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Poet-a-Day: Meet Rick Maxson

By Tania Runyan 5 Comments

Richard Maxson

When Rick Maxson heard his wife singing, in a rare moment of freedom from pain, it needed a poem to hold his wonder. It needed a rondeau.

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

The Joyful Partnership of Poetry & Memoir Workshop—3-part, self-paced

Wheat Berries Cherries Strawberries

A Poetry and Memoir Workshop The Joyful Partnership of Poetry & Memoir is a self-paced course designed by author Megan Willome, to inspire your memoir writing and help you find the best form—poetry or prose—for any given story your heart needs to tell (and the world needs to hear). The course is offered in 3 […]

Poet-a-Day: Meet Megan Willome

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Red Poppies At Mile 37 poem

When you’re going round in grief, the rondeau might be your poetic form. Megan Willome found hers at mile 37.

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

Poetry Prompt: Notebooks Trying To Tell

By Callie Feyen 4 Comments

What have you been trying to tell yourself? Callie Feyen finds patterns, threads, and whispers in an old journal and “Kristin Lavransdatter.”

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

Reading Generously: The Great Gatsby Poetry

By Megan Willome 9 Comments

Pontiac GTO

In her new edition, Tania Runyan says ‘The Great Gatsby’ might as well be poetry. Megan Willome puts that assertion to the poetic test.

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Classic Books, Reading Generously, The Great Gatsby

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

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

Poets and Poems: Brad Lussier and “How Does He Love Me?”

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

The 47 sonnets of “How Does He Love Me?” by Brad Lussier remind us that love is transcendent, eternal and unchanging.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, love poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets, Sonnets

Book Club: Meet the Great Gatsby Characters—Couches Included!

By Tania Runyan 10 Comments

Gatsby Mansion Long Island

In the first installment of our book club, Tania Runyan introduces The Great Gatsby characters—human and otherwise—and invites readers to a Gatsby sestina.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Patron Only, Sestina, The Great Gatsby

Road Trip!—Great Poets Read for National Poetry Month

By T.S. Poetry 4 Comments

Midwest Missouri Bluffs Road Trip Poems

Take a poetic trip with this fine group of talented poets—in a capstone evening reading event for National Poetry Month. Bring your travel mug and keys!

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, National Poetry Month

Poet-a-Day: Meet Dheepa Maturi

By Tania Runyan 10 Comments

Indian classical dance

What if you have no words for a layered, mysterious experience? The ghazal might be just your form. It was for Dheepa Maturi, who speaks through dance.

Filed Under: Blog, Ghazal Poems, National Poetry Month, Poet-a-Day

Poet-a-Day: Meet Ashley M. Jones

By Tania Runyan 13 Comments

Birmingham Skyline View From Quarry

What can the villanelle offer a poet? Ashley M. Jones has a suggestion—and a container for obsession or sorrow.

Filed Under: Black Poets, Blog, English Teaching, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles, writer's group resources

National Poetry Month: How to Write a Form Poem!

By T.S. Poetry 5 Comments

How to Write a Form Poem Porch

Looking for a wonderful book to inspire you this National Poetry Month? Try out ‘How to Write a Form Poem: A Guided Tour of 10 Fabulous Forms.’

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

National Poetry Month: Giving Gatsby the Green Light

By Tania Runyan 20 Comments

Gatsby Kindle on Table

This National Poetry Month, join Tania Runyan to take a poetic twist on Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby in our in our new book club.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Classic Books, English Teaching Resources, National Poetry Month, Patron Only

How to Write a Form Poem: A Guided Tour of 10 Fabulous Forms

By Leave a Comment

How to Write a Form Poem Cover-367

An inspiring poetry handbook Are you looking for a poetry handbook—one that will spark your imagination and guide you in the pleasures of writing poetry with heart and soul? Explore this inspiring “workshop in a book.” No matter your level, you can make poems that express more deeply and impact more richly. Poems to keep. […]

Poets and Poems: Chandra Gurung and “My Father’s Face”

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

The 47 poems of “My Father’s Face” by Chandra Gurung point to the contradictions of life inherent in all cultures and societies.

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

Children’s Book Club: ‘And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon’

By Megan Willome Leave a Comment

series of green dunes

Why learn nursery rhymes? For the jokes! Join our Children’s Book Club as we read “And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon.”

Filed Under: A Story in Every Soul, Children's Book Club, Children's Poetry, Children's Stories, Mother Goose

Lord of the Flies: Simon Writes Home

By Tania Runyan Leave a Comment

Twelve Apostles National Park Lord of the Flies

Not all the boys on the island will admit it, but homesickness is one of the greatest challenges the Lord of the Flies characters face. Poet Tania Runyan and the boys of the island explore a “letters home” epistolary poetry prompt.

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching Resources, Lord of the Flies, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writing prompt

Poetry Prompt: Small Things

By Callie Feyen 6 Comments

When feelings are wild, how do you do to help them find a story?

Join author Callie Feyen as she acknowledges some beastly feelings, and through the gift of small things, turns them into poetry.

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

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