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Search Results for: reader come home

Poets and Poems: Karen Paul Holmes and “No Such Thing as Distance”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

Mountain sunrise Karen Paul Holmes

In her new poetry collection “No Such Thing as Distance,” what matters most to Karen Paul Holmes, both in her head and her heart, is family.

Filed Under: article, Family Poems, Family Ties, Poems, poetry reviews, Poets

Take Your Poet to School Week: Eugene Field, the Poet of Childhood

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

Girl with puppy Eugene Field

Eugene Field is perhaps the perfect poet for Take Your Poet to School Week. It was the schoolchildren of St. Louis who saved his house from demolition.

Filed Under: article, children, Children's Poetry, Children's Stories, Funny Poems, Poems, Poetry Classroom, poetry humor, Poets, Take Your Poet to School Week

Finding Jack Gilbert and “Refusing Heaven” in a Bookstore

By Glynn Young 11 Comments

Tree and sky Jack Gilbert Refusing Heaven

Finding “Refusing Heaven” by Jack Gilbert in a Chicago-area bookstore leads to a consideration of what matters in these lives we live.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, bookseller, Jack Gilbert, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

What Poems Are Good For (Or, What to Read When You Can’t)

By Will Willingham 15 Comments

What to Read park bench with leaf

What does a person read when a whole books feels like too great a commitment? This is what poems are for (well, one thing).

Filed Under: poetry, Reading and Books

Poets and Poems: Clive James and “Injury Time”

By Glynn Young Leave a Comment

Bush in snow Clive James Injury Time

Once told he had only months to live, Clive James wrote a book of poetry. The months became years, and now he’s written another, “Injury Time.”

Filed Under: Poets

Children’s Book Club: “Owl Moon”

By Megan Willome 21 Comments

Quiet, now. Let’s bundle up and pay attention. Join us as we read Jane Yolen’s “Owl Moon” with Megan Willome as our guide.

Filed Under: Blog, Children's Book Club, Children's Poetry, Children's Stories, Reading and Books

Poets and Poems: Michael Pedersen and “Oyster”

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

Man in park Michael Pederson Oyster

“Oyster” by Scottish poet Michael Pedersen is a jarring, irreverent poetry collection that wallops you with unexpected tenderness.

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

Children’s Book Club: “The Tin Forest”

By Megan Willome 26 Comments

From garbage, hope can grow — a forest filled with toucans, tree frogs, and tigers. Join us as we read “The Tin Forest ” with Megan Willome as our guide.

Filed Under: Art, Blog, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Finding Inspiration, nature-deficit disorder, Read, Read for Fun, Reading and Books

Tea Quest: Anchor and Anvil Coffee Bar

By Laura Lynn Brown 13 Comments

Pittsburgh Tea Quest

Laura Lynn Brown’s Pittsburgh tea quest continues with a stop at Anchor and Anvil Coffee Bar, where a person can throw down a “Parking Chair” and celebrate Sconehenge.

Filed Under: Blog, Coffee and Tea, Pittsburgh Literary, Tea, Tea Quest

Through the Looking Glass: Creative Writing Workshop

By Megan Willome 8 Comments

Wonderland Jakob Lawitzki

Children’s stories lead us into our most imaginative selves. Come kindle your curiosity, encourage your whimsy, spark your creativity, and find new ways to think and be, in this inspiring writing workshop that uses children’s stories, as well as grownup’s stories, to take you through the looking glass.

Filed Under: Blog, Workshops

Poets and Poems: Simon Armitage Translates “Pearl”

By Glynn Young 9 Comments

Tree in field Armitage Pearl

British poet Simon Armitage has translated the late Middle English poem “Pearl,” a beautiful poem about a father’s grief and how he resolves it.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, Britain, Classic Poetry, Grief Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Regional Tour: Booklover Footloose in Wonderland (Yellowstone National Park)

By Laurie Klein 14 Comments

Regional Tour Yellowstone

Laurie Klein takes us on a breathtaking regional (and literary) tour of Yellowstone National Park, complete with geysers, thermophiles and the Morning Glory Pool.

Filed Under: Blog, Regional Tour

Reading in the Wild: October’s Pages

By Megan Willome 13 Comments

Come learn the secrets of being a wild reader. Or just share your October pages. Megan Willome leads the way, with her October good reads.

Filed Under: Become a Better Writer, Blog, Children's Authors, Classic Books, Fiction, Literacy for Life, Reading in the Wild

Poe, Rilke, and Our Black Cat

By Glynn Young 16 Comments

Halloween black cat

This Halloween, your black cat can be the instrument of vengeance in the Poe story, or the amber-eyed feline in the poem by Rilke. Or it can be like Kiddy.

Filed Under: Animal Poems, article, Cat Poems, Halloween Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry humor, Poets

From I Hate to Cook to the Joy of Cooking: A Writer’s Favorite Cookbooks

By Laura L. Willis 26 Comments

Favorite Cookbooks muffins in pan

Laura Willis shares her favorite cookbooks, along with memories of the cookbooks that warmed her mother’s and grandmothers’ kitchens.

Filed Under: Blog, Cookbooks

Poets and Poems: Luke Kennard and “Cain”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

Cain by Luke Kennard

In “Cain: Poems,” British poet Luke Kennard has brought the biblical character of Cain into contemporary life, with funny and poignant results.

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

The Mythic and Heroic: “The Song of Hiawatha” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

By Glynn Young 7 Comments

Mountains Hiawatha by Longfellow

“The Song of Hiawatha” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is a beautiful story about a heroic leader who loses what he holds most dear.

Filed Under: Americana Poems, article, book reviews, Epic Poetry, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Poets and Poems: John Latham and “From Professor Murasaki’s Notebooks”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

Sea and sunset John Latham

The poems of “From Professor Murasaki’s Notebooks” by John Latham linger in the mind, and in the heart, long after the reading is done.

Filed Under: article, Blog, love poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets, Science Poems

Life Notes: Notes from an Urban Cabin # 19

By Laura Lynn Brown 12 Comments

Laura Lynn Brown writes about unexpected life in her urban cabin and a cat-and-mouse game. What happened to the peanut butter in the traps?

Filed Under: Blog, Life Notes

The Poetry of the Visiting Card: Miss Jennie Todt meets Catherina Gerhard

By Glynn Young 8 Comments

Wrought iron visiting cards

A visiting card in an 1899 edition of “Longfellow’s Complete Poems” leads to stories of German immigrants, St. Louis history, and even beer.

Filed Under: Americana Poems, article, Books, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Poems, poetry

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