

By Glynn Young 8 Comments

Spoon River Anthology

“Spoon River Anthology” is one of the great works of American literature, and reading it a third time yields new insights.

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Books, Classic Poetry, Poems, Poems about poetry, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Norman Nicholson: Poetry of Landscape and the Environment

By Glynn Young 7 Comments

Norman Nicholson

British poet Norman Nicholson deserves to be remembered for his beautiful poems of the Cumbrian and western Lake District landscape.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Nature Poems, Poems, Poets

Finding Edna and Winifred in the Antique Shop

By Glynn Young 20 Comments

For 75 cents, Glynn Young purchases a book of poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay and considers both the poet and the woman who wrote her name on the inside cover.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Classic Books, Poems, poetry, Poets

Poets and Poems: Tina Barry and “Mall Flower”

By Glynn Young 9 Comments

In “Mall Flower, ” poet and writer Tina Barry combines poetry and short fiction to tell the story of a life – childhood, youth, and adulthood.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Poems, poetry, Poetry for Life, poetry reviews, Poets

Take Your Poet to Work: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

By Will Willingham 11 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow cover

Just one more week until Take Your Poet to Work Day. For our final addition to our poet collection for 2016, meet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching Resources, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Poems, poetry, poetry teaching resources, Take Your Poet to Work Day

British Poetry, British Poets, and Brexit

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

Can you imagine NBC or Fox holding a vote on America’s favorite poets? The British, however, take their poetry seriously and news coverage of Brexit is no exception.

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Poems, poetry, poetry news, Poets

How to Write a Poem in the Classroom: A Teacher’s Secret Tool

By Joel Jacobson 16 Comments

Red and White flower-How to Write a Poem

High school English teacher Joel Jacobson shares his experience teaching a new advanced creative writing class using Tania Runyan’s How to Write a Poem. (Features student poems.)

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching, English Teaching Resources, How to Write a Poem, Poems, poetry, poetry teaching resources, Student Writing

Take Your Poet to Work: Judith Wright

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day Judith Wright cover

Take Your Poet to Work Day is coming on the third Wednesday in July. For 2016, that’s July 20! This week, meet Australian poet and activist Judith Wright.

Filed Under: Australian Poets, Blog, Judith Wright, Poems, poetry, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Canada’s 2016 Griffin Prize: Norman Dubie and Liz Howard

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

Canada’s 2016 Griffin Prize was awarded to Norman Dubie for “The Quotations of Bone” and Liz Howard for “Infinite Citizen of the Shaking Tent.”

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Books, Poems, poetry news, poetry reviews, Poets

Take Your Poet to Work: Emily Brontë

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day Emily Brontë cover

Take Your Poet to Work Day is coming on the third Wednesday in July. For 2016, that’s July 20! This week, meet English poet Emily Brontë.

Filed Under: Blog, Emily Brontë, Poems, poetry, poetry teaching resources, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Understanding the Life and Art of William Blake

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

Two books on William Blake, “Eternity’s Sunrise” by Leo Damrosch and “Blake: A Biography” by Peter Ackroyd, provide an in-depth look at the artist and poet.

Filed Under: Art, Blog, book reviews, Books, London, Poems, poetry, Poets

Take Your Poet to Work: Seamus Heaney

By Will Willingham 9 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day Seamus Heaney cover

Take Your Poet to Work Day is coming on the third Wednesday in July. For 2016, that’s July 20! This week, meet Irish poet Seamus Heaney.

Filed Under: Blog, Nature Poems, Poems, poetry, Seamus Heaney, Take Your Poet to Work Day

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