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Search Results for: haiku

Poet-a-Day: Meet Celia Lisset Alvarez

By Tania Runyan 8 Comments

Florida Palm Trees

Why write a sestina? Direct from Florida, poet Celia Lisset Alvarez gives you a few fabulous reasons.

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

Poet-a-Day: Meet David K. Wheeler

By Tania Runyan 4 Comments

Wallace Idaho waterfall Poet-a-Day David K. Wheeler

How best to write tragedy? Poet David K. Wheeler suggests the soft sorrow of the pantoum.

Filed Under: Americana Poems, Blog, English Teaching Resources, Grief Poems, How to Write a Form Poem, Pantoum, Pantoum Poems, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, writer's group resources

50 States of Generosity: Wyoming

By Megan Willome 16 Comments

Red Gulch Wyoming

We continue our 50 States of Generosity series with a focus on Wyoming and its state fish: the cutthroat trout. Plus a poetry prompt!

Filed Under: 50 States, Blog, Fishing Poems, nature, Nature Poems

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. […]

50 States of Generosity: New York

By Megan Willome 18 Comments

Adirondacks Lake and Pine Trees Poetry Prompt

We begin our 50 States of Generosity series with a focus on New York and its state bird: the Eastern bluebird.

Filed Under: 50 States, Bird Poems, Blog, Generous, poetry prompt, writing prompt, writing prompts

Robert Hudson Explains the House Fly — and Poetry

By Glynn Young 5 Comments

In “The Poet and the Fly,” Robert Hudson considers seven poets and how they used the common house fly to develop their themes.

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

A Ritual to Read to Each Other: ‘A River Runs Through It’

By Megan Willome 4 Comments

Norman Maclean

What makes a story true? We head west for our A Ritual to Read column and enter the river of mystery that is ‘A River Runs Through It.’

Filed Under: A Ritual to Read to Each Other, A Story in Every Soul, Blog, Fiction

10 Ways to Be a Totally Epic Literary Citizen

By L.L. Barkat 6 Comments

Maybe you’ve heard the concept of being a literary citizen? We’re taking it further, making it epic and inspiring. Come along if you want to dream and *be.*

Filed Under: Blog, Literary Citizen

Take Your Poet to Work Day: Zoom Pandemic Edition

By Will Willingham 8 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day Zoom

When poets celebrate Take Your Poet to Work Day during a pandemic, it’s likely total pandemonium. Join Lucille Clifton, William Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson & more in a Zoom chat.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Take Your Poet to Work Day: Tania Runyan

By Will Willingham Leave a Comment

Tania Runyan Take Your Poet to Work Day Cover

Our 2020 Take Your Poet to Work Day ready-for-work poet collection features our first living poet, Tweetspeak’s Poet Laura, Tania Runyan.

Filed Under: Blog, poetry and business, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Poets and Poems: Jessica De Guyat and “Fording the Stream”

By Glynn Young 1 Comment

The poetry collection “Fording the Stream” by British poet Jessica De Guyat is centered in the idea of place, be it Lindisfarne, Iona, or the French Midi.

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

Take Your Poet to Work Day: Countee Cullen

By Will Willingham Leave a Comment

Countee Cullen Take Your Poet to Work Day

We continue our 2020 Take Your Poet to Work celebration with fabulous poet Countee Cullen.

Filed Under: Black Poets, Blog, Countee Cullen, poetry and business, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Your Poet Laura Has Been Up to Something (About Form Poetry)

By Tania Runyan 12 Comments

Rock line on beach

Tweetspeak’s official Poet Laura, Tania Runyan, has been hard at work finishing up her latest title, How to Write a Form Poem. Get a sneak peek at what’s coming.

Filed Under: How to Write a Form Poem, Poet Laura

Take Your Poet to Work: Lucille Clifton

By Will Willingham 1 Comment

Lucille Clifton Take Your Poet to Work Day Cover

We kick off the 2020 Take Your Poet to Work celebration with beloved poet Lucille Clifton.

Filed Under: Black Poets, Blog, Lucille Clifton, poetry and business, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Grief, a Leaf, and Haibun Magic

By Michelle Rinaldi Ortega 18 Comments

how to write a haibun fall leaf

Through a time of grief, Michelle Ortega discovered the haibun, and its interplay with haiku and prose poem forms, offered a place of reflection and healing.

Filed Under: Blog, Grief Poems, Haibun, Haiku

Pooh, On Poetry

By Megan Willome 6 Comments

football

Author Megan Willome takes poetry advice from Winnie-the-Pooh and revises a poem.

Filed Under: Childhood Poems, children, Children's Authors, Children's Poetry, poetry, poetry prompt

Children’s Book Club: ‘The Poet X’ by Elizabeth Acevedo

By Megan Willome Leave a Comment

spoken word poetry

For this month’s Children’s Book Club, author Megan Willome discusses the power of spoken word poetry to tell a story in a YA novel by Elizabeth Acevedo.

Filed Under: A Story in Every Soul, book reviews, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Poets, Spoken Word Poems

Poetry Prompt: Baiku Poems

By Callie Feyen 4 Comments

We have all been thrust into a new season, and it hasn’t been easy (to say the least). Callie Feyen introduces us to baiku, a haiku about saying goodbye. So that we can say hello to the new.

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

Poem Presents—A Poem Is a Gift No Distance Can Erase

By T.S. Poetry 2 Comments

It’s simple to participate. Just find a few poems of beauty, comfort, or hope to share—from a site like Poetry Foundation.

Filed Under: Blog, Every Day Poems, Poem Presents

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