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Search Results for: shakespeare

Between Friends: The Making of a Heroine

By Callie Feyen Leave a Comment

Romeo and Juliet red flowers

In this excerpt from Romeo & Juliet (the full play—includes essays and annotations by Callie Feyen), Feyen talks about finding yourself in a story, even when you’re not sure you want to.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Friendship Activities and Prompts, Friendship Project, Patron Only, Romeo and Juliet

How We Spent Our Take Your Poet to Work Day

By Will Willingham 3 Comments

Take Your Poet to Work Day Bird Bath

The results of a 6-year double-blind, super-sticky study are in: from Hoagland and Oliver to Shakespeare and Poe, poets are bringing happiness to the workplace.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Take Your Poet to Work Day: W. S. Merwin

By Will Willingham 1 Comment

Take Your Poet to Work W. S. Merwin

We’re getting ready to celebrate Take Your Poet to Work Day! Our 2019 poet collection features recently lost American national treasures like W. S. Merwin.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day, W. S. Merwin

Take Your Poet to Work Day: Mary Oliver

By Will Willingham 2 Comments

Mary Oliver Take Your Poet to Work Day

We’re getting ready to celebrate Take Your Poet to Work Day! Our 2019 poet collection features recently lost American national treasures like Mary Oliver.

Filed Under: Blog, Mary Oliver, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Take Your Poet to Work Day: Tony Hoagland

By Will Willingham 1 Comment

Tony Hoagland Take Your Poet to Work Cover

We’re getting ready to celebrate Take Your Poet to Work Day! Our 2019 poet collection features recently lost American national treasures like Tony Hoagland.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day, Tony Hoagland

Take Your Poet to Work Day: C. D. Wright

By Will Willingham 5 Comments

C.D. Wright cover

We’re getting ready to celebrate Take Your Poet to Work Day! Our 2019 poet collection kicks off with with American poet C. D. Wright.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day

Poets and Poems: Shanna Powlus Wheeler and “Evensong for Shadows”

By Glynn Young 1 Comment

Thistles Evensong for Shadows Wheeler

Shanna Powlus Wheeler’s first full poetry collection, “Evensong for Shadows,” suggests the omnipresence of grief — a measure of the loss of love or happiness or relationship, and very much a part of life.

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

Book Club Announcement: How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci

By Will Willingham 5 Comments

Don’t know much about the Renaissance? Not to worry. Join LW Willingham for a bit of exploration and curiosity in a new book club on How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci, Patron Only

Reader, Come Home: “Little Rhymes for Lowly Plants”

By Megan Willome 6 Comments

Reader Come Home

Join us for deep reading with author Megan Willome as we discuss a poetry collection about plants for Poetic Earth Month. And share your March pages for our Reader, Come Home column.

Filed Under: nature, Nature Poems, Poems, Poetic Earth Month, Reader Come Home

Sun and Moon Poems: Night Poetry Prompt

By Callie Feyen 7 Comments

Join author Callie Feyen as she confesses her fear of teaching Romeo and Juliet, and realizes there is much more to see than what she’s afraid of.

Filed Under: English Teaching, English Teaching Resources, Night Poems, Poetry Classroom, poetry teaching resources, Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare, writer's group resources, Writing, writing prompt, writing prompts

It’s Take Your Poet to School Week!

By Will Willingham 1 Comment

Take your Poet to School Week girl on swing

Join teachers, students and librarians around the globe to kick off National Poetry Month with the fun and delight of Take Your Poet to School Week, including our favorites, Talk Like a Poet Day and Poet in a Cupcake Day!

Filed Under: National Poetry Month, Take Your Poet to School Week

Another Poetry at Work Day is in the Books

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Poetry at Work Day snow and clouds

Another Poetry at Work Day is in the books. Come see how we celebrated all around the world.

Filed Under: Blog, Poetry at Work, Poetry at Work Day

Cross-Generational Friendships: Where’s My Daughter? Call Her Forth

By Callie Feyen 3 Comments

Beautiful Red Leaves Juliet Thoughts

One glimmering night, three generations, and a whole lot of love—with a little Shakespeare to flavor the memory. From author Callie Feyen.

Filed Under: Blog, Cross-Generational Friendships, Friendship Project, Patron Only, Shakespeare, The Teacher Diaries

It’s Random Acts of Poetry Day!

By Will Willingham 7 Comments

Do some good in the world today—and maybe change the course of someone’s life. Celebrate Random Acts of Poetry Day by sharing a poem, or listening for one.

Filed Under: Blog, random acts of poetry

A Poem in Every Heart: John Borling, John McCain and the Hanoi Hilton

By Sandra Heska King 24 Comments

A Poem in Every Heart John McCain bamboo leaves

The late John McCain and his fellow prisoners of war tapped poetry and story between the walls of their cells, making a poem in every heart (and a story in every soul) a key to helping each other live.

Filed Under: A Poem in Every Heart, Blog, Poems, poetry

Reading in the Wild: August’s Pages

By Megan Willome 17 Comments

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

Filed Under: Blog, Book Love, Literacy for Life, Reading in the Wild, Shakespeare

World War I: Mary Borden – Nurse, Novelist, Poet

By Glynn Young 6 Comments

Poppies Mary Borden World War I

American Mary Borden married a missionary, financed a hospital in World War I France, had an affair, published novels — and wrote poetry.

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

A Strangely Contemporary Verse Play: “Murder in the Cathedral” by T.S. Eliot

By Glynn Young 7 Comments

Tree in Snow Eliot Murder in the Cathedral

“Murder in the Cathedral” by T.S. Eliot, written and produced in 1935, was one of the last verse plays written for the stage. It is also oddly contemporary.

Filed Under: article, Books, Britain, Classic Plays, Play, poetry, Poets, T.S. Eliot

Poetry Prompt: Find a Farm Skeleton

By Callie Feyen 15 Comments

Creative nonfiction writer, Callie Feyen, takes help from poet Tania Runyan to try to write farm poetry. Come along and craft your own (with or without the talking goat.)

Filed Under: Blog, Farm Poems, How to Write a Poem, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

Take Your Poet to Work Day: How Poets Work

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Geauxsicle popsicle street art Take Your Poet to Work Day

We celebrated the 6th annual Take Your Poet to Work Day this week. Check out the ways we found our poets working away the day.

Filed Under: Blog, Take Your Poet to Work Day

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