﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[ReVerse]]></title><description><![CDATA[digesting the poetry blogs]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com</link><image><url>https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!NKKP!,w_256,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F19f868d6-f1b8-41e0-bdab-dd3f9e522f22_512x512.png</url><title>ReVerse</title><link>https://davebonta.substack.com</link></image><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2026 07:04:31 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://davebonta.substack.com/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><copyright><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[davebonta@substack.com]]></webMaster><itunes:owner><itunes:email><![CDATA[davebonta@substack.com]]></itunes:email><itunes:name><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></itunes:author><googleplay:owner><![CDATA[davebonta@substack.com]]></googleplay:owner><googleplay:email><![CDATA[davebonta@substack.com]]></googleplay:email><googleplay:author><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></googleplay:author><itunes:block><![CDATA[Yes]]></itunes:block><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 24]]></title><description><![CDATA[a ball and some grass, the uncertain horizon, ghost metaphors, the film of familiarity, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-24</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-24</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 22:54:42 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/01586848-4440-4aa7-8cbf-05f77269ce31_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: a ball and some grass, the uncertain horizon, ghost metaphors, the film of familiarity, and much more. Enjoy</em>.</p><blockquote><p>On this morning&#8217;s walk I stopped<br>to look at a shattered tree trunk<br>in a sunlit clearing in the woods,<br>the ground carpeted with fern and ivy,<br>an audience of light seeking trees<br>circling it, as if some kind of forest magic<br>had just happened there, some rite<br>or ceremony I had only just missed.<br><br>Whimsical? Or perhaps just imaginative?<br>All I know is, in that moment I was my own<br>blessing in the world, my own giver of gifts.<br>I must remember this. Stop. Look. Breathe.</p><p>Lynne Rees, <a href="http://www.lynnerees.com/2026/05/poem-blessing_038380904.html">Poem ~ Blessing</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am astounded by how much rest I need after a weary semester of teaching two Eng 112 classes on top of my normal work hours, fighting an English department&#8217;s compulsory AI use (anyone want some AI-generated sample essays in your course materials?!), publishing seven spring books at <a href="https://riverriverbooks.org/store/?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">River River Books</a> and bookselling at AWP, while parenting a tween and a teen and navigating relationships and small business taxes and&#8212;yes. All of it.</p><p>Conversation with my partner yesterday:</p><p>&#8220;I have been so exhausted.&#8221;</p><p>&#8220;It&#8217;s always like this for you, your first few days. You need to unwind.&#8221;</p><blockquote><p>To resist means to soften into the powerful proposal of thriving right now. Of not waiting for permission from a toxic culture that blocks justice and moves from a spiritually deficient place. [&#8230;] One day I hope we can all deprogram from the lie that rest, silence, and pausing is a luxury and privilege. It is not! The systems manipulated you to believe it is true.</p><p>Tricia Hersey, <em>Rest is Resistance</em></p></blockquote><p>The first full day of my residency was also the first day of my cycle, and the gift of only caring for my body on this day was just&#8212;oh, indescribable. I took naps. I read in bed. I took long walks in the pine woods. I ate half a melon on the veranda while reading more poems (Susan Briante&#8217;s new and selected <em><a href="https://www.noemipress.org/catalog/poetry/13-questions-for-the-next-economy-new-selected/?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">13 Questions for the Next Economy</a></em>, rob mclennan&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.ethelzine.com/the-sentence-of-the-book?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">The Sentence of the Book</a></em>, <em><a href="https://www.blackgarnetbooks.com/item/oR7uwsLR1Xu2xerrvdfsqA?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">Rest is Resistance</a></em>&#8212;SO. GOOD! Also Sei Sh&#333;nagan&#8217;s <em><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pillow_Book?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">The Pillow Book</a></em><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pillow_Book?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest"> </a>in the evening, and some <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hildegard_of_Bingen?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">Hildegard von Bingen</a> while making coffee in the morning&#8212;variety is life!). I watched Jim Jarmusch&#8217;s <em><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paterson_(film)?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">Paterson</a></em> (2016) in the evening while drinking wine in bed. I watched 12 deer in the evening field. I tried to write, and oh, it was not happening&#8212;the essay I planned on working on, the poem notebook. &#8220;The best thing you can do for your writing is something else,&#8221; I reminded myself. My first night, I started reading Charles Wright&#8217;s large collected (not complete) <em><a href="https://www.harvardreview.org/book-review/oblivion-banjo/?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">Oblivion Banjo</a></em>, which daringly opens with &#8220;Homage to Ezra Pound.&#8221; I took a walk in the pine woods and was drenched by a downpour, despite the weather saying it wouldn&#8217;t rain&#8212;don&#8217;t trust technology. &#8220;The rain waters the beans, and it waters me, too,&#8221; writes <a href="https://www.walden.org/collection/journals/?utm_source=poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com&amp;utm_medium=newsletter&amp;utm_campaign=june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">Thoreau</a> in his journal. I think of this line all the time. I didn&#8217;t even take a shower that evening, I was so soaked and washed by the rain. It felt a little like a baptism into the woods and rest.</p><p>I&#8217;m astonished at how empty I am&#8212;how much I need to fill back up. Truly, our bodies are not factories, but flesh and blood and soul.</p><p>Han Vanderhart, <a href="https://poetrynotesfromhan.beehiiv.com/p/june-residency-at-weymouth-center-rest">June Residency (at Weymouth Center) &amp; Rest</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When you have worked with a group of people once you get a real flavour of what else might be fun to do. I felt particularly excited at the thought of working together to create a group poem. This would be an even more dynamic way to celebrate National Poetry Day together because we would then have our own poem to share on the day itself.</p><p>In preparation for my visit I put together a set of my own poems on this year&#8217;s new theme of &#8216;Wonder&#8217;, and thought about an appropriate writing prompt. This time I wanted to do away with pencil and paper and stay in the moment whilst we were sharing creative thinking time, so I decided to record the offered responses. With the group&#8217;s permission I recorded what they were saying in response to different mini prompts. I then took the recordings away so that I could listen and see how the poem itself would emerge for reveal typing up. I discovered that three poems were emerging and the main one was fully formed itself in the voice notes. I am so looking forward to recording it with them in October.</p><p>As we gathered together this time, I thoroughly enjoyed watching everyone settling in. Anthologies of poetry were brought to the circle as well as poetry journals and individual poems. I felt lucky to be invited back to this creative community. This small group made up of lovely individuals is a wonderful place to be. It is enabling me to hear the poetry sets I put together with new ears. It brings the joy of spontaneous conversation and laughter. It is one of those spaces that is fully in the moment.</p><p>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/06/15/donning-the-t-shirt/">DONNING THE T-SHIRT</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Over the weekend I realised I&#8217;d missed the deadline to apply for some work I&#8217;d have loved to do with the Poetry Library, earlier this year were several residencies I drafted applications for but couldn&#8217;t finish in time&#8230; It&#8217;s a particular quality of gutted when it&#8217;s not a case of not being picked, but of not even managing to get your name in the hat.</p><p>And as increasingly it&#8217;s my peers who are the recipients it feels a little like missing the bus and then spotting my mates grinning together in the top seats as it drives past.</p><p>What is there to be done? Obviously not sulk at home or get jealous and bitter - even though I&#8217;m gutted I don&#8217;t want to cultivate that within me. So it&#8217;s a case of being gentle with myself and of practicing sympathetic joy, a concept I first came across as compersion back when I was practicing Polyamory.</p><p>What is sympathetic joy? Put simply it&#8217;s feeling happiness for the joy and success of others, even when that success is something you wanted for yourself. It&#8217;s rerouting your thinking from &#8216;<em>I wish that was me&#8217;</em> to &#8216;<em>I&#8217;m so pleased that person/poet/friend is getting to take advantage of this opportunity that&#8217;ll be really great for their development</em>&#8217;.</p><p>But it&#8217;s more nuanced than just giving yourself a different script; there&#8217;s work there in acknowledging your disappointment and allowing yourself to grieve a missed opportunity, and in working to connect with the positive emotion and feeling behind the sentiment you&#8217;re cultivating: it&#8217;s not enough just to say the words, the meaning comes through embodying that position.</p><p>And the other thing? When I stop to think about it I <em>am </em>actually pleased for these friends and peers, it&#8217;s not that hard to cultivate positivity for them because it already exists - I like these people and I&#8217;m glad they&#8217;re benefitting from these wonderful opportunities. And when I acknowledge that, it feels better inside me too - it counteracts the gutted.</p><p>I actually suspect this kind of thinking and practice is really useful to cultivate as a writer full stop, not just for someone in my position. It goes hand in hand with the understanding that being in creative spaces isn&#8217;t about being in competition but in conversation with each other, and celebrating each other&#8217;s successes alongside our own; the arts space is so special because of the multitude of voices and perspectives it contains, and when any of us are benefitting then it&#8217;s bolstering the community and landscape as a whole.</p><p>Rachael Hill, <a href="https://poetnotes.substack.com/p/missing-deadlines-and-practicing">Missing deadlines and practicing sympathetic joy</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>For years Dylan has toured constantly, and he has for decades refused to play a show the way you would expect if you were a fan, casual or otherwise. I have no idea whether this was a conscious plan with a long term objective, or innate rebelliousness, or something that he did because he wanted to. Probably some people know, he has probably talked about it, but from my perspective, it just seems like a fantastic mystery.</p><p>I won&#8217;t go on and on. The show was transcendent. Mostly what I felt was relief. I wasn&#8217;t emotional, mostly, though at times hearing him sing reminded me that so many things in my life have happened, and now are gone, and his music was there all the time. This music was not about him. In a way, anyone could do what he did, which was to get up and not to depend in any way on his celebrity, his history, his Dylan-ness, but just to make a space where we could experience something singular. Anyone could do it, but very few can. And that is the difference.</p><p>His performance reminded me of what I believe constitutes artistic integrity: if I can ever create such a space (in performance or otherwise) with poems or music, I have not wasted my life.</p><p>He was in a cloak, and he cloaked us all in mystery and duende and mortality and timelessness. The only songs I recognized were All Along the Watchtower, Trying to Get to Heaven (a great song on Time Out of Mind), and the closer, Every Grain of Sand. The band was absolutely perfect: they play exactly the way I dream a band of mine will someday play, the sound I have heard in my head a million times. Bass locked down, two guitarists just holding it down with the absolutely perfect edge of breakup natural tones, playing only what is necessary, drummer also locked in, Bob on keys and singing. It was dark on the stage and there was no possibility of seeing his face. But he was there. When he played the harmonica I felt a great wonder in my soul. He is the only one who can play like that, and it sounds just like it did from the beginning.</p><p>Matthew Zapruder, <a href="https://matthewzapruder.substack.com/p/a-great-witch">A Great Witch</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Picture this: a little cockney, looks like trouble, a sickly, druggy type, abroad for the first time, too long holed up in a cheap pensione, hurls a plate of pasta into the piazza and it all kicks off.</p><p>You&#8217;ve got the image. You&#8217;ve seen it in the newsreels. There&#8217;s a football crowd. Probably. Water cannons. Possibly. Plastic chairs thrown in foreign town squares. Fat, bald blokes taking swings. It&#8217;s ugly. There is a collective national tutting. Commentators say <em>it&#8217;s a disgrace</em>, headlines: <em>The English Disease,</em> there is outcry, <em>a blight on our nationhood</em>. England away. Love it.</p><p>The incident I describe in the opening paragraph didn&#8217;t take place during a World Cup or have anything at all to do with football. But it did happen. In 1820. The little cockney in question, a poet, one John Keats. OK, so he didn&#8217;t exactly chuck his spaghetti and start a riot but he did scrape the contents of his dinner plate from a high window onto the Spanish Steps in Rome and it caused consternation. He made a scene. He was a trouble maker. I mean he <em>was</em> brought up above a London pub, he got into scraps in the streets as a kid, was disruptive in class. He was a trouble maker in the best possible sense. He may not have been one of the lads but Keats, oh Johnny Keats he was a geezer.</p><p>The World Cup is upon us. You may be doing your best to ignore it. I tried but slowly it&#8217;s reeling me in once again. But this year something is off. Perhaps it&#8217;s the disturbing rise of nationalistic anger away from the stadiums that&#8217;s making me uneasy about participating in the pageantry. Football was always more about belonging than it ever was about jingoism. It was about rooting for the outsider, cheering on the underdog, coming together, celebrating. Yes it got messy. Sometimes it got very messy. I&#8217;ll admit I rather liked it when it did. There were times when I got carried away. But that&#8217;s poetry, right? That&#8217;s what poetry is supposed to do, it&#8217;s supposed to carry you away.</p><p>Let&#8217;s get this straight. I never liked sports. I&#8217;m not a sporty type. I dislike competition in general. But I adore football. Or I used to. It was a love affair, a love affair that occasionally turned toxic. I got picked for my school team (once), turned out for a local league side (twice) and played every Sunday for the Cubs where the coach employed a &#8216;turn up and you&#8217;ll get a game&#8217; strategy. I liked his approach. I still like this approach. This is how we make poetry. This is how Keats made poetry. He just turned up, got a game. He didn&#8217;t have an expensive education, specialist training or all the fancy kit. You don&#8217;t need those things. Just a pen and some paper. A ball and some grass.</p><p>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n68-a-game-for-poets">N&#176;68 A game for poets</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>ELSEWHERE, in a parallel proximity, a triple-tap. The last strike coming a moment later. Just as souls are rising through the dust cloud. The uncertain horizon conflates macabre and paranormal. Reality is the gate booby-trapped at the hinge.</p><p>ELSEWHERE, words echo like tambura notes. An unresisting background resonance. The idea that the earth has been helplessly rotating from the beginning&#8217;s beginning, recalibrates meaning.</p><p>ELSEWHERE, thousands of flecks of light rise like dancers to create new constellations in the night sky. Heads gather themselves, with their feet and waists and hungry mouths, into waiting parentheses.</p><p>ELSEWHERE, the day itself is a disquieting monotone. The monsoon sets up percussion and string. Rain is a pendulum in motion. Silence slips into wetness and reflection. Lines are wheels in revolution. Again. Again.</p><p>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/that-which-we-call-a-drone-by-any">That which we call a drone by any other name</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>From April through September of last year, I was corresponding with a poet from Iran who&#8217;d asked to interview me. Given the current situation and the fact that I know nothing about the poet&#8217;s situation, not even whether or not they are still alive, I am not going to name them here, but I&#8217;ve been thinking a lot about the questions they asked me since the beginning of the US-Israeli war against their country, since very few of them had any direct relationship to my work as a poet or to poetry in general. Still, they were all thought provoking, often leading me to articulate things I&#8217;d never really thought about before and that I think are worth sharing. Rather than work those answers into new essays, though, and out of respect for the poet who interviewed me, I&#8217;m going to preserve the Q&amp;A format and publish my answers as I originally wrote them. You&#8217;ll understand immediately why I&#8217;ve decided to start with the second question in the series. Looking back, it seems especially prescient.</p><p><strong>Q: &#8220;I strongly agree with Kafka&#8217;s statement that &#8216;war, in its first phase, emerges out of [a] total lack of&#8230;imagination.&#8217; How do you view the main source of war?&#8221;</strong></p><p>I&#8217;m not sure how to begin to answer this question. Since I have never&#8212;and I am grateful for this&#8212;had to live through a war, I have never been forced to confront face-to-face what it would mean for there to be people in the world who have defined me as an enemy who does not deserve to live. Even as I write that, though, I realize I have begun to formulate an answer. As my use of the word &#8220;defined&#8221; suggests, I believe lethal violence is rooted in a quintessentially imaginative act: the proactive imagining of another human being or group of human beings as nonhuman and therefore &#8220;killable&#8221; with impunity.</p><p>I have never believed that the default human stance towards others is to see them as so fundamentally, essentially different from ourselves that we also see their lives as inherently less worthy than ours; and I guess I do believe, therefore, that rendering someone &#8220;killable&#8221; requires willful, proactive effort. Even killing in self-defense requires this imaginative act. If someone is trying to kill you and killing them is the only way to save your life, you have to believe on some level that your potential murderer is no longer as fully human as you are and therefore no longer has the same right to live as you do.</p><p>I have never been through military training, but I remember walking to the post office in 1980 to register for Selective Service. The Soviet Union had invaded Afghanistan and the possibility existed that then-President Jimmy Carter was going to reinstitute the military draft in response. He activated Selective Service registration in preparation for that possibility. I was eighteen years old. As I walked, I tried to imagine what it would be like to be trained to kill people I had never met and had no reason to hate. I couldn&#8217;t do it, but I knew that, if I ever were drafted, that&#8217;s what I would be trained to do, and the thought of what that would do to my humanity terrified me. I would never have been able to articulate it this way back then, but I was struggling with the question of whether and how I could resist the the militarization of my imagination.</p><p>Implicit in what I think you and Kafka mean by &#8220;a total lack of imagination&#8221; is the optimistic belief that the imagination is an inherently good and humanizing thing. That&#8217;s the way those of who are artists tend to think of the imaginative capacity out of which our art emerges, but I think we miss something crucial if we define as an absence a world view that is so diametrically opposed to our existence that the people who hold it are willing to go to war with us. I also think that defining their world view as an absence of imagination merely inverts the hierarchy that organizes how they see the world, placing ourselves on top instead of them.</p><p>If someone is indeed trying to kill you, though, if someone insists on prosecuting a war of aggression against you, you may very well have to kill them first in order to survive. I just think it&#8217;s important to remember that they&#8217;re not trying to kill you because they lack imagination, or because imagination has failed them. Rather, they are trying to kill you because of what they have imagined you to be, and they may very well give you no choice but to accept that nothing you can do will change their minds about that.</p><p>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.fernwoodpress.com/2026/06/11/the-source-of-war/">The Source of War</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i cease to sleep. i build the robot. i do not<br>want the robot but here it is. it makes<br>all the promises i do not want it to make.<br>it says, &#8220;we are gods.&#8221; my eyes well up.<br>the birds scatter into the dark hills.</p><p>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/06/09/6-9-5/">building the robot</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now that I&#8217;ve given up (temporarily?) the thought of getting a collection published, I&#8217;m going through my &#8216;collections&#8217; and adding back all the poems I edited out. Poems that were removed because they weren&#8217;t &#8216;good&#8217; enough, there wasn&#8217;t enough space for them to be included in a realistically publishable book, they retold a story or touched on a similar theme already established or they just didn&#8217;t quite make the cut. Poems I love, that tell the story I want to tell, capture the time the collection is about. Poems that deserve to be read, if only by me again.</p><p>I&#8217;ve found poems in my first collection, poems in my Retired Poems and Spare Poems folders and in old versions of the collection that were lost over time and brought them together. I&#8217;ve printed the first set out, 160 pages. Crazy, I&#8217;ve forgotten so many of them. Rereading, stepping back into those moments is a wonderful way to waste a rainy afternoon. The pubs that I visited, people I&#8217;ve lost touch with or just lost, solo journeys I took, times before I was a partner, a mother, my youth, my inexperience. My glory days merging into real life.</p><p>I&#8217;m boring so at the moment I just have them separated into the Scotland poems, the Finnish poems, the love poems. There are probably other exciting themes I haven&#8217;t delved into yet like My Childhood. The themes are so loose which allows me to collect more poems together. I&#8217;m not looking for something sellable, just a version of how I see my life and my work. It feels like a biography or another diary. Between my journals, my writing notebooks, my poems and their drafts I write so much. I&#8217;ve been writing obsessively for 30+ years, and it piles up.</p><p>Oh, how I want to edit some of the ones published in my first collection. My style has changed a lot. I used to <em>love </em>piling on the adjectives. I probably still do, I just hope I&#8217;m more subtle. I&#8217;m making notes on the print-outs, but I&#8217;m unsure if I&#8217;ll change much. I love to edit, but these feel like they should stay in my old voice. There&#8217;s nothing wrong with her, she&#8217;s just not me anymore.</p><p>Gerry Stewart, <a href="http://thistlewren.blogspot.com/2026/06/collecting-collections.html">Collecting the Collections</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today is the birthday of my friend Kathleen Kummer. After several falls, she is now very frail and housebound.</p><p>Kathleen and I met on a writing week with the poet Lawrence Sail at the beginning of the century. She had lived and worked in the Netherlands. We became friends. I visited her in Dorchester and in Devon where she moved, aged 79, to be nearer her two daughters.</p><p>Kathleen had a body of work when she moved to Devon and sent a manuscript to Alwyn Marriage at Oversteps Books. They published her debut collection<em> Living below sea level </em>(2012).</p><p>I am deeply grateful to Kathleen for our friendship and our poetry connection. Today I&#8217;m posting her poem <em>Birthday Party</em>, showing her empathy and eye for telling detail.</p><p>Fokkina McDonnell, <a href="https://fokkinadutch.substack.com/p/birthday-party-poem">Birthday Party - poem</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been trying to read my sermon less, which in some ways is good, primarily in the more lively energy. But I don&#8217;t like that I get tongue-tied, and I worry about my sermons getting longer. I try to limit my discursive comments so that they don&#8217;t become a wandering tangent where I can&#8217;t easily get back. I want a sermon to be 9-12 minutes, so if I&#8217;m going to continue this experiment in not looking at the manuscript as much, maybe the manuscript needs to be shorter.</p><p>Now it&#8217;s time to shift my attention back to poetry writing. My various writing projects do feed each other, while at the same time demanding time, which requires constant balancing. Last week, I returned to a May rough draft of a poem, &#8220;A Song Both Familiar and Strange.&#8221; In the poem, I connect my visit to my friend who had a catastrophic stroke which means she now lives in the skilled nursing unit to Julian of Norwich. I did some serious revising, moving stanzas, taking out material. I think it&#8217;s done, but before I started last week&#8217;s revisions, I thought it was done. [...]</p><p>Last week I even made some poetry submissions. In some ways, it&#8217;s easier in the summer when many journals aren&#8217;t taking submissions. In September, when most journals are &#8220;open,&#8221; and most for a very short time, I find it overwhelming.</p><p>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/06/sermon-revisions-poem-revisions.html">Sermon Revisions, Poem Revisions</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m thrilled to share that poem &#8220;<a href="https://www.whaleroadreview.com/hopkinson-2/">Confession to a Woodhouse&#8217;s Toad</a>&#8221; appears in <a href="https://www.whaleroadreview.com/issue-43-summer-2026/">Whale Road Review Issue 43</a>, a summer issue full of sharp, resonant work from writers I deeply admire.</p><p>One of the things I love about <em>Whale Road Review</em> is how intentionally they support their contributors. Each author page includes a direct tip link, so if a poem or essay moves you, you can thank the writer directly. It&#8217;s a small gesture that makes a meaningful difference in sustaining literary work.</p><p>If you&#8217;re curious about the editorial vision behind the journal, you might enjoy revisiting my earlier conversation with them: <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2020/12/07/no-fee-submission-call-editor-interview-whale-road-review-deadline-dec-30-2020/">My interview with Whale Road Review</a>. It&#8217;s a look at their ethos, their approach to submissions, and what they hope to champion in contemporary poetry.</p><p>Trish Hopkinson, <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/06/08/my-poem-confession-to-a-woodhouses-toad-published-in-whale-road-review-no-fee-call-deadline-6-15-2026/">My poem &#8220;Confession to a Woodhouse&#8217;s Toad&#8221; published in Whale Road Review + NO FEE call, Deadline: 6/15/2026</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wrote this on Arran, thinking about previous times on a variety of islands, and only once I had committed fully to this title [&#8221;The Misty Isle&#8221;] did I realise that it is the vernacular name for the Isle of Skye. In this poem, the Isle itself is Britain, and the mist is manifold. It represents, metaphorically, the mysterious sub-Roman era of British history, which has proved a fecund ground for my imagination. It is also, at its essence, true mist, to coat the landscape, obfuscating objectivity and creating endless interpretations of events which, were you to investigate yourselves, you would see have a huge swathe of differing opinions around them.</p><p><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/06/13/drop-in-by-hadley-james-hoyles/">Drop-in by Hadley-James Hoyles</a> [Nigel Kent]</p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Third person gives objectivity, distance, observation. First person gives subjectivity, close range, self-analysis. Third person can seem judgemental, first person can seem confessional. Using the same words except for his/my or I, here are both versions of the poem. [...]</p><p>While the man in the first version comes over as seedy and pathetic in his loneliness, which is the way the narrator wants us to see him and which may not be accurate, the narrator of the second version, because of the intensity of his self-awareness, becomes arrogant and much more menacing.</p><p>Maybe the second one works better, but it was an either/or choice and, for right or wrong, I plumped for the first, objective take on it. Perhaps it&#8217;s just an example of the way we need to step back, ask ourselves &#8216;what if&#8217; I altered third person to first, or the other way round.</p><p>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/06/09/objective-or-subjective-working-out-whats-best/">OBJECTIVE OR SUBJECTIVE? WORKING OUT WHAT&#8217;S BEST</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I became a mother, I spent much more time in the house than I ever had before. On one of the endless nights of early motherhood when I was breastfeeding my daughter, I felt a wave of the most visceral panic wash over me as I realised I could not leave. I was tied there not just by the practicalities of breastfeeding, but the reality of love, which was as visceral as the panic I felt in that moment. I wrote about this in a poem in my recent collection <em><a href="https://www.kimmoorepoet.co.uk/publications-poetry-and-non-fiction/">The House of Broken Things</a></em> called &#8216;Dear Wordsworth&#8217;: &#8220;I did not know / what horror love could be, how it keeps you / tied to one town, one house, one room, / one chair, one life&#8221;.</p><p>Later in the book I wrote about women who were found murdered and remain unidentified in a poem called &#8220;The Black Notices&#8221;. These women were found in the places women are often found, in bodies of water, in wasteland, in car parks, in forests. But once upon a time they lived in a House, and for whatever reason, they were not safe, they were pushed out, or driven out of a house, or they were kidnapped or lured away, or tricked on the way home, and now they are nameless.</p><p>The figure of the House and our expectations of it keeping us safe continues to haunt me. Writing <em>The House of Broken Things </em>has not exorcised the contradiction of the House from my mind or my desire to make sense of what it means to live with another - the gestures of love and the tiny acts of violence we inflict on ourselves and each other, and then if we are lucky, repair.</p><p>I&#8217;ve been doing quite a few readings recently and most have been followed by a question and answer session of some kind, and most of the interviewers (all apart from the one who didn&#8217;t bother to read my book in advance!) asked what the House was, what it represented to me, why I wrote multiple poems under the same title.</p><p>It&#8217;s taking me time to work out an answer that is in any way articulate, and part of the answer at least is that I don&#8217;t know, or I don&#8217;t know yet, or I am only beginning to know now. I know that the House is both the house of my childhood and the house of my motherhood, it is the house where I was mothered, and it is the house of my giving up, and the house of my enduring, it is the house of violence that I lived in once, and it is the house of my marriage, it is the house of loneliness and it is the house I escaped to, and I didn&#8217;t know until I finished writing this collection that I&#8217;m carrying all of these inside myself, that time means nothing inside the House.</p><p>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/what-is-the-house-of-broken-things">Inside the House of Broken Things</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>We</em> were consumed? I keep on saying <em>we.<br></em>Let&#8217;s talk about my own consuming passions,<br>the matter I&#8217;ve amassed for sixty years,<br>I and my spouse. At least our progeny<br>have flown, trailing their jettisoned possessions,<br>yet overnight we crammed space that was theirs<br>with things: books that seemed vital in the moment;<br>music, its living soul encased in vinyl.<br>What happened to the frugal hippie bride<br>I thought I was? What if it had to go&#8212;<br>everything, by some deadline, settled, final?<br>Fervent recycling wouldn&#8217;t stem the tide.<br>The angel might as well begin recording<br>the worst: I <em>am</em> a hoarder. This is hoarding.</p><p>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/stuff-a-meditation">Stuff: a meditation</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.instagram.com/jidesalawu/">Jide Salawu</a> is a Canadian-Nigerian writer. He is the author of <em><a href="https://africanpoetrybf.brown.edu/books/new-generation-african-poets-a-chapbook-box-set-sita/preface-for-leaving-homeland/">Preface for Leaving Homeland</a></em>, published under the African Poetry Book Fund, and the co-editor of<em> African Urban Echoes</em>, published by Griots Lounge Canada, and <em><a href="https://bookshop.newestpress.com/products/contraband-bodies">Contraband Bodies</a>,</em> published by NeWest Press and Narrative Landscape. He is currently a Black postdoctoral scholar in the Department of English at Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Ontario.</p><p><strong>1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?</strong></p><p>Thank you, rob. My first book, <em>Preface for Leaving Homeland,</em> was published in 2019. I had received an invitation from the African Poetry Book Fund for their chapbook series, headed by <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/kwame-dawes">Kwame Dawes</a> and <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/chris-abani">Chris Abani</a>. The series has become a new cultural venue and has already produced new-generation African literary stars such as <a href="https://poets.org/poet/gbenga-adesina">Gbenga Adesina</a>, <a href="https://complitandthought.washu.edu/people/gbenga-adeoba">Gbenga Adeoba</a>, <a href="https://www.writerafiansong.com/">Afua Ansong</a>, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/adedayo-agarau">Adedayo Agarau</a>, <a href="https://rustedradishes.com/author/nour-kamel/">Nour Kamel</a>, <a href="https://www.leilachatti.com/">Leila Chatti</a>, <a href="https://rasaqmalikgbolahan.com/">Rasaq Malik Gbolahan</a>, <a href="https://www.momtazamehri.com/">Momtaza Mehri</a>, among others. So, as I was saying, I was nominated to submit to the boxset series. Before then, I had written individual poems addressing a variety of subjects. But my first sustained work that explores the precarity of mobility in Africa and beyond would be the chapbook. The overwhelming experiences of African migrants moving through trans-Saharan and Mediterranean routes become daunting archives that will inform most of the poems. In <em>Contraband Bodies</em>, I was thinking about African migrant within Africa as a racialized figure; this includes the xenophobic rage in South Africa now; I was thinking about migration from below and what I mean by that is rural/urban migration; I was thinking about my private memories as a Black African migrant moving across different diasporic spaces, including Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and within Africa. But I don&#8217;t own these memories alone. I have described <em>Contraband Bodies</em> as a personal record&#8212;I think this work imbricates other public experiences of the Black diaspora.</p><p><strong>2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?</strong></p><p>It is a personal story that I am always glad to credit to my grandfather, who I would call a Yoruba poet, for his skill of oriki, a genre of oral poetry in Yoruba culture. He introduced me to the gift of literature and the sublimity of the Yoruba language. Yoruba is a highly tonal language, and quite musical. This does not mean all Yoruba people are poets, but the language is the first linguistic resource point for someone interested in literary culture. From that background, we can pick one or two things about my growth as a young writer. As a student, even when I was interested in poetry, and I had read literary greats such as <a href="https://www.festivaldepoesiademedellin.org/en/Revista/ultimas_ediciones/74_75/rubadiri.html">David Rubadiri</a>, <a href="https://www.poetryinternational.com/en/poets-poems/poets/poet/102-23498_Mtshali">Oswald Mtshali</a>, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Wole-Soyinka">Wole Soyinka</a>, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/christopher-okigbo">Christopher Okigbo</a>, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/kofi-awoonor">Kofi Awoonor</a>, <a href="https://www.festivaldepoesiademedellin.org/en/Revista/ultimas_ediciones/81_82/angira.html">Jared Angira</a>, I didn&#8217;t know how to begin writing. In 2005, Gabriel Arishe, a teacher in my secondary school in Shao, who had taken it as a duty to mentor me in English grammar, told me I could also write poetry. I thought I needed some celestial power to do so. That day ended with me writing a poem I titled, &#8220;Moonlight Days.&#8221; I wish I still had that scrap of paper on which I wrote the first poem. [...]</p><p><strong>7 &#8211; What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?</strong></p><p>Arts, as you know, can be perverted. Arts have been in the service of oppression. rob, let me tell you about what is going on in the case of Nigeria. The politicians, after their tenure, are writing hagiographies (life-writings of sorts), and they are getting reviewed by professors who praise them. In the books, they glorify themselves and talk about their good deeds for the masses. That is how terrible it is. Globally, too, you know, there are writers who side with horrendous leadership and even justify their need for the governance. Writings were first used to service colonialism itself; I recall now <a href="https://ponderosaenglishkessler.weebly.com/uploads/9/5/1/5/9515361/achebe-chinua.pdf">Achebe&#8217;s &#8220;The Image of Africa&#8221;</a> where he is in dialogue with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Joseph-Conrad">Joseph Conrad</a>. I think as a writer, I want to reject grand narratives. Speaking against tyranny and oppressive structures has been a whole duty, and this is my pure sentiment given my own background, appearance at the margin, as a person from a country like Nigeria. Tell the counter-story.</p><p>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/06/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_01771803856.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Jide Salawu</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I recently read a <em><a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/06/15/for-people-with-misophonia-everyday-noises-can-be-agony">New Yorker</a></em><a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/06/15/for-people-with-misophonia-everyday-noises-can-be-agony"> article about misophonia</a> that referred to the sound of &#8220;fingernails on a chalkboard.&#8221; Chalkboards. They were in every classroom throughout my schooling, but by the time my own children were in sixth grade, a middle-school remodeling push had replaced them with whiteboards. The college where I taught had whiteboards, as do most boardrooms, meeting places, etc. An occasional squeak of a too-dry marker is about as aurally annoying as it gets. Who uses chalkboards anymore? Maybe the occasional cafe for daily specials?</p><p>And therefore, why do we still use &#8220;fingernails on a chalkboard&#8221; when we want to describe something extremely irritating? Like many other phrases and images, that phrase is frozen into our language&#8211;there are hosts of them if you stop and think about it. 33rpm albums may be back for some niche music listeners, but most people under 20 have never actually heard &#8220;a broken record.&#8221; Pop culture moves so quickly; what do young people think it means when Blondie&#8217;s Debbie Harry says she&#8217;s in a <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWhkbDMISl8">phone booth ringing the telephone</a> off the wall? (If they even happen to hear that song.) I think of these as ghost similes or metaphors, still haunting our language long after the origins have gone out of date. Some of them hang around for decades, maybe centuries; others fade like last year&#8217;s popular lingo.</p><p>I consider these things when I&#8217;m working on a poem. What will the words mean decades from now, or to a person in another culture, or to a very elderly reader? It&#8217;s not that I think my poems will be read decades from now&#8211;heck, they don&#8217;t have a lot of readers even today&#8211;but, because poems convey information and imagery in order to evoke interpretation and to create pleasurable sound and rhythm, poets need to think about the words we employ and why we use them. Allusions, metaphors, the lively sounds of slang or dialect, popular culture or political references, scientific terms, various kinds of jargon, words from languages other than English: they are all words, the writer&#8217;s main tools. And it can be harder than you&#8217;d think to get the right tool for the job.</p><p>At the same time, I don&#8217;t want to overthink. It gets in the way of writing poetry. I seriously doubt that Emily Dickinson gave a second thought about being <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47652/because-i-could-not-stop-for-death-479">picked up in a carriage</a> by Death; horse-drawn carriages were a part of everyday life. When Whitman wrote of fishermen seining for menhaden on the Long Island shores (<a href="http://www.poetryatlas.com/poetry/poem/786/a-paumanok-picture.html">&#8220;A Paumanok Picture&#8221;</a>), it&#8217;s unlikely he thought the word &#8220;mossbonkers&#8221; would send readers running to a dictionary. If we have to look up some words today to get a clear idea of what&#8217;s happening in a poem, I see no problem with that. Besides, the Whitman poem is so clear in its description, we don&#8217;t really need to.</p><p>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/06/15/ghost-metaphors/">Ghost metaphors</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Where are you now, Mama?</p><p>I want you to know that<br>I keep my hunger<br>under my bed<br>in the box<br>with the starving<br>baby.</p><p>I kept her bones.<br>I gnaw them sometimes<br>when all else fails.</p><p>I want you to know<br>that only a<br>silver of me<br>remains.<br>Starving.<br>An open pit,<br>a coal mine.</p><p>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/because-my-hunger-has-no-voice">Because My Hunger Has No Voice</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Some Poems by Thomas Hood</em>, selected and introduced by Alex Wong,<em> </em>is the latest (and second) pamphlet from <a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/about">Headless Poet</a>.</p><p>Alex was kind enough to answer a few questions &#8212; on embarrassment, &#8216;bad&#8217; puns, questionable taste, and the Victorians &#8212; over email. <em>Some Poems</em> is available for order <a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/shop/p/thomas-hood">here</a>, and in stock now at the London Review Bookshop.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley: </strong>I thought we might start by putting Hood in some kind of context, but every time I do this, I&#8217;ve no idea where to start. This is partly my own ignorance, but also because he straddles so many styles or concerns. There&#8217;s a romantic Hood, there&#8217;s a comic Hood, there&#8217;s a polemical Hood engaged in Victorian debates about poverty. The romantic, &#8216;Keatsian&#8217; Hood was the biggest surprise to me. Is it fair to say he falls between the gaps?</p><p><strong>Alex Wong</strong>: I think it <em>is</em> fair, if we&#8217;re talking about the gaps in current understandings of literary history. I mean the gaps between what have become the most familiar categories and groupings. For a start, when W.M. Rossetti called him &#8216;the finest English poet between the generation of Shelley and the generation of Tennyson&#8217; he was placing Hood in a gap, and I think it&#8217;s still a gap in most people&#8217;s sense of the history of English poetry. It&#8217;s a small gap, almost not a gap at all unless you&#8217;re thinking in terms of &#8216;generations&#8217;, but in its small way it&#8217;s a little like the reign of Mary Tudor, or the gap between Chaucer and Malory: ask the average intelligent Eng Lit graduate who was writing in those periods and you&#8217;d be lucky to get more than one or two names. Very lucky, I should think.</p><p>And then he muddles our distinction between serious and &#8216;light&#8217; verse, and between high and popular culture. Humorous poets who are basically doing something quite serious, though inconsistently and a bit under cover, tend to be hard to place ... Stevie Smith for instance. But Hood muddles it further, because he also delves so deeply, and so obviously, into topical moral concerns &#8212; &#8216;big issues&#8217; &#8212; without giving up the trappings of his light verse. And he muddles it all even further still, by also having written those comparatively highbrow &#8216;romantic&#8217; poems you&#8217;re alluding to.</p><p>But I don&#8217;t think you could say that he fell between the gaps in his own day. A lot of people were reading Hood when not very many were reading Keats. Hood sold a lot of books, a lot of magazines and annuals. And also we sometimes forget about the reading rooms and circulating libraries that allowed people across classes to access these texts. He was truly popular. He found a gap in the market, and in the culture, but he filled it pretty effectively; he didn&#8217;t fall through it. [...]</p><p><strong>JW: </strong>Punning must have something to do with writing from the unconscious? Could you say something more about the way in which Hood shaped that appreciation (for puns) at the time, or in perhaps in the poets he&#8217;s influenced? You mention Auden was a fan in the introduction &#8212; so much of Auden is in terribly &#8216;bad taste&#8217;. And Moul recently <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/bank-on-the-grammar-flowing-on-prynnes">spotted</a> that J. H. Prynne&#8217;s first published poem seems to have been a translation (into German, I mean really) of &#8216;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/52339/silence-56d230b89fd5e">Silence&#8217;</a>.</p><p><strong>AW: </strong>Well, the Lacanians say the unconscious is structured like a language &#8212; but we won&#8217;t get into that. Anyway a mind that is habitually punning is a mind that is letting associations range pretty freely, you could say. And I think Hood, not only when he&#8217;s punning, does tend to be open to the associations of things &#8211; erotic, violent or scatological associations, awkward afterthoughts &#8211; and he&#8217;s happy to run with them. It&#8217;s part of what makes his writing seem a bit overcharged for some tastes, the O.T.T. quality. As with the puns and ingenious rhymes, so with other things; there&#8217;s an opportunism, if you like, or just a huge openness. He goes for it. But Empson makes an interesting point in <em>Seven Types of Ambiguity</em>, when he argues that Hood&#8217;s comical verse seems to use punning to pull back from things that could get really awkward, to dispel the tension somehow. Which is almost the opposite point of view. And I guess it does relate to what I was saying about &#8216;Bridge of Sighs&#8217; and the impulse to make something tolerable, even though that&#8217;s a poem in which he <em>does</em> get seriously involved in something genuinely challenging.<br><br>Of course, the puns are also embarrassing when you <em>don&#8217;t</em> get them. That&#8217;s another important aspect of the embarrassment of puns. And I suppose it connects with Prynne, about whom I can&#8217;t say very much because generally I don&#8217;t &#8216;get&#8217; him. I mean I haven&#8217;t reached a satisfactory accommodation with what he&#8217;s doing, at least after the earliest poems. And I&#8217;m somewhat embarrassed about it. But, well, I suppose it&#8217;s not surprising that Prynne should have had an interest in Hood. Although that particular sonnet isn&#8217;t a punning one (it&#8217;s about &#8216;silence&#8217;, so in a sense it&#8217;s about the terrifying void that&#8217;s left when the punning has to stop), still there&#8217;s conceivably a relationship between Hood&#8217;s almost maniacal aliveness to <em>double-entendre</em> and Prynne&#8217;s &#8212; I would call it rather intellectual &#8212; love of etymological and phonetic play.<br><br>The really fundamental difference for me is that Hood&#8217;s poems always create the illusion of a real utterance, a person speaking, with the <em>bonhomie</em> that comes with that; he&#8217;s appealing more directly to our ways of reading small adjustments of tone in our everyday communications. Auden is closer to Hood in that respect, although in some ways ... I think you could say that where his debt to light verse is most apparent, his urbane wit probably feels closer in inspiration to other predecessors, like Praed. But it&#8217;s been a long time since I&#8217;ve spent much time with Auden, so I may be wrong.</p><p>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/how-much-depends-on-the-exactness">How much depends on the exactness of the spell</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The publication of Michael Laskey&#8217;s <em>Collected Poems</em> by Smith/Doorstop coincides with his receiving the King&#8217;s Gold Medal for Poetry at the beginning of this year. As well as consistently publishing his own poetry across four decades (he is now 81), Laskey is well known for co-founding and directing the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival, co-editing the magazine <em>Smiths Knoll</em> for twenty-one years, as a poetry tutor, and as publisher of The Garlic Press, which mainly features work by poets from Suffolk, where Laskey lives.</p><p>This edition combines Laskey&#8217;s six existing collections and fifteen new poems. Until his recent royal <a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy8d0wzeyyo">accolade</a> (which &#8216;completely astonished&#8217; Laskey), his poetry had not gained the public recognition some felt it deserved; an endorsement on the back of the book by Stephen Fry says: &#8216;Michael Laskey is one of England&#8217;s finest poets you&#8217;ve probably never heard of.&#8217; Typically, a Laskey poem is a quiet one &#8211; and quiet work is often unjustly overlooked or sidelined. This is a pity: Laskey&#8217;s poems, I feel, have real lasting power.</p><p>I read almost the whole of this 385-page collection outside on a sunny April day, the setting enhancing the poems, and vice versa. I found I then wanted to read the collection again more slowly &#8211; as an &#8216;off-duty&#8217; reader rather than a critic &#8211; simply because the poems were a pleasure to engage with and I wanted to spend more time with them. Laskey is a poet who celebrates, even &#8216;thrives on&#8217;, he explains in &#8216;Quotidian&#8217;, the &#8216;everyday, the humdrum, dull for some&#8217;: &#8216;small&#8217; pleasures; humble, ordinary experience. Craig Raine has called him &#8216;our poetic Alan Bennett &#8211; a genius of, as it were, biscuit barrels and wry grief.&#8217; As Andrew McCulloch has pointed out though, on introducing Laskey&#8217;s poem &#8216;The Lawnmower&#8217; as the <em>TLS</em> <a href="https://www.the-tls.com/regular-features/poem-of-the-week/the-lawnmower-michael-laskey-poem-of-the-week-andrew-mcculloch">&#8216;Poem of the week&#8217;</a>, &#8216;The world Laskey describes may be familiar [&#8230;] but its images are far from cosy&#8217; or complacent: the interplay of real familial emotions and failed connection that he often depicts, especially between parent and child, is (in McCulloch&#8217;s brilliantly exact observation) &#8216;softly tragic&#8217;. He is like a more domesticised Larkin &#8211; a poet who also had the sensitivity to see, and to reveal, the beauty and the interest in the so-called &#8216;dull&#8217; moments of our lives. As Larkin remarked in an interview with John Haffenden: &#8216;I don&#8217;t want to transcend the commonplace, I love the commonplace, I lead a very commonplace life. Everyday things are lovely to me.&#8217; Laskey&#8217;s own attention to the commonplace extends to the word itself: he wittily points out in &#8216;Quotidian&#8217; that he doesn&#8217;t like this ornate, Latinate synonym: &#8216;not a word / I&#8217;d choose, actually one I avoid &#8211; / [&#8230;] it contradicts / what it means&#8217;. Obfuscation is not part of Laskey&#8217;s poetic project.</p><p>Nicola Healey, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/thriving-on-the-humdrum-michael-laskey">Thriving on &#8216;the humdrum&#8217;: Michael Laskey</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sir Walter Scott (1771&#8211;1832), <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1904/11/was-sir-walter-scott-a-poet/637798/">wrote Arthur Symons in 1904 in the </a><em><a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1904/11/was-sir-walter-scott-a-poet/637798/">Atlantic</a></em>,</p><blockquote><p>was twenty-six, the age of Keats at his death, before he wrote any original verse. He then wrote two poems to two ladies: one out of a bitter personal feeling, the other as a passing courtesy; neither out of any instinct for poetry.</p></blockquote><p>From inauspicious beginnings, how strangely things fall out. Through the last three years of the eighteenth century and into the first decade of the nineteenth, Scott followed these first amateur attempts with translations from Goethe and collections of traditional ballads in two volumes of <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/12742/pg12742-images.html">Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border</a></em>. His narrative poem <em><a href="https://www.theotherpages.org/poems/minstrel.html">Lay of the Last Minstrel</a></em> &#8212; begun in 1802, published in 1805 &#8212; was followed in fairly rapid succession by the 1808 <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4010/4010-h/4010-h.htm">Marmion</a></em> (of which &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-lochinvar?utm_source=publication-search">Lochinvar</a>&#8221; remains the best-known section), <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/3011/3011-h/3011-h.htm">The Lady of the Lake</a> </em>in 1810, and four other long narrative poems. All this output made him, temporarily, the most famous poet in of his era.</p><p>What rendered Scott&#8217;s poetic fame so temporary? Short answer: the appearance, in 1812, of the first two cantos of <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/5131/5131-h/5131-h.htm">Childe Harold&#8217;s Pilgrimage</a></em>. There was, Symons wrote, &#8220;a more popular poet in England,&#8221; and his name was not Scott, but Byron. Though Scott continued to write verse &#8212; his final long poem, <em>Harold the Dauntless</em>, would appear in 1817 &#8212; he turned his energies to prose and the completion of the story that became <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/5998/5998-h/5998-h.htm">Waverley</a></em>, the first of his historical novels, published in 1814.</p><p>At this juncture we could ask, as Symons did, whether Scott hadn&#8217;t really been a novelist all along: not a poet after all, but a mere &#8220;improviser in rhyme,&#8221; whose true charism was prose narrative. Certainly the verse by which he had made his name had narrative as its first end &#8212; though as we might reflect, casting our minds back to the <em>Epic of Gilgamesh</em>, poetry was telling stories almost before it was doing anything else. It&#8217;s not as though the narrative impulse somehow canceled out the poetry; Scott&#8217;s own narrative poems drew directly from the tradition of the medieval romance. And yet if Scott&#8217;s poems were as popular as they were, it was because</p><blockquote><p>they were so like novels. They were, what every publisher still wants, &#8220;stories with plenty of action;&#8221;and the public either forgave their being in verse, or for some reason was readier than usual, just then, to welcome verse.</p></blockquote><p>Scott&#8217;s turn to the novel, then, simply dispensed with the need to go through the motions of verse &#8212; at which Byron was better, anyway &#8212; in order to deliver what the public really wanted: &#8220;stories with plenty of action.&#8221; No need to make those stories rhyme and scan, if the musical pleasure of verse wasn&#8217;t the first principle of composition and integral to the generation of the narrative.</p><p>If those narrative poems of Walter Scott had been successes, then &#8212; in dispensing with the effort of poetry altogether &#8212; Scott with his gift for a rousing good tale could and did make the novel popular, in a way that even his own action-packed poems, as poems, had not been. &#8220;The fact is,&#8221; wrote Symons, &#8220;that skill in story-telling never made any man a poet&#8221; &#8212; not, again, that &#8220;skill in storytelling&#8221; ever made any man not a poet, either. The question is one of priority and proportion, and of what the indispensable element in a given literary work actually is, for both writer and reader. For Scott, and for his readers, that indispensable element was action, not music.</p><p>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-proud-maisie">Today&#8217;s Poem: Proud Maisie</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Those trained up in civics and classical political theory &#8212; which, with the decline of philology, may well be a good majority of intellectuals with a leaning toward the traditional &#8212; would tend to take Yeats to be describing something akin to thumos, the kind of drive toward that Tennyson&#8217;s Ulysses has. Major Gregory seeks some reward, even if it&#8217;s a hidden fame, and such rewards are of necessity defined by the social order. &#8220;Man is by nature a political animal,&#8221; as Aristotle put it, and nobility is found in the <em>polis</em>, and the virtues of the great soul are in life lived among others.</p><p>That is, on its face, absent from the Irish airman. He confesses a social location: &#8220;My country is Kiltartan Cross, / My countrymen Kiltartan&#8217;s poor.&#8221; But he&#8217;s deliberately left them behind, willing to fight for the British with whom he feels no connection, to seek some entirely individual experience &#8212; not just an impulse of delight, but a <em>lonely</em> impulse of delight.</p><p>He lacks, for example, the virtue of bravery we think expressed most clearly in self-sacrifice, the willingness to give up one&#8217;s life to save another. Oh, he&#8217;s obviously brave in the sense of having willingly entered the sphere of war, where life and death are brought to the sharpest point. But the thing he finds therein is sheer experience, as felt by someone with the rare gift of sensibility &#8212; a figure great enough to feel the heightened sense of the moment. He wants not fame, I think, or glory, but the perfect balance of the <em>now</em>:</p><blockquote><p>I balanced all, brought all to mind,<br>The years to come seemed waste of breath,<br>A waste of breath the years behind<br>In balance with this life, this death.</p></blockquote><p>This is not a social claim, a placing in a political order, but a metaphysical thing, new to humanity in the modern order &#8212; born of the highly self-conscious self of modernity. He seeks not Tennyson&#8217;s newer world but the sheer perfection of the experienced <em>now</em> in the life and death of war.</p><p>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-an-irish-airman-foresees">Today&#8217;s Poem: An Irish Airman Foresees His Death</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I dreamed of a dead friend.<br>We did not touch. We spoke.</p><p>I was deaf. We looked at art,<br>though I was blind. This morning,</p><p>the roses are pink and smell<br>of rain.</p><p>Sharon Brogan, <a href="https://sbpoet.com/2026/06/10/snapshot-poem-10-june-02026/">Snapshot Poem 10 June 02026</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;The Intentions of Thunder&#8221; is a collection of new and selected poems from Patricia Smith. It is deliberately substantial, both in terms of the number of poems and the depth of poetry. The collection draws from &#8220;Life According to Motown&#8221; (1991), &#8220;Big Towns, Big Talk&#8221; (1992), &#8220;Close to Death&#8221; (1993), &#8220;Blood Dazzler&#8221; (2008), &#8220;Shoulda been Jimi Savannah&#8221; (2012), &#8220;Incendiary Art&#8221; (2017), &#8220;Unshuttered&#8221; (2023) plus uncollected poems. It is nearly impossible to provide a flavour of the range of poems that the collection covers. Picking favourites is easy but would render this review far too long to read. [...]</p><p>Patricia Smith is a poet of witness, determined not to let her community go unheard or unrecorded. That doesn&#8217;t make her worthy or dull, on the contrary, she has a playfulness and a deft control of form, whether that&#8217;s a &#8216;choose your own adventure&#8217; choice of sonnets on Emmett Till or recording the aftermath of Katrina without letting politicians off the hook. &#8220;Intentions of Thunder&#8221; is a book to return to, each visit bringing a new reward. It&#8217;s lazy to describe her as heir to Gwendolyn Brooks. Smith has long stepped out from that useful mentorship and found her own strong, compelling voice. But it&#8217;s useful to let Brooks have the last word, writing that Smith&#8217;s work is &#8220;direct, colloquial, inclusive, adventuresome.&#8221;</p><p><a href="https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/the-intentions-of-thunder-1394">&#8220;The Intentions of Thunder&#8221; is available from Bloodaxe</a>. If you&#8217;ve not read any Patricia Smith, this is an excellent place to start.</p><p>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/06/10/the-intentions-of-thunder-patricia-smith-bloodaxe-book-review/">&#8220;The Intentions of Thunder&#8221; Patricia Smith (Bloodaxe) &#8211; book review</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Still Life with Sorrow &amp; Joy, </em><a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/the-autobiography-of-rain/">Lana Hechtman Ayers</a>, The Poetry Box, 2026</p><p>What a lucky thing to have poet-friends.</p><p>I had two big deadlines at the end of May (didn&#8217;t quite make them, but almost); I&#8217;m teaching another Creative Retirement Institute Class (on William Stafford, and it&#8217;s going beautifully); and I seem to have forgotten all about being a blogger. But then comes this package in the mail, two books from none other than <em>the </em>Lana Hechtman Ayers, managing editor (and one-woman dynamo) of the Concrete Wolf Poetry Series, MoonPath Press, and World Enough Writers. [...]</p><p>Penelope Scambly Schott calls <em>Still Life with Sorrow &amp; Joy </em>&#8221; a joyous celebration,&#8221; full of both grief and delights. The collection plays with form, pays tribute to other poets, dreams wildly, and blends paeans to beloved pets with longing for lost two-legged loved ones. The poems are all about love, though at times they keen over our failure to love enough. In the very short, &#8220;Night Vision Goggles,&#8221; we get these three bare lines: &#8220;All we do not understand / could fill battlefields &#8212; // and does.&#8221;</p><p>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/lana-hechtman-ayers-still-life-with-sorrow-joy/">Lana Hechtman Ayers, STILL LIFE WITH SORROW &amp; JOY</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Near the end of <em>Eclogue </em>9, Lycidas, who is keen to continue singing despite Moeris&#8217; obvious sorrow and reluctance, points out that they&#8217;ve reached the tomb of Bianor, the half-way point of their journey, where the farmers are stripping the foliage. He suggests they should put the kids they are carrying down here and pause for a song.</p><blockquote><p>hinc adeo media est nobis via; namque sepulcrum<br>incipit apparere Bianoris. hic, ubi densas<br>agricolae stringunt frondes, hic, Moeri, canamus;<br>hic haedos depone, tamen veniemus in urbem.</p></blockquote><p>Here&#8217;s Heaney again:</p><blockquote><p>We&#8217;ve come half-way.<br>Already you can see Bianor&#8217;s tomb<br>Just up ahead. Here where they&#8217;ve trimmed and faced<br>The old green hedge, here&#8217;s where we&#8217;re going to sing.<br>Set that creel and those kid-goats on the ground.<br>We&#8217;ll make it into town in all good time.</p></blockquote><p>Once again, what sounds pragmatic is also allusive. In Theocritus 7, a tomb &#8212; in that case of Brasilas &#8212; similarly marks the half-way point of a journey. But the name Bianor itself comes from Homer (Iliad 11.86-92), where he is, like so many of those words in Callimachus&#8217;s epigram for Heraclitus, a <em>hapax</em>, a name that appears only once. His death, which sets off the battle that ends with the death of Patroclus, takes place, we are told, at that hour in the day when woodsmen at work cutting trees in the forest feel the longing to rest and eat. In his enthusiasm, Lycidas is, as it were, suggesting a Homeric pause.</p><p>Moeris refuses: he says they have to get on and there&#8217;s no time to waste. In that, he is rather like Meliboeus in the first eclogue, who is being cast out in such a hurry that he has had to leave behind two new-born kids, twins who are the <em>spes gregis </em>(&#8220;hope of the flock&#8221;), forcing the mother goat to go on without them. There is no solace there of the kind offered by Heraclitus&#8217; poem, in which one twin accompanies the mother in death and the other stays with the father. Here in the ninth eclogue, though, they are carrying the kids with them; and though Moeris does not want to sing any more himself, he hopes that Menaclas will yet take up the song.</p><p>Virgil is not sure that songs endure. As Heaney says himself in his fine essay on pastoral, the question of the <em>Eclogues </em>is that of Shakespeare:</p><blockquote><p>Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea<br>But sad mortality o&#8217;er-sways their power,<br>How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,<br>Whose action is no stronger than a flower?</p></blockquote><p>He&#8217;s not sure, but he hopes it might be so.</p><p>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/all-these-songs-i-have-forgotten">All these songs I have forgotten</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8212; One of those books I own and will never let go of is <em><a href="https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/M/bo43501975.html">Mickey Rourke and the Bluebird of Happiness: A Poet&#8217;s Notebooks</a></em> by W.S. Di Piero. In some ways, it doesn&#8217;t look like much, it&#8217;s a slim volume, but some of the thoughts it holds have changed me, helped me, opened me up. The style of writing, the form, these too have been useful.</p><p>&#8212; I&#8217;ve quoted from it before at length, but today this:</p><p>&#8220;<em>The offices of poetry.</em> To use shapely speech to express the radicals of existence in all their ambiguity. To answer idiosyncratically, privately, to a public world given over to falsehood, fake facts, scuzzy rumour, casual murderousness, comedic denials, manic vicious wind tunnel ideologies. To answer palsied language with vital language, plasticity, gaiety of invention and fabulation, over against opportunistic mendacity. If poetry can&#8217;t, or chooses not to, reveal what it feels like to live as a sentient being in a perilous enchanted world, then maybe it really is marginal or beside the point.&#8221;</p><p>&#8212; Published in 2017, that could be from yesterday.</p><p>&#8212; Everywhere you look, enshittification, mediocrity. (For this is what degenAI is). But good poetry is the opposite of that, good art of any sort. I think, and I&#8217;ve said this before and should probably just stop, that there is no point in talking about the lousy stuff, but to just give space to great art, great literature etc.</p><p>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/theofficesofpoetry">The Offices of Poetry</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Wordsworth began his &#8220;Ode&#8221; in 1802. It&#8217;s a poem that embodies his philosophical stance on childhood vision and its eventual loss, implying that what has been forfeited must first be named before it can be recovered.</p><p>Could there be a more problematic<s> </s>condition for a poet? If it&#8217;s the poet&#8217;s job to pay tribute to states of feeling (as Wordsworth writes in the Preface, &#8220;Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotions recollected in tranquility,&#8221;) then their success hinges on the ability to see and sense deeply, to recollect clearly and attentively.</p><p>And these are the poem&#8217;s <em>opening lines</em>. He&#8217;s set high stakes for the rest, which documents Wordsworth&#8217;s departure from a world of wonder to a world worn smooth by sight. Adulthood strips away that &#8220;freshness of a dream,&#8221; leaving the poet feeling less able, maybe even less inclined, to write about the world with the same appetite and astonishment.</p><p>Coleridge, Wordsworth&#8217;s longtime collaborator, talks about this risk in Chapter XIV of <em>Biographia Literaria. </em>He praises his friend in Preface to<em> Lyrical Ballads</em> and credits him for tuning Coleridge&#8217;s own sight &#8220;to the loveliness and the wonders of the world before us; an inexhaustible treasure, but for which in consequence of the film of familiarly and selfish solicitude we have eyes, yet see not, ears that hear not, and hearts that neither feel nor understand.&#8221;</p><p>I love the phrase &#8220;the film of familiarity,&#8221; which suggests that time dulls the senses, reducing one&#8217;s sensitivity to the world&#8217;s wonder, yes, but also reducing one&#8217;s capacity for empathy, &#8220;ears that hear not, and hearts that neither feel nor understand.&#8221;</p><p>I&#8217;m sometimes asked why I chose to research wonder&#8212;saying my PhD was on the role of wonder in poetry <em>does</em> sound <em>slightly</em> like I apprenticed myself to a unicorn paddock for four years. Here&#8217;s why: the potential and incentive for renewing wonder is serious business. It transcends the individual and speaks to the larger human project, to the belief that deep inquiry into individual experience may lead to greater appreciation of collective experience, and that this appreciation is vital for humanity&#8217;s survival.</p><p>The more we wonder, the less of an appetite we have for destruction, Rachel Carson argued. Poems are the perfect wonder vehicles. They are wonderfully efficient and cost-effective wonder delivery systems.</p><p>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/what-adulthood-forgets-wordsworth">What Adulthood Forgets: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and the Fate of Wonder</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I went on a long hiatus from writing, a sort of starvation, somewhere around the start of the pandemic. I can&#8217;t tell if this was a totally conscious choice, but I knew my writing life needed a deeper anchor.</p><p>I am slower now. I rarely submit my work. And when I do, it&#8217;s because I feel truly called to the journal. I speak and read when it feels aligned. I write because I want to. I work on projects that feel like I am alive. I say no to opportunities that are extractive and dulling, even if they are shiny.</p><p>I spend a lot of days not writing. I read a lot. I live. I celebrate other writers. I write books and pieces that have no intended publisher and no end goal. I am working on a memoir in a time when &#8220;no one wants memoir unless you&#8217;re a celebrity,&#8221; bla bla bla.</p><p>I am doing it because I would rather die than not.</p><p>Some of this is also about being tired, older, chronically ill, and overstimulated without social media and expectation. Some of this is that my life has expanded, and I am nourished beyond art. But most of it is that I burned myself out on myself.</p><p>Writing is a gift. We don&#8217;t have to do it. Literally, we don&#8217;t have to be here. Like, we can quit. We <em>get</em> to do it. We <em>want</em> to do it, right? We get to be the arbiters of pure and total consciousness. We get to reach into the river and feel the current. And we get to translate it. What a joy to crawl back into the creative self as a joy and not as a form of proof or punishment.</p><p>Lisa Marie Basile, <a href="https://lisamariebasile.substack.com/p/there-are-two-writers-within-meand">There are two writers within me&#8212;and they are eating each other alive</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Just write it out of you. Write anything, don&#8217;t even try to get to the new. Have no goal to heal the the pain you think is in you through the writing. Just write any damn thing that comes before your eyes. Fictionalise it. Steal. Be the bad guy for once, but just write and in a while as you keep writing it will start to be enough. I don&#8217;t know or care why. Nor do I want you to write a book or monetise your pain in some way. Just fucking write, and forget healing, forget being a writer, a poet, a thinker, someone with an opinion. Let the writing fill up the page without all these things you think you are and it will raise you up just by you having written, and without you getting in your own way.</p><p>John Siddique, <a href="https://johnsiddique.substack.com/p/write-it">Write It</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I remember crossing out poems in the school booklet because we weren&#8217;t doing them.</p><p>I remember &#8220;Bean green over blue&#8221;.</p><p>I remember the poetry editor who said of a rival: &#8220;We must crush them.&#8221;</p><p>I remember the poet who paused mid-reading to savour the word &#8220;ontologically&#8221;.</p><p>I remember the poet who was sarcastic about skiing holidays to the festival organiser.</p><p>I remember finding rhymes.</p><p>I remember fridge poetry, but not fridge poems.</p><p>I remember the poet stuck on a bus texting about what it meant to send a text saying &#8220;I am here&#8221;.</p><p>I remember &#8220;Fire-fangled feathers dangle down&#8221;.</p><p>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/i-remember-poetry">I Remember Poetry</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>That was the invitation of the final prompt: to imagine a future self, ancestor, spirit, object, animal, place, or other presence watching over a moment from our lives. What might they see that we could not see then? What language might they use for our seeing? What might their gaze loosen, bless, protect, question, or refuse?</p><p>During the session, I found myself writing about the &#8220;birdbath&#8221; visible from our apartment balcony. I say &#8220;birdbath,&#8221; but what I really mean is the sizeable dip in the parking lot asphalt that becomes a watering hole after rain. Birds gather there for hours, splashing, pausing, lifting off, returning.</p><p>The prompts kept asking us to shift perspective, to let looking move from the self to elsewhere and back again. Here&#8217;s a haiku that came from that space:</p><p>robin in a puddle<br>my eyes from there<br>an afterthought</p><p>I like that the poem lets the looking happen away from me. The robin does not need to become symbol, messenger, or metaphor right away. It gets to be there first: in the puddle, in the after-rain, in its own attention. My eyes arrive later, almost beside the point.</p><p>That feels like one lesson I&#8217;m carrying from the workshop: sometimes looking as a way of writing means letting the self become secondary, decentered long enough for the world to look back.</p><p>Jos&#233; Angel Araguz, <a href="https://joseangelaraguz.me/2026/06/11/post-workshop-thoughts-my-eyes-from-there/">post-workshop thoughts: my eyes from there</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Morning light tints the walls<br>the same color as what leaks into the streets.<br>You swing your feet over the side of the bed<br>and they look for slippers, as if they had that<br>small, separate autonomy. What does it mean<br>to live without asking, or expectation? Your arms<br>slide into sleeves, lift a cup of water to your lips.</p><p>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/06/it-was-22/">It was</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 23]]></title><description><![CDATA[the prow of the house, swampy winged women, a parking space for dreams, rubbish dumps and petrol pumps, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-23</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-23</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 23:11:17 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/8bdba544-748d-42dc-9c4c-ecd1ce156e69_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: the prow of the house, swampy winged women, a parking space for dreams, rubbish dumps and petrol pumps, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>One morning last week I woke abruptly from a dream about Horace&#8217;s ode to a wine-jar, <em>Odes </em>3.21, which begins <em>o nata mecum consule Manlio</em> (&#8220;o female-thing born with me when Manlius was consul, i.e. in 65 BC&#8221;). In the dream, the first line was the actual first line but the following three were some kind of made-up dream-Latin, though in alcaics of course, like the original.</p><p>Horace&#8217;s odes are almost all addressed to people. There are very few to non-human entities: just this one, 1.32 (the poet addressing his own lyre) and 3.13 (to the <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/why-horace">Bandusian spring</a>). <em>Odes </em>3.21 is accordingly quite often treated as a kind of comedy-ode or even a send-up of one, and this isn&#8217;t wrong, exactly: it obviously <em>is</em> meant to be humourous and perhaps quite affectionate. But thinking of it as a joke is not a very good guide to the experience of the poem either, because as so often in Horatian lyric, the poem ends up somewhere very different from where it started. If it begins as a kind of send-up of a hymn and a joke about Horace&#8217;s tendency to write poems about boozy parties, it ends as an <em>actual </em>hymn, with one of the most mysteriously beautiful closing lines in all of Horace.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/o-gentle-tile">O gentle tile</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It was bliss. The first time this year lying on a hammock in my backyard, under tall trees, the green-filtered flickering light and Medieval music in delicious fifths on decidedly 21<sup>st</sup> century earbuds. Then I stopped the music and listened to the birds. Our yard is surrounded by trees and is near a ravine so we have many birds and many varieties. As I was listening, I was thinking about Bernie Krause&#8217;s concepts related to <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundscape_ecology">soundscapes and biophony</a> and especially the acoustic adaptation hypothesis and the niche hypothesis, that is where creatures carve out their own acoustic space in a soundscape, usually through occupying a particular frequency niche. So, not only what are the sounds of birds, but how do different birds occupy a soundscape together.</p><p>I&#8217;ve always loved seemingly uncoordinated sounds from crowds. So, rather than the coordinated homophony of church choirs, the heterophonic and more anarchic traditional chanting (including muttering) of the synagogue congregation. The aggregate sound of a party or really any large human group just doing their thing. The many intertwined voices overlapping, cancelling each other out, winding around each other, changing depending on position and depending on the pitch and timbre of the voices, occupying different acoustic niches.</p><p>All of this inspired me to rise from the hammock and create a setting of a poem, and specifically something that I&#8217;ve wanted to experiment more with: multiple versions of the same voice but presented in various overlapping ways so the words wash over you. Do you absorb the words and their meaning by osmosis? What if one voice was slightly louder? Does time pass differently as the various word repeat, echo or anticipate each other? What does it do to the language part of the brain as opposed to the music or environmental listening part of the brain?</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/everyone-talking-and-singing-at-the">Everyone talking and singing at the same time</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This week I&#8217;ve been flying solo, a poetry reading in Rome at Keats-Shelley House, an award ceremony and a launch for an underground poetry pamphlet series. I booked an apartment and spent most of my fee on a view across the Eternal City, the dome of St Peter&#8217;s a stone&#8217;s throw from the terrace. This is not a step up. I&#8217;ll still have nothing in my pockets when I come home. But this, this I tell myself, is poetry. You don&#8217;t get to take views home with you. They remain in the places where poetry goes.</p><p>My exuberance was perhaps due to my Instagram feed that is, like everyone else&#8217;s, notoriously populated with &#8216;my-life-is-better-than-yours&#8217; views. In the last weeks it has been hijacked by writers from the Hay Festival, novelists mainly, not discussing ideas, not getting into it, not getting deeply down into it but bragging, mostly bragging about the idyllic locations where they&#8217;ve written their latest best sellers.</p><p>&#8220;I spent a delightful month in Tuscany,&#8221; says Sheila De Vinity, author of the <em>A Millpond at Marlborough</em> (Chatsworth &amp; Grimstone) a W.H.Smith recommendation or David Henchman-Trout addressing a sold out crowd in a tent, &#8220;I find the pace of Dorset just suits my writing,&#8221; and Daphne Soames who you&#8217;ll probably know from <em>All Our Mothers&#8217; Sons</em> saying with a contrived world weariness, &#8220;Each year my publisher banishes me to a villa in Umbria and tells me not to come home until I&#8217;m done.&#8221;</p><p><em>Fuck you</em>, I think, <em>fuck you,</em> I shout at my phone. And then I book a fancy apartment in Rome. Because I want to be like them, the writers, the serious writers who don&#8217;t seem to have a view on anything, who only seem to have a nice view over something.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/what-do-you-do-with-a-view">What do you do with a view?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>One of Richard Wilbur&#8217;s best known poems, <a href="https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/writer">&#8220;The Writer,&#8221;</a> begins in his daughter&#8217;s room &#8220;at the prow of the house / where light breaks, and the windows are tossed with linden. . . &#8221; For years I thought I knew what that meant, &#8220;the prow of the house.&#8221; Wilbur&#8217;s biographers, who have located the very house and the very room, tell me I am not quite correct, but I hold to my mental image. I live in a house with a prow, and a neighborhood full of such houses. The years I&#8217;ve spent writing poetry have made clear to me the hold that these streets and these houses have on my imagination. In the normal order of things, supposing my work is remembered, it might be years before some critic noticed its rootedness in a place. I have the chutzpah to talk about it myself because the place is already beginning to disappear.</p><p>In architectural terms, my &#8220;prow&#8221; is a dormer, projecting from the roof-plane at the front of the house. A gable end with a prominent window can have the same visual effect. On the streets I inhabit, a hundred such dormers and gables jut into the sea of society. In each the containment of the family puts its public face toward the street, propriety and stature on view. These are Edwardian and even Victorian houses, creaky with age but spacious, with dormers that often extend from third stories, looking into the crowns of mature trees. In times past, high windows on these streets would have been tossed with elm; the dying elms gave place to ash trees, now dying in their turn and being more thoughtfully replaced with varied species. Our own tossing is done by maples.</p><p>In spiritual terms&#8212;that is, from its interior&#8212;a dormer of this kind is a place of solitude and protection. As its etymology declares, it&#8217;s often a place to sleep. The sloping walls created by the main roof, or by the dormer itself, lean in as if to embrace the inhabitant: sleeping child, daydreaming teenager, adult engrossed in some attic-exiled craft.</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/houses-neighborhoods-poems">Houses, Neighborhoods, Poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I arrived, a woman was sitting in the quiet at a side table in front of a laptop, looking pensive over the keyboard. Two people were setting up a table of books for sale. One by one people drifted in, slightly disheveled, many, some looking halt and infirm, then others arriving in twos and threes, more nimble, clutching bags and notebooks, chattering, some, others sitting quietly, men, more women, mostly middle aged and above, some scattered younger folks, one group looked like a parent and an adult child or two. Sneakers, light jackets against the rain shower, some cool glasses here and there. A writers festival, the mountains of northern New York State. I spoke to someone from Vermont, a woman from Texas visiting a daughter. That family I saw turned out to be locals. An old friend was there with his son, having traveled in from two other parts of the north to meet there. Fiction, mystery, romance, memoir, poetry, fantasy, plays, screenplays &#8212; all the minds roiling with ideas and the desire to write. In Ukraine, according to the article, the same, but younger, many wearing army fatigues, chatter, hugs, periodic evacuations because of the possibility of incoming missiles, all clutching bags of books, minds full of stories. Physicists are positing that all reality is relational, not material. We are many things, we problematic human species, but we are word lovers, tellers of tales, avid listeners, against odds of geography, war, life&#8217;s inherent limitations, large and small, grievous and petty. I am moved by this.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/06/08/time-works-it-out/">&amp; time works it out</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There&#8217;s something powerful about gathering in a room with other people to work on our writing together. There were four of us in the library yesterday, and another six online, and for an hour, all of us were working in silence, except for the scribbling of my pen and the tapping of their keyboards. It&#8217;s a pleasantly organic, embodied experience, writing like this; it reminds me of the old days in the newsroom when six or twelve of us were huddled around a large table in one room, working, together. Except in the writing circle, none of us are on deadline, and we&#8217;re all there just to support one another in our various writing projects. I noticed, at the end of that hour, that my heart rate had slowed and my anxiety levels were lower.</p><p><strong>Dylan Tweney, <a href="https://dylan.tweney.com/five-things-for-june-4/">Five things for June 4</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Yeah, I know, Wile E. Coyote isn&#8217;t saintly, but all those years ago, watching Saturday morning Looney Tunes, young me empathized with him way more than with the smug, always-victorious Roadrunner. I hereby salute everyone giving creative chase this summer, painting tunnels on rocks, building devious literary contraptions to trap a fleeting spirit, even knowing we&#8217;ll take a lot of canyon falls.</p><p>I recently revised a brief lyric essay starring Wile E. and Krazy Kat and placed it under submission, along with a lot of poems, as I hunt out which magazines are open during these dog days (Virginia&#8217;s humidity blanket has settled on my valley). Oh, <em>Ploughshares</em>, how I&#8217;ve tried and tried to snag your attention almost every June for decades now: will I ever catch you? Some of my poetry submissions from earlier this spring landed well, thanks to editors at <em>The Common, Ecotone, </em>and <em>SWWIM Every Day. </em>Thanks, as well, to a few editors for sending me encouraging notes with their rejections. The longer I trudge through the desert, the more I appreciate that kindness.</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/06/08/wile-e-coyote-patron-saint/">Wile E. Coyote, patron saint</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Saturday was reading through poems and checking I&#8217;m happy they&#8217;re ready, then making two lists: one of poems and one of places to send them. I also nominally suggested which poems I might send where but of course I changed this when it actually came to sending the subs (<em>not sure if these were actually good changes, but it&#8217;s too late now!</em>). Then the actual subs were split over Sunday and Monday, plus one on Friday night after work. I split them up cos it takes me a long time, I struggle to decide what to send where, and to stay on task, and I have to do <strong>a lot</strong> of checking to make sure I&#8217;ve included/omitted all the things on the instructions; trying to send too many in one day is overwhelming and ends up not happening. [&#8230;]</p><p>It&#8217;s time consuming, right, and a bit of a headache. Even with doing all my writing in a 12 point standard font and basic formatting (<em>excluding concrete poems obvs</em>) I still have to read back through and double check all the formatting specs cos they&#8217;re slightly different across a lot of places.</p><p>Then if it&#8217;s a comp you have to make sure your name isn&#8217;t on it&#8230; some want page numbers in a particular place&#8230; some are specific about what they want in the file name&#8230; some want you to include a line count in the top right or the top left&#8230; some specify spacing&#8230;</p><p>Some want a separate entry form attached along with your submission, while my favourite (<em>joking, obviously</em>) want you to fill out their online form, make payment through a separate portal, and then email your poems along with transaction/receipt numbers and other specified information in the body of the email. Trying to get all these separate points correct as a neurodivergent is &#8211; <em>to put it mildly</em> &#8211; absolutely fucking brain-melty.</p><p><strong>Rachael Hill, <a href="https://poetnotes.substack.com/p/submissions-insert-facepalm-emoji">SUBMISSIONS &#8211; insert facepalm icon here &#8211;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m a bit like a hermit crab right now, quietly working on my new books. Trying to make time to stare at big skies, take deep breaths, dream big dreams and patiently birth new worlds.</p><p><strong>Salena Godden, <a href="http://www.salenagodden.co.uk/2026/06/books-festivals-summer-2026.html">Books &amp; Festivals: Summer 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My father is passing<br>through these last days<br>like a ghost<br>he lies in<br>the nursing home bed<br>while finite iterations<br>of him skulk their way<br>toward the grave.</p><p>I am stuck in time<br>mulling over the past<br>as though I am<br>polishing rocks in<br>my mouth.</p><p><strong>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/the-space-between-breaths">Edit A Poem With Me</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How can we tell, the ones who will be here only briefly. Is it the eyes, the smile through the unannounced pain. Is it the wandering. Where did you sleep most nights? In a poem for you I apologised, &#8216;I never knew your address&#8217;.</p><p>Is it the ones who pass us by like a flash, like a light, brightly. Cast deep into the back of our minds. At one point we all needed a break. Some of us were settling down, as they say. I last saw you from the 38 bus.</p><p>All of this in the one single poem I have ever written for you.</p><p><strong>Luciana Francis, <a href="https://lucianafrancis.substack.com/p/map-of-our-lives">Map of Our Lives</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We went to a different part of the North Carolina mountains, near Boone. We were there for the wedding of my spouse&#8217;s sister&#8217;s oldest child. The wedding was beautiful, of course, but there were other beautiful moments:</p><p>&#8211;On Monday night, we went to <a href="https://www.parallelbeer.com/">Parallel Brewing</a> in Boone for a rehearsal dinner/party. Do they brew beer? I don&#8217;t know. Did I taste it? No. I wanted wine to go with the pizza. Was any of the wine memorable enough to make note of what it was? No.</p><p>&#8211;I was much more interested in <a href="https://www.huzzahbooks.com/">Huzzah Books</a>, which shares the building with Parallel Brewing. We could go back and forth, which made the party better&#8211;more space.</p><p>&#8211;I also loved lingering among the books, which seemed to be used books from decades when publishers were more serious about publishing. I found a book of &#8220;best new poetry&#8221; published in 1960 or so. The names were fairly familiar and all male, except for Adrienne Rich.</p><p>&#8211;One of our younger family members (21 or so) was thrilled to find a book by Jane Kenyon. I was thrilled that she was thrilled.</p><p>&#8211;We didn&#8217;t do more in Boone. We spent most of our time visiting with family members on the front porches of our cabins. If it had been clearer weather, we&#8217;d have had a glorious view.</p><p>&#8211;I did love seeing the fog/mist move across the land, only to vanish. Once again, I thought about how humans might come to believe in ghosts.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/06/memory-whisps-from-last-weeks-travel-to.html">Memory Whisps from Last Week&#8217;s Travel to the High Country of NC</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The author event is good, as it is every year. It&#8217;s one of those jobs that I look forward to. I take 1-2-1s with PhD and MA students, helping them in their publication journeys, boosting confidences. In between events I take some time to wander into York looking for a building I&#8217;ve heard about but never seen. I walk up and down the street several times until I finally find it &#8211; the oldest house in York, tucked down an alley way called Trembling Madness Apartments.</p><p>The passageway leads to a courtyard. Within the courtyard are the ruins. An ancient window looks out into the brickwork of the wall behind it, floor joists jut from the wall, holding up air. This is the sort of ruin I like &#8211; the juxtaposition of it; the bins against the masonry, the fag ends next to the romance of a 12<sup>th</sup> century window trailing ivy like a fairytale. I stand for a while undoing the modern to reach the past, reducing the surrounding buildings to nothing, the minster back to its original wooden structure, the window back to a view of the river, the fields. The woman in my novel would have known this place as a ruin too. It&#8217;s possible she walked here. I feel her feet in my feet, as if the building is a pin that sticks us together, holding us in one space.</p><p>As I leave, an American couple is talking a photo of the alleyway with its comical name. I apologise for spoiling the picture, and the lady tells me I suit the name perfectly and I laugh and embrace it: I am trembling madness, I am swirling between jobs, I am writer, I am carer, I am menopause, I am slipping between worlds and finding a way back to myself, and I&#8217;ve been doing that forever.</p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/trembling-madness">Trembling Madness</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Recently, I found myself in the middle seat on a turbulent flight, barely able to move without bumping into my seatmates.</p><p>You may know that feeling of foreboding that arrives out of nowhere. I can go months without it, and then, somehow, an accumulation of stresses tips into dread.</p><p>Anxiety has endless inventive momentum. No wonder so many writers seem to know it intimately.</p><p>So, what did I do to calm my body and mind? I used the in-flight Wi-Fi to look up poems about anxiety.</p><p>I&#8217;d love to hear which poems resonated most with your experience. And if there&#8217;s one I missed, please share it in the comments.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/the-poetry-of-anxiety">The Poetry of Anxiety</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>7 &#8211; What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?</strong></p><p>Writers are deep observers; I think that quality of being a witness and then writing it is a vital check in society. I&#8217;m a yoga teacher and practitioner, and the yoga practice also requires contemplative awareness. I do my best to honor what practicing yoga actually means; according to <a href="https://www.gita-society.com/wp-content/uploads/PDF/Patanjali-yogasutra.IGS.pdf">The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali</a>: <em>yogash chitta vritti nirodhah</em>, essentially translates as &#8220;yoga is the quieting of all the changing states of the mind.&#8221; The primary purpose of this practice is to clear the lens to be in a state of heightened clarity at the present moment. What better conditions exist for poems to emerge than from the place of sheer presence?</p><p><strong>8 &#8211; Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?</strong></p><p>ESSENTIAL. The right set of objective eyes, (or a few of them), is essential to crafting and refining poems when the poems are ready for that stage of work. This is part of the journey is a wonderful opportunity for self-inquiry, because it allows me to explore my relationship with ego, want, and attachment. Why am I clinging to this couplet? What makes this image so damn precious to me? What happens if I let go and allow the space for possibility beyond what I originally imagined?</p><p><strong>9 &#8211; What is the best piece of advice you&#8217;ve heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?</strong></p><p>Last year, I had the opportunity to study with Ellen Bass on her Truth &amp; Beauty retreat in Santa Cruz with Marie Howe. When I was concerned about about what the poem was uncovering about the person and situation it was based on and feeling guilty about putting all of the mess into the poem, she told me, &#8220;Give the poem what it needs.&#8221; It was such a declarative moment of wisdom. You can go back after and do all the things to care for the humans who&#8217;ve inspired the pieces or think about how the audience will meet the piece, but as the poem is coming to life, don&#8217;t hold back. When I head into tough territory around family of origin work, I hear this reminder and charge forward, emboldened and reminded to meet the poem where it is and tend to its needs.</p><p><strong><a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/06/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_0711015340.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Emily Hyland</a> (rob mclennan)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t write poetry to get reviews or validation but all the same it&#8217;s nice when you find out someone likes what you do.</p><p>The first written response to my collection <a href="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poems-Key-Aardvark-Bob-Mee/dp/B0H2FBPLZB/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2WYYNWD9ZVLZN&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.3qZrOeP1xnymB-jzXtF-hgURKTBNDbSwZDAjdRITqjZ_BFLR7FeYe8MNJmPy38Owa4_PaVtG-Owp9tD_3CmC0A.unMGfgUQEIJE8ts8DwAGjEv2vXxEOsdd6ibKAtlwFHE&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=bob+mee+poems&amp;qid=1780507833&amp;sprefix=%2Caps%2C338&amp;sr=8-1">Poems In The Key Of Aardvark</a> has appeared on amazon (from a verified sale, it says). So I will, quite shamelessly, quote in full:</p><p>&#8220;Poetry that reads like a mind passed through a shredder, then carefully reassembled by touch: fragmented, intimate, and full of strange little truths that only reveal themselves when you stop trying to read them normally. Difficult to put this one down.&#8221;</p><p>I like the idea of my mind passing through a shredder. Seems fair.</p><p>And sales are trundling along. Mostly, as far as I can tell, to people who aren&#8217;t poets. So far, so good.</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/06/03/first-review-of-poems-in-the-key-of-aardvark/">FIRST REVIEW OF POEMS IN THE KEY OF AARDVARK</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sitting down with a copy of Bob Mee&#8217;s magnificent <a href="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poems-Key-Aardvark-Bob-Mee/dp/B0H2FBPLZB/ref=sr_1_1?crid=8MAWVWRMRTA0&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.vyi35s42U_tSxGdufTj0Pg.TT-0AOjes_DOFzzo8EFv6eOz1eUO9VDVp1SPdbxxS1c&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=poems+in+the+key+of+aardvark&amp;qid=1780611019&amp;sprefix=poems+in+the+key+o%2Caps%2C106&amp;sr=8-1">Poems In the Key of Aardvark</a> is like tackling a giant trifle with a tiny teaspoon. There&#8217;s a lot if it. Gobbled at once, you&#8217;ll be sick from here to Christmas. But take your time and you&#8217;ll be amply rewarded.</p><p>It&#8217;s a full fifteen years since Bob&#8217;s last outing: The Maker of Glass Eyes, and there&#8217;s a sense of making up for lost time &#8211; both in the urgency and sheer volume of this new collection.</p><p>Some of this work is familiar from the blogosphere, where early versions were first aired. But for me, the poems are more impressive on the page, where print rewards the courage of their convictions.</p><p>When you have a writer as prolific and effortlessly inventive as Bob, it&#8217;s easy to miss lines &#8211; and sometimes whole poems &#8211; that truly resonate and sing.</p><p>The trouble is, he can do everything. His trick is accessibility; he&#8217;ll draw you in with a casual invitation; sometimes a throwaway line, then lead you somewhere totally unexpected.</p><p><strong>Christopher James, <a href="https://christopherjamespoet.wordpress.com/2026/06/04/stop-making-sense-a-review-of-poems-in-the-key-of-aardvark-by-bob-mee/">Stop making sense &#8211; a review of Poems In the Key of Aardvark by Bob Mee</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Or many villages. Whole cities. And today, I want to thank them all.</p><p>My brother, Harsha, Vani, and <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/5273325-namratha-varadharajan?utm_source=mentions">Namratha Varadharajan</a> &#8211; for reading the manuscript and giving me the courage to take the next step. And, with <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/41943794-madhuri-katti?utm_source=mentions">Madhuri Katti</a> and Prithvi &#8211; for being massive sounding boards as the publishing process almost broke my resolve at every step.</p><p>My fellow-poets on WordPress and Blogger &#8211; for reading the poems when I posted them in 2022-23. You kept me going for a whole year as the series evolved. I went back several times to read your comments and reviews, when I was drowning in imposter syndrome and self-doubt. And especially <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/303922953-rosemary-nissen-wade?utm_source=mentions">Rosemary Nissen-Wade</a> &#8211; for the idea, the inspiration and the friend that she is.</p><p>Folks at Atta Galatta, one of Bangalore&#8217;s premier indie bookstores &#8211; for letting me write and edit and sulk at one of their tables, whenever I needed a place away from home. And the good people I meet there &#8211; for all the positive energy and support.</p><p>Fellow Substackers &#8211; for your kind words of support. It encouraged me to bring new poems from here into the book.</p><p>And those who have lived through the things in the book with me, all these long years &#8211; for quietly providing a shoulder or a willing ear or an anchor, whenever I needed it. You know who you are. This one is for you.</p><p>For too long, this book has been unwilling to step out into the world. But here it is now. NWH is out on <a href="https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0H3TNMP7G/">Amazon India </a>. It will take a few more days for the international listings.</p><p>&#8216;No Way Home&#8217; is the dark scab on an old wound. I hope you will welcome it gently into your homes.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/because-it-takes-a-village">Because it takes a village</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was editing the final version of the upcoming collection of poems and thinking about what holds the book together as a whole. Some of it a twisted version of matrimony and domesticity, but also in some ways, the idea of transformation and monstrosity, which is a place I have visited before obviously with previous books and series, but seems important to take into account with this manuscript in particular. Early American vampires. Murdering governesses. Swampy winged women, and, of course, Bluebeard and his wife (and hidden room full of corpses of brides.) Not that I haven&#8217;t written about monstrous women before, though they are usually less malicious. The Renaissance dog-girl of PELT, the sideshow women of GIRL SHOW and EXOTICA. The strangeness of the SWALLOW poems and the female body. These women have a bit more bite behind them. A bit more violence.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/06/women-and-monstrosity.html">women and monstrosity</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Having had some time alone at home over the past several days, I watched a lot of bad costume television (Bridgerton Season 4), made progress on a new imaginary landscape painting, pulled a lot of weeds, and spent time combing through my computer files to see how many poems I consider ready to submit or have been published yet uncollected in a book. I figured I&#8217;d have twenty or thirty.</p><p><strong>Reader, I have one hundred and seven.</strong></p><p>How did this happen? When the hell over the past several years have I written over a hundred poems that were not in my last two books?</p><p><strong>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/aliens-mris-ouija-boards-outer-space">Aliens, MRIs, Ouija Boards, Outer Space, and Wild Carrots</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We&#8217;ve all likely been to a show where no one came. In fact, some of my most wonderfully memorable shows as an attendee have been exactly that&#8212;such as seeing one of my favorite bands, Jucifer, perform at the Double Door (RIP) in Chicago to a crowd of less than 10, their wall of amps still reverberating so loud that they knocked over my husband&#8217;s beer. And for those of us who are poets and writers, we&#8217;ve all likely been on that awkward side of the microphone, staring into a room of just a few good friends or fellow readers, but playing and playing (or reading and reading) just the same.</p><p>It can sometimes be so hard to explain this to the authors I work with as a publicist. Just because a bookstore is hosting an event for you doesn&#8217;t mean people&#8212;particularly people who don&#8217;t know you&#8212;will come. And just because people come to an event, it does not mean they will buy books. Events are rarely, if ever, about sales. You will not sell enough books to pay for your time and travel (says she who is saving all her tour receipts as a tax deduction for her unprofitable writerly &#8220;business&#8221;)&#8212;even celebrity author tours aren&#8217;t known to break even (particularly those that require stylists and handlers and make-up artists).</p><p>So, why do we it? Why do we, even at Black Ocean, strongly encourage our authors to team up and get out there?</p><p>There is no substitute for the author-in-person&#8212;hearing their voice, seeing and feeling why the work matters to them, and having the opportunity to engage with the ideas in the moment, in the flesh. This is not just true of poetry (which one could argue should always be read aloud and has its origins in performance) but of serious nonfiction as well. A scholar&#8217;s true enthusiasm for their subject and their research can be infectious.</p><p>Events are about visibility and profile raising. Even those who live in a different city or can&#8217;t attend the event may see something about it on social or in a newsletter. It puts the book and author into the ether. Those mentions build and compound. A good reading may lead to a review or an interview. It may lead to word-of-mouth recommendations. Or an invite to speak to a class. It may even lead to book sales you don&#8217;t see online or a library request.</p><p>They are also worth doing just because they are fun. For me, they&#8217;ve provided the wonderful opportunity to hang with friends (thank you, Nate Hoks, for the road trip conversation to/from Iowa City), read with writers whose work I love but had never heard aloud before (thank you, Tessa Bolsover, Sadie Dupuis, Sara Wainscott, Jordan Windholz, and Anna Zumbahlen), and to make new friends and support writers and publishers I admire (thank you, Teresa Dzieglewicz and Naoko Fujimoto&#8203;).</p><p><strong>Carrie Olivia Adams, <a href="https://poetryandbiscuits.substack.com/p/readings-and-book-events-do-they">Readings &amp; Book Events: Do They Matter?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As I move ever deeper into the third print run of <em>Whatever You Do, Just Don&#8217;t</em>, I find myself reflecting more and more on the complete irrelevance and absolute significance of sales figures.<br><br>Sales are completely irrelevant to me as an objective or target, but on the other hand their growth brings with it an accumulation of readers, who are by far the most important part of my whole creative process. Without a reader&#8217;s enjoyment, my poems would seem self-indulgent.<br><br>Then there&#8217;s the fact that no favour trading or box ticking are involved in someone&#8217;s decision to sit down with a collection, and engage with it. The gaining of a reader is by far the greatest award that a poet can win.</p><p>I&#8217;ve come to believe that slow-burning word of mouth is the most solid, long-lasting way to build a reputation as a poet. Do you agree&#8230;?</p><p><strong>Matthew Stewart, <a href="http://roguestrands.blogspot.com/2026/06/an-accumulation-of-readers.html">An accumulation of readers</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>San Francisco poet Beau Beausoleil has collaborated with Sebastopol artist <a href="https://tamsinspencersmith.com/">Tamsin Spencer Smith</a> in this striking volume published on 24th March this year by <a href="https://fmsbwpress.com/">FMSBW</a> Press. Smith&#8217;s bold and expressive abstract paintings face Beausoleil&#8217;s poems of love and rage, observation and empathy, across each two-page spread.</p><p>Many of the poems are tall and slender, like the trees that <em>hold the sky in place</em> and <em>entwine their roots &#8230; nourish each other</em> setting an example of care and co-operation to our divided human society. Beausoleil&#8217;s California is a place where <em>night-ships</em> carry <em>darkness under starlight</em>, and urban landscapes interact with a crumbling coastline &#8211; <em>a parking space for dreams</em>. The poet&#8217;s eye is drawn to <em>wandering streets and &#8230; fog-filled trees</em>, highway signs and <em>the scent of the ocean</em>. The poems are sustained by love and fuelled by a fierce grief at human cruelty and destruction.</p><p><strong>Ama Bolton, <a href="https://barleybooks.wordpress.com/2026/06/04/a-new-book-from-beau-beausoleil/">A new book from Beau Beausoleil</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve finally got round to cutting the grass today as we&#8217;d been doing No Mow May (How deliberate that was is up for debate), but between that and the state of our new allotment (It&#8217;s official now&#8230;we have the key and have joined the WhatsApp Group for it&#8230;) it&#8217;s been a week for wrestling with nature, so it was great timing to finish my reading of Graeme Richardson&#8217;s debut collection, <a href="https://www.carcanet.co.uk/9781800175341/dirt-rich/">Dirt Rich</a>, this week.</p><p><em>Dirt Rich</em> followed his New Walk Editions pamphlet, <a href="https://newwalkmagazine.bigcartel.com/product/to-start-with-issue-3-new-walk-magazine-18-month-subscription">Last of the Coalmine Cowboys</a>, pretty quickly, that being published in 2024. And there&#8217;s often a fear with that sort of turnaround that it has been rushed, but a) I&#8217;m not going to review a reviewer (who reviews the reviews of a reviewer, etc?) and b) while the collection contains all but 3 of the poems from LotCC, I think this is more a case of accretion of material over time.</p><p>Anyhoo, more importantly, I enjoyed it.</p><p><strong>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/06/07/hardstanding-for-the-bier/">Hardstanding for the bier</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In <em>Thistle</em> Kate Maxwell turns a compassionate focus on daily interactions and familiar scenarios. Her poems don&#8217;t judge. She illustrates how vital acts of empathy and humanity are in healing connections with others and how to stop short of overdoing it and becoming overwhelmed. Readers are invited to see a thistle not as a prickly weed, but a sign of endurance and resilience. Something that grew where it wasn&#8217;t invited but made the best of a hostile environment nonetheless.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/06/03/thistle-kate-maxwell-recent-work-press-book-review/">&#8220;Thistle&#8221; Kate Maxwell (Recent Work Press) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The full-length poetry debut by <a href="https://adrianaonita.com/">Edmonton-based poet, artist, educator, translator and researcher Adriana Oni&#539;&#259;</a> is <em><a href="https://palimpsestpress.ca/books/descantec-for-my-split-tongue-adriana-onita/">Desc&#226;ntec for my Split Tongue: poems</a></em> (Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2026), a collection of poems that sits amid and between two languages and cultures, even as the author feels her Romanian slip slowly away. &#8220;I should have begun by saying / that I lost my mother tongue.&#8221; begins the poem &#8220;LIMBA MATERN&#258;,&#8221; early on in the collection, &#8220;I know what you are thinking. / How can you lose something / that lives inside of you, unless / you chose to live languageless? // Forgive me, loss never occurs / on purpose. Think of the way / you lose a loved one, or faith.&#8221; Her poems speak of a loss still in-progress, with almost a call-and-response element to a number of these poems: offering a line in Romanian that follows in English translation, almost as a kind of reclamation of her mother tongue, but one that sits aside this more recent English comprehension. The poems work to reclaim and, perhaps, to recontextualize, offering alongside this life built fresh in Canada&#8217;s prairies. As the poem &#8220;PENTRU A FACE &#350;I DESFACE / <em>FOR DOING AND UNDOING</em>&#8221; writes:</p><p>F&#259; rai din ce ai.<br><em>Make heaven from what you&#8217;ve got.</em></p><p>Gr&#259;be&#351;te-te &#238;ncet.<br><em>Hurry slowly.</em></p><p>Am carat ap&#259; la f&#226;nt&#226;n&#259;.<br><em>I carried water to the well.</em></p><p>The way her two languages, her translations, are set against each other, it suggests not simply to replicate or repeat in English, but composed and translated in a way attempting to shape and articulate that space where both Romanian and English might comfortably meet, within the comfort of her own divided imagination, perhaps. Accompanied by full-colour collages, including those built with photographs from the family archive, Oni&#539;&#259; writes to articulate, to claim, to re-claim, setting up a new foundation from which to finally build. I am curious to see what might follow.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/06/adriana-onita-descantec-for-my-split.html">Adriana Oni&#539;&#259;, Desc&#226;ntec for my Split Tongue: poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In Australia his literary reputation, like the man himself, was big enough to block the sun. But to the poets who grew up in Les Murray&#8217;s shadow, it was a reputation also composed of conservatism, royalism and patriarchalism. And so, as a young woman coming of age at the University of Technology in Sydney &#8211; the epicentre of a metropolitan, sloganeering conformity in the late 80s and early 90s &#8211; I deliberately turned away from Murray and his undeniable talent and originality.</p><p>Some of my reticence was understandable. Australia still had a frontier, masculine culture, and at first glance Murray&#8217;s poems appeared to inhabit that tradition too comfortably. There wasn&#8217;t much there for a young feminist to easily identify with. My mentor, Dorothy Porter, was chippy and dismissive of him, and I found it easy to fall in with her point of view.</p><p>Here&#8217;s another reason for my initial disdain: Murray was the same age as my father, and from a similar background. Working class and a Catholic convert. I was keen to code myself differently at university: sophisticated, worldly, adventurously atheist. I cringe when I think about that younger self.</p><p>But as I got older, I realised that Murray was the real thing, and far and away the most talented and original poet Australia has ever produced. When I moved to a rural property three hundred miles north of Murray&#8217;s native Nabiac to raise my young son I gained a different perspective on the rhythm of life in a farming community, and a new respect for Murray&#8217;s exploration of masculinity, of the Oz cultural cringe, of the harsh realities of Australia&#8217;s violent pioneering past &#8211; and how its brutality has affected both incomers and indigenous people. His reportage of what it meant to be a motherless working-class boy bullied at school with only a distant and haunted father to watch over him is deeply moving. [&#8230;]</p><p>I remain captivated by his &#8220;Buladelah-Taree Holiday Song Cycle&#8221; &#8211; an early attempt to create dialogue between Aboriginal and western ballad traditions, at a time when most white writers were either too frightened or politically paralysed to genuinely engage beyond the usual second-hand slogans and bromides. The political and critical response to the &#8216;Buladelah-Taree Holiday Song Cycle&#8217; over time is salutary. Cultural commentators as diverse as Lisa Gorton (whose review in the <em>Australian Book Review</em> is wonderful), Nam Le, Noel Pearson, Peter Garrett and Clive James all praise the poem. In his excellent essay on Murray in the <a href="https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2011/09/29/angry-genius-les-murray/">New York Review of Books</a> J. M. Coetzee <a href="https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/of-frightened-cows-a-slippery-ice-block-and-an-unmade-bed/news-story/8d4f91992dd078e568c7f678d9b4451d">calls it</a> an &#8216;expansive, joyous holiday-season poem&#8217; whose use of the Moon-Bone cycle is &#8216;a stroke of genius on Murray&#8217;s part that is also an act of homage&#8217;.</p><p>That&#8217;s the way I see it: an act of careful, respectful homage written by a man who grew up in a community that was on the very frontier of rural race relations. Where the rubber, along with human skin, hits the road &#8211; brutally, and irreversibly: a deeply uncomfortable and heartbreaking place to be, both for indigenous people and the white rural working class; a place of daily experience of the other, while sharing the same environment of poverty and marginalisation; and a very long way from the &#8216;ought over is&#8217; utopias of the metropolitan universities.</p><p><strong>Lisa Brockwell, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/in-the-shade-of-les-murray">In the Shade of Les Murray</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Just arrived on my doormat is the latest, and second, issue of <em><a href="https://www.freebloodybirds.com/">Free Bloody Birds</a></em>, a new little magazine &#8216;printing new poems and essays about poetry&#8217;, edited by Alan Jenkins and Declan Ryan. Louis MacNeice turns up several times, which is always a good sign: there he is in Ange Mlinko&#8217;s essay on Derek Mahon, in Michael Hofmann&#8217;s poem for Michael Longley, and surely he&#8217;s somewhere in that <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/91395/snow-582b58513ffae">fire</a> in <a href="https://www.freebloodybirds.com/issue-two/were-i-to-stare-into-an-open-fire-by-paul-muldoon">Paul Muldoon</a>&#8217;s contribution.</p><p>And, of course, he&#8217;s there in John Clegg&#8217;s lovely essay on <a href="https://www.freebloodybirds.com/issue-two/a-rustle-of-leaves-in-regents-parknbsplouis-macneices-london-by-john-clegg">MacNeice&#8217;s London</a>, of which more below. There&#8217;s also a superb series of poems by Leontia Flynn (who I wrote about <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/poetry-notebook-240426">here</a>), an elegy for youth, called &#8216;Summer&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>Summer is fading<br>on literary ambition &#8211;<br>on my literary ambition<br>on the blood-congested drive<br><br>to conquer all readers<br>as not <em>a</em> but <em>the </em>poet,<br>marmoreal and timeless<br>to be referenced in every debate;</p></blockquote><p>That first line, which is the first line of each poem, working its way down the page, comes from Larkin&#8217;s &#8216;Afternoons&#8217;. Perhaps Larkin was listening to MacNeice too. MacNeice creeps up on you, <a href="https://mathewlyons.substack.com/p/the-writers-bookshelf-jeremy-wikeley">as I wrote the other day</a>. Here is the beginning of <em>Autumn Journal</em>, the long poem he wrote in 1938:</p><blockquote><p>Close and slow, summer is ending in Hampshire,<br>Ebbing away down ramps of shaven lawn where close-clipped yew<br>Insulates the lives of retired generals and admirals&#8230;</p></blockquote><p>As FBB&#8217;s editors point out, though poets from Belfast and &#8216;the North&#8217; are keen to claim MacNeice as &#8216;one of their own&#8217;, MacNeice &#8216;went to school and university&#8217; in England and lived and worked in London &#8216;almost his entire adult life&#8217;. At the same time, John argues in his essay, MacNeice rarely wrote about living in London with the same roving magpie eye for he brought to places like Belfast and Birmingham.</p><p>Rather (<a href="https://www.freebloodybirds.com/issue-two/a-rustle-of-leaves-in-regents-parknbsplouis-macneices-london-by-john-clegg">John writes</a>) &#8216;MacNeice writes at his best about London &#8212; writes, in fact, unforgettably about London &#8212; when he is leaving or entering it.&#8217; John&#8217;s full explanation is ingenious: I won&#8217;t spoil it here. But, as he says, leaving or entering London also means being &#8216;on the train or on the road&#8217;, and MacNeice is the &#8216;first poet of things seen from that speed&#8217;: factories, the backs of houses, rubbish dumps and petrol pumps.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/goodbye-to-london">Goodbye to London</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The extreme musicality of Baudelaire&#8217;s &#8220;L&#8217;invitation au voyage&#8221;, emphasised by its very short lines, immediately make me think of Verlaine, but it combines musicality with a robust sensuousness quite unlike Verlaine&#8217;s delicate, ethereally elusive effects. In fact it&#8217;s above all the sound of the words and the way they make the mouth feel as you say them that makes their images glow so voluptuously in the imagination [&#8230;]</p><p>There&#8217;s no point in commenting on the images in detail. Anyone reading the poem aloud or sounding it in his inner ear will both see them and feel how caressingly the poet evokes them in his imagination. The poem unfolds like a song, an incantation that weaves a self-hypnotising spell so that the speaker seems almost to sink into the world he&#8217;s imagining. Only almost, though. The refrain both yearns towards this world and accepts its distance. Depending on the emphasis one gives &#8220;L&#224;&#8221; in reading the poem, this acceptance can seem like something quietly in the background or a sharp reminder of how far the speaker&#8217;s actual world is from the order, beauty and pleasure of the imagined one.</p><p><strong>Edmund Prestwich, <a href="https://edmundprestwich.co.uk/?p=2937">Baudelaire&#8217;s L&#8217;invitation au voyage</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Searching our postings, I was surprised to see that Eliot is among the poets we have mentioned <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=eliot+site%3Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fpoemsancientandmodern.substack.com">most often</a> in <em>Poems Ancient and Modern</em> &#8212; although the newsletter has featured only three of his poems: &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-gerontion">Gerontion</a>,&#8221; &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-la-figlia-che-piange">La Figlia che Piange</a>,&#8221; and &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-preludes">Preludes</a>&#8221; (partly because not all his work is out of copyright). Somehow, for us, Eliot remains a touchstone, and if his thought dwelt on a poet &#8212; <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-a-dirge">John Webster</a>, for example, or <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-love-iii">George Herbert</a> &#8212; we tend to engage that thought.</p><p>A sign of age, perhaps? When Sally Thomas and I were young, Eliot&#8217;s poetry was the very horizon of ambitious verse, and high modernism the chief claim of high seriousness, both intellectual and poetic. And that was particularly true among literary and intellectual readers with a religious sense, for whom such work as Eliot&#8217;s <em>Four Quartets</em> gave an obvious riposte to the oft-heard sneer that believers are undereducated idiots.</p><p>As it happens, when I was starting out as a writer, I took a long lance and <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Pulp-Prejudice-Essays-Search-Culture-ebook/dp/B006ZFY7KI/?tag=josebott-20">charged at this use of Eliot</a>, arguing that God in his poetry is more often a device for addressing the crisis of modernity than an object of faith. The essay was overwrought, as young critics&#8217; work often is, although I think I do still hold that Eliot was doing something intellectually and theologically risky when he took the language of mysticism, which expresses the believer&#8217;s rising to the vision of God, and shifted it down the scale to describe the non-believer&#8217;s rising to belief.</p><p>Perhaps similarly, as the years have gone by, I&#8217;ve grown less certain of the idea that Eliot&#8217;s poems are puzzles to be solved. Here&#8217;s a link to a useful <a href="https://wasteland.windingway.org/">hypertext version</a> of <em>The Waste Land</em>, and in the presentation of Today&#8217;s Poem, I&#8217;ve placed <em>hors-texte</em> links to Eliot&#8217;s own notes. But I have gradually come to think that we might be best served by taking <em>The Waste Land</em> as a toboggan ride rather than, say, a step-by-step guide to forensic accounting. You just climb aboard and try to hang on as it shoots down a bumpy mountain run.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-waste-land-91e">Today&#8217;s Poem: The Waste Land</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Come February, maybe, we&#8217;ll embark on a study of the &#8220;Terrible Sonnets,&#8221; the hard-won late-life achievement of Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844&#8211;1889). But right now, in the Northern Hemisphere, anyway, <em><a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-sumer-is-icumen-in?utm_source=publication-search">sumer is icumen in</a></em>, with all its bursting life, and it seems fitting to turn, yet again, to Hopkins&#8217;s own summertime of poetic flourishing. In the spring and summer of 1877, as Hopkins awaited the autumn and his priestly ordination, the sonnets we most readily associate with his name, voice, and vision flowed from him in a great surge: &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-windhover-0a8?utm_source=publication-search">The Windhover</a>,&#8221; &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-gods-grandeur?utm_source=publication-search">God&#8217;s Grandeur</a>,&#8221; &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-as-kingfishers-catch?utm_source=publication-search">As Kingfishers Catch Fire</a>&#8221; &#8212; and Today&#8217;s Poem, &#8220;Pied Beauty.&#8221;</p><p>This poem is one of three examples, in Hopkins, of the &#8220;curtal sonnet,&#8221; a form devised and named by the poet (the other two are &#8220;<a href="https://poets.org/poem/peace-0">Peace</a>&#8221; and &#8220;<a href="https://allpoetry.com/Ash-Boughs">Ash Boughs</a>&#8221;), and distinguished chiefly by its abbreviated length, ten and a half lines instead of the sonnet&#8217;s standard fourteen. More precisely, it is like a Petrarchan sonnet whose separate pieces have shrunk in the wash, or like a recipe with two ingredients, reduced proportionately. The Petrarchan octave becomes a sestet; the resolving sestet then consists of a quatrain and a fifth partial line. The rhyme scheme is compressed accordingly. The standard <em>abba </em>quatrain doesn&#8217;t repeat itself, but gives way instead to a <em>cdecde </em>sestet, with its first two lines forming the end of the initial stanza, broken after the <em>d</em>-rhyme, which is repeated an extra time in the short closing line.</p><p>The form&#8217;s compression raises the stakes subtly, requiring the poem to accomplish its Petrarchan wind-up/wind-down thought process in fewer lines, with less room at the end to tie that process off. If Hopkins&#8217;s primary fascination was with the mathematics involved in this reduction of the Petrarchan sonnet &#8212; he went so far as to work out the formula for paring it down with precision &#8212; the consequence, in &#8220;Pied Beauty,&#8221; is something that eludes quantification.</p><p><strong>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-pied-beauty-5b2">Today&#8217;s Poem: Pied Beauty</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Comprising tightly written found poems as well as persona poems in the form of police &#8220;confessions&#8221; to the deaths of the African Americans who appeared again and again on our screens, <em>Ligatures</em> [by Denise Miller] draws on the news articles, autopsy reports, and video recordings of and testimonies, verdicts, and sentences in the court cases to establish the undeniable, unsettling, ugly truth of the alternative narratives that Miller offers for Scott and Garner, Rice and McDonald and Steen: systemic racism in the United States, where &#8220;black and brown / people&#8217;s stories have been spun so quickly and so / thoroughly so that suddenly our lives seem to justify / the ending of them,&#8221; exists still. [..]</p><p>Just 35 pages long and containing the reported narrative of each death, <em>Ligatures</em> delivers a deserved punch in the gut, restoring what a headline and a hashtag cannot: name, identity, story written by &#8220;<em>those people</em>&#8221; denied all three.</p><p>It is not at all &#8220;the child friendly bed time story&#8221; Miller acknowledges that some in America wanted then, want even now:</p><blockquote><p>[. . .]<br><br><em>See a picture of a black boy or black girl, a black man<br>or a black woman, a black person or a black person</em><br><br><em>and you wonder is she or isn&#8217;t she, is he or isn&#8217;t he, are they or<br>aren&#8217;t they and each isn&#8217;t but each is, you wonder is it another<br>story of or isn&#8217;t it? </em>[. . .]</p><p><strong>~ from &#8220;Dear Spectators 2: A Bed Time Story&#8221; (pp. 33-34)</strong></p></blockquote><p>History &#8212; <em>his</em> story, <em>her</em> story, <em>their</em> stories &#8212; in Miller&#8217;s series of strong and strongly defiant poems is the present we cannot just scroll by. Our shame, Miller makes clear, is so many more names have been, could be, are still being added.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/ligatures-by-denise-miller">Ligatures by Denise Miller</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A poem [&#8230;] does not make the kind of sense an essay does. The experience a poem invites a reader into&#8212;even the experience it leads me through as I write it&#8212;is an emotional one; its logic is associative, not discursive. It creates what <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanne_Langer?ref=richardjnewman.com">Susanne Langer</a> calls in <em><a href="https://archive.org/details/feelingform00susa">Feeling and Form</a>,</em> a &#8220;virtual experience,&#8221; by which she means that a poem, despite being made from discursive language&#8212;syntax, after all, is linear&#8212;presents the experience it contains as a whole to be encountered as irreducible to the sum of its parts. &#8220;Coitus Interruptus,&#8221; in other words, is not a report <em>about</em> my experience with domestic violence. Rather, it offers the reader an opportunity to feel what it was like for domestic violence to have been such an intimate part of my life.</p><p>Creating this experience necessarily meant leaving out some details of what actually happened, not because they were unimportant, but because they existed outside the emotional web of that intimacy. For example, not too long after &#8220;Mr. Peters&#8221; asked me to tape that note to my neighbor&#8217;s door, I was telling a friend about everything that had preceded my doing so as we sat talking in my living room after dinner. Suddenly, a male voice came up through the grate covering the space in the wall where my radiator was located. &#8220;So you&#8217;re the motherfucker who called the cops! You better not let me run into you. You won&#8217;t like what happens then.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/domestic-violence-has-been-a-thread-running-through-my-life/">Domestic Violence Has Been A Thread Running Through My Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><blockquote><p>I oones fro Westminstir cam,<br>Vexid ful grevously with thoughtful hete,<br>Thus thoughte I: &#8216;A greet fool I am<br>This pavyment a-daies thus to bete<br>And in and oute laboure faste and swete,<br>Wondringe and hevinesse to purchace,<br>Sithen I stonde out of al favour and grace. &#8211;</p><p><strong>Thomas Hoccleve (c1420)</strong></p></blockquote><p>The above quote is taken from Hoccleve&#8217;s (1368-1420) poem &#8216;The Complaint&#8217;, and it relates a situation that will feel <em>vividly</em> familiar to<em> any</em> member of our contemporary precariat, but especially to those of us grappling for purchase at the ragged edge of End Days Academia. This passage situates the speaker within the unfolding vocational crisis of the late Middle Ages, whereby expanding universities graduated ever more elitely educated clergy, whom the church could not afford to hire into beneficed positions.</p><p>There were multiple reasons for this, not least the unscrupulous practice of &#8220;pluralism&#8221;, where wealthy clerics or papal favourites were allowed to hoard multiple lucrative benefices; hiring out the pastoral overspill to poorly paid and often uneducated surrogates, such as vicars, chaplains, or lesser church officials, while continuing to pocket the juicy tithes. Increased secular interference was also a huge factor. The Catholic church had been greatly weakened (financially and in terms of authority) by the Great Schism; secular monarchs and local lords sought to take advantage of this situation by seizing control over church appointments, selling benefices off to the highest bidder, or simply giving them away to unqualified relatives in order to siphon parish revenue &#8211; the bastards.</p><p>Reasons aside, the results were clear: a crisis of vocation amongst the clergy, and the creation of what Kathryn Kerby-Fulton in her banging monograph <em>The Clerical Proletariat and the Resurgence of Medieval English Poetry </em>(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021) calls a &#8216;clerical proletariat&#8217;, forced into ever more various, casual, insecure and undignified forms of labour in order to make a living. This new and highly literate proletariat took lowly positions as civil servants, became secretaries in great houses, office-clerks, jobbing liturgical labourers, itinerant scribes and &#8211; according to Kerby-Fulton&#8217;s thesis &#8211; poets.</p><p>I&#8217;ll admit, I hadn&#8217;t thought about it in these terms before: but this new social class simply saw more opportunities for writing in English because they were working for &#8211; and uncovering an audience amongst &#8211; the laity. The implications of this, in terms of determining a kind of proletarian poetics are<em> huge</em>: the opportunity to address proletarian themes directly; to carve out for this clerical proletariat a distinct subjectivity and realm of concern, as Chaucer does through his characters &#8211; especially the Clerk of Oxenford and the Parson &#8211; in the <em>Canterbury Tales</em>; as Hoccleve does through his striking first-person confessional in &#8216;The Complaint&#8217;, and as a roused and radical Langland does through scorching critique in <em>Piers Plowman</em>, with its defence of the poor and its attack on corrupt labour laws and church hierarchy. Fun fact here: the rebels of 1381 are known to have used pseudonyms, including that of Langland&#8217;s titular character &#8220;Piers Plowman&#8221;, so you have a really solid example of the way the poetry of the clerical proletariat is not merely reflecting but influencing/ imagining into being a political and literary proletarian community. Woo-hoo!</p><p>Why am I telling you this? Because Hoccelev&#8217;s despair has often, over the last couple of years, been my own, and because the situation in which he found himself resonates so profoundly with the crisis engulfing academia in Space Year 2026: there are fewer and fewer permanent positions; the universities themselves seek to outsource more pedagogic labour to adjuncts, associates, and sessional tutors. We&#8217;re highly skilled and highly qualified, but we <em>will </em>face chronic underemployment/ unemployment as a result of both over-qualification (ahem) and &#8211; it has to be said &#8211; a raft of unethical practices inherent to a profit driven university system that has chugged the ghastly orange Kool-Aid of business ontology down in one.</p><p>I dearly want to find these parallels comforting; to take them as proof that <em>this too shall pass</em>, but how I <em>actually</em> feel about it can be summed up in the rather more sobering assessment that history repeats, corruption endures, and that we learn &#8211; that we continue to learn &#8211; absolutely nothing. What I <em>do </em>take courage from is precisely the resurgence that Kerby-Fulton&#8217;s book identifies. Before resurgence must come recognition: that is, the abandoning of internalised aspirational bullshit; learning to know ourselves (myself) again as a member of the sweaty, striving, vitally alive proletariat. What do we/ I sound and think like when not staging our subjectivity for an elite &#8211; downward and outward-looking &#8211; audience, but when we are, in fact, talking to and imagining among ourselves? What kinds of speech and formal tactics might be ours? What is the new vernacular? The new idiom? The language of our intellectual laity?</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/hoccleve-hedge-schools-rude-bootlegs">Hoccleve/ Hedge Schools/ Rude Bootlegs</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>the bee&#8217;s buzz&#8212;<br>another path<br>into thoughts</p><p><strong><a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/06/02/embrace-by-tom-clausen/">embrace by tom clausen</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last fall, one of my poems, &#8220;Confessions of a Former Scarecrow,&#8221; was featured as part of Prairie Schooner&#8217;s <em>Intern Picks</em> series. I&#8217;m grateful to have the poem receive that attention and wanted to share it again here as I continue thinking about looking, attention, and transformation in relation to my upcoming workshop.</p><p>You can read the feature here:<br><a href="https://prairieschooner.unl.edu/digital-schooner/intern-picks-fall-feature/">Prairie Schooner Intern Picks Fall Feature</a></p><p>And the poem here:<br><a href="https://prairieschooner.unl.edu/excerpt/confessions-of-a-former-scarecrow/">&#8220;Confessions of a Former Scarecrow&#8221;</a></p><p>Here is a stanza from the poem:</p><p>I&#8217;m not a man but a wariness,<br>a warning to keep clear of the field.<br>I stand, friendless&#8212;what friends, tell me,<br>are apple trees, a trail of leaves,<br>the wasted weather, these apples worn<br>to a sun-brown, and then just brown,<br>a rot and musk&#8212;everyone reeks<br>to me, no man, half-made of air.</p><p>Returning to this stanza now, I&#8217;m struck by the way the speaker looks out from a transformed state. The poem does not simply describe a scarecrow; it lets the speaker become a field of wariness, warning, weather, rot, and air. The act of looking here is shaped by estrangement. The speaker sees from the edge of personhood, or from a place where personhood itself feels unstable.</p><p>That feels connected to some of the questions behind my upcoming workshop, &#8220;Look / Mira: Latinx/e Ways of Looking in Poetry &amp; Prose.&#8221; What happens when looking is not neutral? What happens when the gaze is shaped by memory, body, place, fear, language, or transformation? How might a poem or essay allow us to see from a position we could not otherwise name?</p><p>I&#8217;m interested in writing that lets looking become more than description. Looking can become pressure. Refusal. Witness. Inheritance. A way to survive. A way to change shape.</p><p><strong>Jos&#233; Angel Araguz, <a href="https://joseangelaraguz.me/2026/06/05/three-invitations-to-look/">three invitations to look</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The day after my online book launch, I got up at 4.30am to get a taxi to the airport to go to Cork International Poetry Festival. I was there for four glorious days &#8211; and met so many fantastic poets and writers. If I was cast out from Yorkshire, I would probably run away to Cork. It&#8217;s one of my favourite places in the world. If any of you are thinking of a poetry holiday next year &#8211; and by poetry holiday, I mean those ones where you gather your poetry friends and descend on a poetry festival, then do think about going to Cork. The programme is always amazing, and is truly international &#8211; plenty of Irish poets but also poets from around the world. The readings go on all day and most of the night and you could quite safely go on your own and end up with friends for life by the end of the first reading.</p><p>I was very excited to be reading with Annemarie N&#237; Churre&#225;in on Saturday night &#8211; she is a fantastic poet, and author of one of my favourite contemporary poems A <a href="https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/2023/10/28/poem-of-the-week-a-hymn-to-all-restless-girls/">Hymn to All Restless Girls </a>&#8211; now the title poem of her latest collection, published by <a href="https://gallerypress.com/product/hymn-to-all-the-restless-girls/">Gallery Press.</a></p><p>I&#8217;d bought thirty copies of the House with me, and sold twenty six books at the reading, and then one for cash in the bar afterwards, so I only had two take home with me!</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/more-adventures-with-the-house">More Adventures with the House</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I always think I need more time to write and when I have it, it suddenly seems hard to focus. But this week I sketched a poem about students finding my poetry on the internet. They&#8217;ve googled me which seems a waste, but there&#8217;s definitely worse things out there. The fact that they chanted lines of my poetry back at me on the last day of school as some kind of taunt just tickled me. I had to write about it. They read poetry willingly, even memorised it. That has to be something to be proud of. [&#8230;]</p><p>My desire to try and get published may be almost gone, but not my love of writing. So in between lesson planning, coursework, piles of laundry, mowing, feeding and negotiating with my kids, I try to write poetry. I play with words and images, I attempt to capture my moments in this world on the page.</p><p>And I don&#8217;t press publish on this blog to reach the masses or even a trickle of readers, but for myself. To see the entries sketch my thoughts across the years, to document my highs and lows, my random thoughts, my cycling through the seasons.</p><p>I write to find my way through.</p><p><strong>Gerry Stewart, <a href="http://thistlewren.blogspot.com/2026/06/writing-for-no-reward.html">Writing for No Reward</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>[A] couple of days ago, we visited <a href="https://www.lunaparc.com/">Luna Parc,</a> which is quite an experience. It is a handmade house, sculpture garden, and studio that Ricky Boscarino has been working on for decades. A Rhode Island School of Design student fascinated by silver-smithing, Boscarino decided early on that he wanted to make a living doing art. He began by making unusual (and sometimes slightly alarming) jewelry and creating art from found objects. He&#8217;s also a painter, ceramicist, welder, woodworker&#8230;and trying to make his housing needs, studio, and life as sustainable as possible in the wooded region near Stokes State Park in New Jersey. Now, the place is a non-profit that trains students, sponsors art interns, and continues to grow and morph into, well, who knows? He&#8217;s devoted his life to art-making. And the place is really fun to explore.</p><p>Talk about inventive!</p><p>It&#8217;s something people need to do, have an urge to do&#8211;invent stuff for some purpose, to solve a problem, for enjoyment, or out of a need to play around; we are, as Huizinga says, Homo Ludens (<a href="https://annemichael.blog/2018/02/02/cosmogenic-questioning-play/">see this post</a>!). Play leads to all kinds of things, piqued by curiosity and that urge to fiddle with things. The patent models at Hagley were behind glass, but I was itching to play with them, like a five-year-old.</p><p>That is what I like about writing poetry, too, the play and invention of it&#8211;using words, images, sounds, patterns. Earlier today I was messing around with quatrains that used rhyme/slant rhyme line endings, switching off between ABBA and ABAB by stanza. The poem&#8217;s content isn&#8217;t cheerful, yet puttering with possible patterns was fun and kept me thinking about the topic. Then I went inside and put <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inventions_and_Sinfonias">Bach&#8217;s Inventions &amp; Sinfonias</a> on the stereo.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/06/07/invention/">Invention</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Working in the arts is tough going, and classes are clear in America. I think it&#8217;s hard to understand how much physical and mental labor and hours go into making books. It&#8217;s long hours. There are people who look down on those of us who work. Some people refuse to get their hands dirty, and I wouldn&#8217;t know how to step into their mindset. I have respect for all kinds of labor, whether it&#8217;s medicine, law, building houses, or kelp farming.</p><p>I could not walk into a room and pretend to be a lawyer or a stockbroker or an arbitrageur. But neither could a suit walk into our lives and paint or plant a garden or build something. I have painted and gardened and trained horses. My husband and son can do most of the trades&#8212;plumbing, carpentry, tile; my son redid my whole bathroom when the floor collapsed. We are in the substance of the world, building culture.</p><p>Which is why I want to keep the press going. I like books. I like arguing about them. When friends disagree with my thoughts on a book, I love those conversations, because I&#8217;m still in the swim of a story.</p><p>It&#8217;s late, and I need to sleep. In stress and exhaustion, I am not operating at my best, but when I wake up, the dinosaur will still be in the room&#8212;the ridiculous Kate&#8212;and what do I do with her? And the press hanging on by its fingernails, and the people who are upset with me, and all the problems I can&#8217;t fix.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/waking-up-to-the-dinosaur-finding">Waking Up to the Dinosaur: Finding Our Story of Survival</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When we pick and gather, wash, chop,<br>stir then eat and drink, there&#8217;s almost<br>always a sense of ceremony. From<br>the holy trinity of onions, garlic, and<br>tomatoes to the background strains<br>of gingery broth, bitter greens and<br>tamarind pucker, any improvisation<br>is inspired by those who taught us:<br>before you reach for your portion,<br>shake some droplets on the ground,<br>ladle an offering into a bowl.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/06/it-was-16/">It was</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This week the thing that I read which kept me Alive (as opposed to just living) was the <a href="https://tricycle.org/podcast/li-young-lee/">transcript of an interview</a> between James Shaheen and Li-Young Lee on Tricycle. Like, dig this:</p><p>&#8220;For me, there&#8217;s only three postures of the soul when you&#8217;re writing a lyric poem. They can be summed up as &#8220;Oh my God,&#8221; &#8220;Oh my love,&#8221; and &#8220;Holy, holy, holy.&#8221; You know, when I experience something and I feel, &#8220;Oh my God,&#8221; I mean, I know I have to write about it. When I experience something like, &#8220;Oh, my love,&#8221; I have to write about it. Or when I see and feel something that inspires in me, &#8220;Holy, holy, holy.&#8221; Those three are the postures of awe. Adoration, I don&#8217;t know who said it, but adoration is the proper attitude of a soul in awe. And it seems to me that the lyric poem is the greatest expression of awe and adoration, turning about one thing, and that thing is unknown. I feel like I live in those three postures all day long.&#8221;</p><p>So this is what&#8217;s getting me through. Thinking about the three postures of awe. Thinking about adoration. And repeating in my head the words, holy holy holy. Also, he talks about the line of a poem being a form of trembling. When you speak a poem, when you speak, &#8220;the vocal cords are trembling.&#8221;</p><p>Poetry is not going away, awe is not going away, trembling is not going away. The holy holy holy is not going away.</p><p>I think, I imagine, what will happen next is that the realms will just get further apart. They were always apart, and I don&#8217;t know why. Because why do you want to be a human living in this world, and separate yourself from art, and joy, and beauty, and philosophical thought, and the depths of the creative experience. I think back to taking what now seems like a truly wondrous undergrad degree in the humanities, and how the arts were always pitted against the business and science faculties. That was so weird to me. I always craved more cross pollination, people-wise. Which I guess is why I worked in the science library when I was at university doing my English Honours degree. (Which I received with honours, might I add, because what the hell). My co-workers were largely science and engineering students and we had the most interesting conversations.</p><p>We get to pick our posture every day. And the thing to do is to remember. You put on your coat, your shoes. Put on your posture of awe, too. Holy holy holy, oml omg.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/holyholyholy">Holy holy holy</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And here&#8217;s a poem from <em>Magnifying Glass</em> which captures a moment from childhood when I was stung for the first time&#8230;</p><p><strong>STUNG</strong></p><p>If it was a wasp<br>it stung once and fled,</p><p>if it was a bee<br>I didn&#8217;t see it die.</p><p>I stood naked<br>gazing at a splinter;<br>a black spine centred in a pink circle.</p><p>I pushed my stomach out to watch what next,</p><p>alone and naked in a field I saw<br>it redden concentrically as I stared.</p><p>I held out my arms to the summer air</p><p>let my lungs expel their cry.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/06/08/a-person-flying-their-horse-on-the-beach/">A PERSON FLYING THEIR HORSE ON THE BEACH</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We had some family stuff that happened that reminded me that life is not steady, that change is the only constant, and sometimes, those changes are not the changes we&#8217;d choose. Parents getting older, our worrying about them, and my own body, struggling with what can be several debilitating problems at once, realizing we don&#8217;t have forever, and neither do those we love. It can push us into depression or push us to try to make the best of every day we have. It&#8217;s also realizing that although right now is hard, we&#8217;re not having as bad a time as we had in the past&#8212;reading from <em><a href="https://webbish6.com/flare">Flare, Corona</a></em> always reminds me that I had some of the worst news and the worst health of my life when I wrote that book, and I survived a terminal cancer diagnosis and an MS diagnosis and severe flare almost a decade ago now. We lose things in life&#8212;our memories, our ability to run or walk, our balance, money, security, loved ones&#8212;and we have a choice, to continue on or to stay in mourning or lament our inability to trust and secure our lives exactly the way we want them to be. Sure, the world can feel like it&#8217;s in constant apocalypse right now. But we have a choice in what we do every day with that. What do you do with your last day on earth? Why, write another poem, of course.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/reading-with-kelli-in-shoreline-goldfinches-hummingbirds-woodpeckers-and-losing-things/">Reading with Kelli in Shoreline, Goldfinches, Hummingbirds, Woodpeckers, and Losing Things</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>this is my huge giant flower face. this is my<br>handful of hair. this is my rocket collection.<br>when i reach the moon i am going to put<br>my ear to the surface &amp; listen.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/06/04/6-4-5/">6/4</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 22]]></title><description><![CDATA[a sequestered egg, phrenology&#8217;s adhesiveness, the rustle of blood, dancing chickens, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-22</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-22</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 23:26:34 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/2fff8b2f-ad85-4a56-8775-72aeb6be2a6f_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: a sequestered egg, phrenology&#8217;s adhesiveness, the rustle of blood, dancing chickens, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>This morning the air brings the rustle of rain soon and the vague scent of vanilla biscuits.</p><p>Alt text says this week&#8217;s photo is a person holding a book in front of a bookshelf. Indeed it is, and that person is me and the book that I have temporarily removed from its space on the shelf in Waterstones is <em>Welcome to the Museum of a Life </em>published by Black Eyes Publishing UK. And the fact it is written by me, and it is there makes my heart dance a little happy dance.</p><p>In my ponderings this week I thought about blue moons, and I found out that maybe the blue moon at the end of May meant there have been forty-two blue moons since I was born. And whether there have or there haven&#8217;t this &#8216;fact&#8217; along with the realisation that I hadn&#8217;t got a blue moon poem in amongst my moon poems inspired me to get writing. I donned my &#8216;Poetry in Business&#8217; t-shirt and started to draft.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/06/01/forty-two-blue-moons/">FORTY-TWO BLUE MOONS</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>this heat, dear god. this room. a tranquillised diplomacy. <em>refrain</em> is bottlenecked inside the throat. i float, infused, transfigured; so pink and smooth: sequestered egg. i dream, such dreams! my cloudy raptures overrun. i must wake up. to wane of nations, whine of wealth, wax of sun; the clean and reachy flight of birds, white birds. those deadly vestal things are women in accomplished dresses, sweeping up and down. not i. an egg does not aspire to flight.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/le-spectre-de-la-rose">LE SPECTRE DE LA ROSE</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>All week I&#8217;ve had a book with a broken spine cracked open in my study. (Which could be how it came apart in the first place). It&#8217;s a well-loved book, as so many of mine are, and becoming more beloved all the time. This is <em>Another Beauty</em> by Adam Zagajewski.</p><p>I&#8217;ve been doodling in the mornings, with and without words. What can I say, it&#8217;s the therapy I can afford and there are worse methods to get one&#8217;s s-h-i-t together. One of the phrases that comes up is one of my favourite lines from AZ:</p><p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not time we lack, but concentration.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/summerwasjustabout">&#8230;that summer was just about over</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As a full-time writer, I sometimes work a 16-hour day, and still there are tasks not completed, and still there is no time to write poetry. I hardly ever have weekends off; I do most of my creative writing and editing on holiday, or late at night when I should be asleep. How do you let your words run wild if you&#8217;re earning less than the minimum wage, or if you have to get a first in your creative writing MA to justify the course fees and the time away from other priorities? How do you let go when you don&#8217;t understand the poem that everyone loves, or you have to write a poem-a-day, or what you most urgently want to say might lead to sweeping judgements in the poetry world, might even get you cancelled? When everyone is arguing, and you&#8217;ve been rejected again, and no-one will publish the book you&#8217;ve been working on for years, when you take your precious poem to a workshop and everyone finds something they want you to change, how then do you write freely and truly from your own heart?</p><p>And perhaps just as crucially, what can we do as a community, as readers, as friends and writers and peers, and teachers and mentors, competition judges, event organisers, publishers and editors, to support the wildness in each other? How can we shape the environment in which we create poetry, to encourage and sustain its wild heart?</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/return-to-the-wild">Return to the Wild</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Are you a poet with a chapbook or full-length collection that came out in 2025 or 2026, or is coming out in 2027? I created a spreadsheet to help poets with new books find each other for readings, events, collaborations, regional connections, and general book-launch camaraderie in this circus of book promo. Email me at <strong>kelli (at) agodon (dot) com</strong> and I&#8217;ll send you the link so you can add your book and info, to find other poets with books coming into the world around the same time. [&#8230;]</p><p>Poetry Book Recommendation:<em> <a href="https://thepoetryshop.com/mv8yni">The New Economy</a></em> by Gabrielle Calvorocessi. I know, I won&#8217;t stop talking about this book. <a href="https://readalittlepoetry.com/2024/02/02/hammond-b3-organ-cistern-by-gabrielle-calvocoressi/">This is the first poem of the book</a>&#8212;you can decide if you&#8217;d like more of this voice. I honestly can&#8217;t get enough of Gaby&#8217;s poems and rereading it again.</p><p><strong>Kelli Russell Agodon, <a href="https://kelliagodon.substack.com/p/terry-gross-wants-to-interview-me">Terry Gross Wants to Interview Me! and Other Things AI Made Up</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Two things. Firstly, the &#8216;<a href="https://apoetsguide.co.uk/">Guide to Getting your Poetry Published&#8217;</a> is out in the world (literally: orders from Canada, Singapore, Sweden, France, India &#8230;) so that&#8217;s one big project finished. And thank you to Thomas Ovans for his <a href="https://londongrip.co.uk/2026/05/getting-your-poetry-published/">review of the book on London Grip.</a></p><p>Secondly, I&#8217;m now setting myself a &#8216;poem a day&#8217; challenge to get some work in the bag. OK, it hasn&#8217;t been every day exactly, but I&#8217;ve made a good start, and I&#8217;m back on it once I&#8217;ve written this post. Writing went out the window for a few days while our little choir the Lewes Singers were in Winchester singing the weekend services. Turned out the cathedral was the only cool place in town, in fact I got really cold a couple of times while it was over 30 degrees outside! I also met up with a friend for a visit to <a href="https://janeaustens.house/">Jane Austen&#8217;s house</a> in Chawton. Although I&#8217;ve been there before, it&#8217;s still a lovely place to revisit, very atmospheric and quite moving to be reminded of Jane&#8217;s short and <em>somewhat</em> unlucky life. [&#8230;]</p><p>A couple of weeks ago<a href="https://peterkenny.co.uk/"> Peter Kenny</a> and I launched a new episode of Planet Poetry, this time <a href="https://planetpoetry.buzzsprout.com/1414696/episodes/19171660-stopped-clocks-starling-with-mara-bergman">featuring poet and children&#8217;s author Mara Bergman</a>. It&#8217;s already proving to be a popular episode. Our next interviewee will be <a href="https://willjharris.com/about/">Will Harris,</a> in the last new episode of this season. But there will be at least one, maybe two archive interviews released over the summer. Scaling back the number of new shows this season while keeping the poddy going has suited both Peter and myself, in that we&#8217;ve both had the time and energy to work on other projects.</p><p><strong>Robin Houghton, <a href="https://robinhoughtonpoetry.co.uk/2026/05/28/quick-round-up-of-poetry-other-happenings/">Quick round-up of poetry &amp; other happenings</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last month, I revived our monthly poetry thread for subscribers, and I could not be more glad that I did.</p><p>What I witnessed this month was a reminder of the care, decency, and thoughtfulness at the heart of poetic practice. I watched strangers comment generously on one another&#8217;s poems, sharing how and why they were moved. I saw vulnerability and candor that wasn&#8217;t performed, just human.</p><p>I also read some really, <em>really</em> good poems I would not have encountered otherwise.</p><p>One of the pleasures of putting together this selection was the range of subjects, registers, and approaches. I found poems in strict forms, poems inventing their own forms, and poems unfolding in lively streams of consciousness. There were poems about grief and loss, of course, but also many rooted in appreciation and pleasure.</p><p>I&#8217;ve tried to reflect some of that range in my curation&#8212;and, as usual, I&#8217;ve tried to link the poems up by echoes in their motifs. My selection is idiosyncratic rather than comprehensive, but please know how much I enjoyed reading your work even if I didn&#8217;t include your poem. And please know there&#8217;s always next month.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/poems-for-your-weekend-949">Poems for Your Weekend</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wasn&#8217;t actually going to post this week, but</p><p>1. I have to say a huge thanks to Tim at Crooked Spire for a great evening last Sunday and the last event for the Fig Tree 2025 Anthology.</p><p>2. And I have to say a hugerer thank you to the wonderful <a href="https://katiegriffithsweb.wordpress.com/publications/">Katie Griffiths</a> for inviting me to read at the <a href="https://www.riverhousebarn.co.uk/">Riverhouse Barn</a> (Michelle Penn and Tom Sastry coming up soon &#8211; go, go!!) on Thursday just gone. It was a wonderful evening of readings from Alwyn Marriage and the 4 open mic folks..And Katie&#8217;s own poem at the start (I think it was called Arrival) was glorious and very moving.</p><p>A huge thanks to Katie&#8217;s partner, Cris, for the lift to and from the station&#8230;and to everyone that came. Part of the evening was an interview ons stage. I&#8217;ll not lie, I was more nervous about this than any other part of the night, but I was out at ease and it was lovely to hear Katie say she enjoyed these blogs and my work. She&#8217;s certainly given me lots to think about in terms of using some of the gubbins I post here in poems. I gave myself something to think about by saying I should stop writing these and use the time on poems instead&#8230;We&#8217;ll see.</p><p>I look forward to Katie&#8217;s new collection, <em>Mindset Mindrise</em> due out this year, and commend <a href="https://ninearchespress.com/publications/poetry-collections/the-attitudes.html">The Attitudes</a> (her previous collection to you now).</p><p>Finally, more gigs where you&#8217;re gifted a mug afterwards please.</p><p><strong>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/05/26/it-meant-allotment-to-me/">It meant allotment to me</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Well, I was supposed to spend the last week on the San Juan Island at a writing residency. The first day was glorious &#8211; beautiful warm sunshine, seal heads bobbing in the water, and my first ever real-life encounter with baby foxes! The second day was cold and rainy, but I got a lot of reading and some writing done. The third day, sadly, I woke up with my jaw swollen from a tooth infection (root canal next week!) with fever and it was determined that I should probably get home so I could rest, get antibiotics and move up my root canal. [&#8230;]</p><p>Here is the rising of the Blue Micromoon of May, which is slightly smaller AND a rare second full moon of the month. Apparently, all weird moons are signs of health doom for me, so I should really pay more attention to them (see many blog posts where weird supermoons coincide with unexpected trips to the hospital.) Should have paid attention to that horoscope!</p><p>Anyway, one thing I did get to do during the residency besides writing a new fox poem was look over my manuscript, and you know what? I had the strong feeling that, at this point, I could make it <em>different</em>, but I could not make it better. I definitely had the feeling it was time to send that manuscript out and start on a new project at last.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/rough-week-with-blue-minimoon-baby-foxes-tooth-and-rib-drama-and-summer-approaches/">Rough Week with Blue Minimoon, Baby Foxes, Tooth and Rib Drama, and Summer Approaches</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s beginning to flood, my foot<br>on the brakes falling straight to the floorboard<br>as water rises, the car floating slowly<br>amidst a cache of litter, planks,<br>a garbage can, and a blue tricycle.<br>Out of control, I let the waffling<br>steering wheel go, lean back with a Hail Mary<br>on my lips and think about wading<br>to the nearest bar for a screw-it-all beverage.</p><p><strong>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://charlottehamrick.substack.com/p/may-listopia-2026">May Listopia 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Of course time has dimmed my memories, and no doubt shifted them as well. What I remember is a blogging community, people whom I met only online, who helped and encouraged me.</p><p>Some of you are still here. I wasn&#8217;t, for a few years. I see the vacancies in the resurrected blog, the months of silence. No doubt I was silent elsewhere, too; silent on the blogs of my WWW friends.</p><p>Now, I miss it. All of it. The community, the fresh excitement of meeting someone new, someone interesting, a new way of making language, new thinking, new art. New eyes.</p><p>We built something. Now I discover that I was not the only one to fade. I learn that blogrolls are obsolete, that writers no longer exchange <em>links</em> and <em>comments</em> and <em>follows</em> that lead, eventually, to more of the same.</p><p>I learn that nostalgia is a kind of grief.</p><p>the buddha in the window well<br>wet with spring rain<br>remembers snow, its white shawl</p><p><strong>Sharon Brogan, <a href="https://sbpoet.com/2026/05/30/w-w-w-nostalgia/">W.W.W. Nostalgia</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was seventeen, and blinded by youth: by my grandiosity and timidity. I wavered, as boys do nowadays, between thinking myself extraordinary and thinking myself worthless; but I didn&#8217;t recognize that about myself. So why Homer&#8217;s story of a fatherless boy setting out to discover whether he actually has a heritage (and whether it is ever coming home to save him) would move me, was mysterious to me. But move me it did.</p><p>I did know some things. I was reading the classics for the first time, and they were legible! So there was a heritage, it was a real thing, and I was up to receiving it! That, at least, I understood at the time.</p><p>But another thing that happened to me, I did not realize. It happened sotto voce. I was reading poetry for the first time. It was my great good fortune that I was given the Odyssey in Robert Fitzgerald&#8217;s translation: I was reading a master of English iambic pentameter. My ear was wholly untrained then. I was only vaguely aware that it was poetry, at first. I knew that that ragged right margin was supposed to signal something special, some elevation or sonority or affectation, but I didn&#8217;t really know what it was. So I just read it as though it were prose, galloping along, puzzling out the meaning. It was exceptionally clear language, very easy to grasp at first sight, but I was very young and very uneducated, and reading it at all was an athletic achievement. I was proud of it, and rightly so. So many foreign names, alien customs, weird locutions, puzzling repetitions! I marched through it, like Sherman&#8217;s troops through Georgia.</p><p>And something was happening besides the story. I was absorbing the fundamental rhythm of English poetry. I was learning it in probably the best, if not the most efficient way: just by reading it, line after line. When I read Shakespeare for the first time, later that year, I had a leg up: I already understood implicitly how this thing worked, how it steered, how you breathed when you read it. Poetry will eventually teach you how to read itself, if you give it time, and grant it authority.</p><p><strong>Dale Favier, <a href="http://koshtra.blogspot.com/2026/05/on-first-looking-into-fitzgeralds-homer.html">On First Looking into Fitzgerald&#8217;s Homer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the ninth month of his forty-first year, readying the third edition of <em>Leaves of Grass</em>, Walt Whitman sat down to compose what we, ahistorical in our lexicon, might consider his coming out. Titled &#8220;Calamus&#8221; after <em>Acorus calamus</em> &#8212; a tall wetland flowering plant native to his birthplace, Long Island, the sand-duned end of America, also known as sweet flag for its strong erect leaves and solid cylindrical spadix &#8212; this would always remain his most overtly erotic lyric sequence, the one in which he included his elegy for <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/04/18/whitman-traversal/">his New Orleans heartbreak</a>. The sequence is often referred to as Whitman&#8217;s &#8220;homoerotic&#8221; epic &#8212; a definition narrowed not only to sexuality alone but to a sexuality that exists solely as an antipode of the heteronormative paradigm. Such a reading flattens the substance to the surface, for the &#8220;Calamus&#8221; poems are Whitman&#8217;s love poems&#8212;his only overt love poems. Among them is a short meta-poem vibrating with the vulnerability of writing these verses at all:</p><blockquote><p>Here the frailest leaves of me and yet my strongest lasting,<br>Here I shade and hide my thoughts, I myself do not expose them,<br>And yet they expose me more than all my other poems.</p></blockquote><p>But while Whitman boldly celebrated his intimate sympathies in verse, he remained restive about them and sought to fathom himself through what he, along with his generation, thought to be science. Again and again, Whitman returned to phrenology&#8217;s amativeness and adhesiveness, charging his poetry of contrasts with this battery of words, locating his own coordinates in relation to them, making sense of the world, making sense of himself in relation to the world and of the world&#8217;s totality in relation to its multitudes. Out of the language of a pseudoscience, he sculpted a new vocabulary of elemental personal truth. In the &#8220;Calamus&#8221; poems, he dares imagine in the public plane what felt so intolerable on the personal &#8212; not only the total acceptance of his nature, but its consecration of an entire species of love:</p><blockquote><p>For I am the new husband, and I am the comrade.<br>And this, O this shall henceforth be the token of comrades, this calamus-root shall,<br>Interchange it youths, with each other! There shall from me be a new friendship &#8212;<br>It shall be called after my name.</p></blockquote><p>How much more poetic it would be to call ourselves Whitmanic or Waltean rather than homosexual or bisexual or queer or any other term etymologically rooted not in the lush wetlands of nature but in the strangeness, the otherness of the counternatural, describing us not by what we are but by what we are not.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/05/30/traversal-phrenology-whitman/">How Phrenology Queered Language: Walt Whitman and the Evolving Lexicon of Love</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now published, my translation of the great German poet J&#252;rgen Becker&#8217;s 1993 collection, <em>Foxtrot in the Erfurt Stadium</em>. Shearsman Books have done a marvellous job with this book. The poems are introduced by a brilliant essay by Lutz Seiler (also in my translation) and an extract from Becker&#8217;s early statement of literary intent, &#8216;Against the Conservation of the Literary Status Quo&#8217; (1964). I love the choice of cover image: the receding blue remembered hills evoking the way Becker&#8217;s poems layer, and intermingle, the past and present of his life and his country&#8217;s history so seamlessly. Becker&#8217;s work is hugely admired in Europe but almost unknown over here (and in the USA). [&#8230;]</p><p>In her Afterword to J&#252;rgen Becker&#8217;s monumental 1000-page <em>Gesammelte Gedichte </em>(2022), Marion Poschmann praises the poet as being &#8216;the writer of his generation who has most consistently exposed himself to the work of remembrance, who approaches the repressed with admirable subtlety and is able to reconcile his personal biography with the great upheavals of history.&#8217; Becker grew up in the German region of Thuringia which, after World War II, was in the Soviet occupation zone, later the GDR. By then, his family had moved to West Germany and, after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, Becker often returned to his childhood landscape.</p><p>It is, in part, such biographical happenstance that has made Becker a poet of historical change which, as he says in the poem &#8216;Dressel&#8217;s Garden&#8217;, is &#8216;not yet / a completed process&#8217;. The poems achieve their ambitious goals through a layering of time periods, a multiplicity of voices, strands of association and networks of memory. He collages fragments and juxtaposes elements of everyday speech, popular music, neutral description, higher tones, and historical quotation. What holds the poems together are recurring leitmotifs, focal points of personal and historical memory, familiar places, to such a degree that it is &#8216;possible to read 17 volumes totalling 1000 pages as a single, enormous poem&#8217; (Poschmann). [&#8230;]</p><p>Selecting from the 1000-page poem that Poschmann envisages would be difficult indeed, so I have chosen to present the whole of Becker&#8217;s crucial 1993 collection, <em>Foxtrot in the Erfurt Stadium</em>. Following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and reunification the following year, this is the collection in which Becker explores his relationship with his own childhood in Thuringia and the continuing impact of the Second World War and the division of Germany. I have also included a substantial extract from Becker&#8217;s important 1963 lecture, &#8216;Against the Conservation of the Literary Status Quo&#8217;, because it suggests clearly the poet&#8217;s dissatisfaction with the literary forms of that time and his belief that a form of &#8216;journalling&#8217; was to be his own way forward. Becker&#8217;s baggy, comprehensive, allusive, meditative, brilliantly detailed poems (surely at their best at length) can also be viewed as a response to Czeslaw Milosz&#8217;s lines in the 1968 poem &#8216;<em>Ars Poetica</em>?&#8217;: &#8216;I have always aspired to a more spacious form / that would be free from the claims of poetry or prose&#8217; (tr. Milosz and Lillian Vallee). These then are poems of great historical importance, but my interest in them has also been sustained by the belief that they are extraordinary technical achievements and present an extension of the concept of what makes a poem, an extension too long absent from the English language poetry world.</p><p><strong>Martyn Crucefix, <a href="https://martyncrucefix.com/2026/06/01/now-published-foxtrot-in-the-erfurt-stadium-by-jurgen-becker/">Now Published: &#8216;Foxtrot in the Erfurt Stadium&#8217; by J&#252;rgen Becker</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Longing in <em>Dream Logic</em> is not confined to romantic or interpersonal scenarios; it also takes the form of grief, where desire is directed toward the impossible recovery of the dead. In several poems centred on the speaker&#8217;s grandparents, memory becomes both a consoling and destabilising force. <em>Echo Wood</em> is especially effective in this regard. The poem revisits shared habits and private rituals&#8212;guessing the wood of a banister, smoking roll-ups&#8212;not as anecdotal detail alone but as traces through which intimacy is preserved after loss. Since her grandfather&#8217;s death, the speaker explains that &#8216;she likes to haunt&#8217; the places associated with him because &#8216;it feels as if a part of you is still there, a bit of your soul left behind.&#8217; The language of haunting is crucial here. It registers grief as a condition in which the boundaries between presence and absence become porous, and in which the mourner herself assumes a spectral relation to the world. Bosman intensifies this instability through the refrain &#8216;Perhaps- perhaps&#8217;, a phrase that suspends the poem between disbelief and yearning. Logic gives way to wish, but the wish is structured by grief&#8217;s need to imagine continuation. In this sense, the collection&#8217;s dream logic is nowhere more affecting than in its treatment of bereavement, where emotional truth depends not on factual certainty but on the persistence of attachment.</p><p>These recurring concerns&#8212;unrealised possibility, anxiety, failed agency, and grief&#8212;give <em>Dream Logic</em> a notable conceptual coherence. Bosman&#8217;s references to Emily Dickinson, Emily Bront&#235;, and Sylvia Plath help to situate that coherence within a wider poetic lineage, though the collection does not merely imitate its forebears. One might locate Bosman between Dickinson&#8217;s inward metaphysical attentiveness, Plath&#8217;s psychological intensity, and Bront&#235;&#8217;s emotional extremity, yet her work remains distinct in tone and method. Where those predecessors often move toward crisis, revelation, or visionary confrontation, Bosman is more interested in quieter forms of disturbance: hesitation rather than rupture, lingering attachment rather than rebellion, emotional afterlife rather than dramatic catharsis. Her landscapes, accordingly, are less sites of sublime struggle than repositories of memory and projection. What emerges from the collection is an understated but persuasive poetics of frustration, in which the mind returns compulsively to what it has lost, feared, or failed to realise. As a debut, <em>Dream Logic</em> demonstrates not only technical control but a sustained interest in the forms through which interior life becomes thinkable and speakable.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/05/30/review-of-dream-logic-by-satya-bosman/">Review of &#8216;Dream Logic&#8217; by Satya Bosman</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As with other Italian imports, such as olives and spaghetti, I sometimes feel have an endless appetite for sonnets. So another anthology is always welcome, and this week I&#8217;ve been reading Paul Muldoon&#8217;s <em>Scanty Plot of Ground: A Book of Sonnets </em>(Faber, 2025). It&#8217;s an enjoyable buffet of small plates; one discovery I was glad to make was &#8220;The Shepherd Boy&#8221; by John Clare, which, like many sonnets, seems to tell a story about its own playful ability to imagine riches in a confined space (the book&#8217;s title comes from Wordsworth: &#8220;&#8216;twas pastime to be bound / Within the Sonnet&#8217;s scanty plot of ground&#8221;) [&#8230;]</p><p>As with most poetic miscellanies, closer inspection reveals some scantiness in the table of contents. For a writer whose own <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57869/why-brownlee-left">inventively pararhymed sonnets</a> have been so influential on contemporary poetry, Muldoon is surprisingly uninterested in the range of modern experiment with the possibilities of the fourteen-liner out there, and surprisingly keen on nineteenth-century poets with only a minor claim to significance in sonnet history. Robert Browning, for example, was not a notable sonnet writer &#8212; unlike his wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning &#8212; yet not only does he get in with a sort-of-sonnet comprising two seven-line stanzas, but also features in <em>two</em> other tributes: Swinburne&#8217;s &#8220;A Sequence of Sonnets on the Death of Robert Browning&#8221; and Landor&#8217;s &#8220;To Robert Browning&#8221;. For this week&#8217;s post, then, I thought I&#8217;d pick seven sonnets passed over by Muldoon, which would be in my own imaginary anthology.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/pinks-43-a-swirling-chain">Pinks #43: A Swirling Chain</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>If literary history is defined by the great writers who seem to mark its eras, what do we say of those whom time has largely forgotten: the quieter, more idiosyncratic voices who never quite rise to the surface, let alone manage to stay there? We call them minor, lacking a more precise term for the writer who falls short, somehow, of a Shakespeare, a Donne, or a Wordsworth. And perhaps it&#8217;s true of that writer&#8217;s vision, that it is smaller and less striving, that it doesn&#8217;t aspire to the level of the epic. Still, even a small vision may, in its way, contain its share of multitudes.</p><p>Consider the example of Eugene Lee-Hamilton (1845&#8211;1907). &#8220;Who?&#8221; you might say, and well you might &#8212; though some of you might recall the poet and critic Daniel Galef&#8217;s piece on Lee-Hamilton&#8217;s chilling &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-queen-eleanor-to-rosamund?utm_source=publication-search">Queen Eleanor to Rosamund Clifford</a>,&#8221; which ran here a year ago last March. But largely, except to scholars of the Victorian era and those who remember him as the endower of a still-ongoing literary prize at Oxford and Cambridge, Lee-Hamilton has lapsed into an undeserved obscurity.</p><p>Educated in France and Germany, he served in various diplomatic positions before abruptly and inexplicably, at the age of twenty-eight, losing the use of his legs. He spent much of his adult life in Italy, a semi-invalid under his mother&#8217;s care, producing his body of poetic work between bouts of illness and what the doctors termed &#8220;nervous prostration.&#8221; His interest as a poet inclined to the historical dramatic monologue, as in the imagined address of Eleanor of Aquitaine to the mistress of her husband, Henry II, whom Eleanor loves, as Daniel Galef has written, &#8220;the way the viper loves the dove.&#8221; In these dramatic monologues, Lee-Hamilton manages to channel not only the Victorian monologue-master, Robert Browning, but also the sonnet mastery of that poet&#8217;s wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning.</p><p>A master of the sonnet in his own right, Lee-Hamilton deserves our renewed notice. Today&#8217;s Petrarchan sonnet, small as it is, strikes a resonant note of large existential disillusionment. The beautiful, evocative sound that the seashell returns to the ear is not the sound of the sea, but the rustle of our own blood, which we tell ourselves is the sea. If this sonnet&#8217;s vision is one of debunked hope, posing the false promise of the shell&#8217;s sea-sound as a figure for the emptiness of the idea of heaven, still the poem is as beautiful and beguiling, even in its despair, as the illusory sound of the sea in a shell.</p><p><strong>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-sea-shell-murmurs">Today&#8217;s Poem: Sea-Shell Murmurs</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The latest full-length poetry collection since her remarkable <a href="https://griffinpoetryprize.com/poet/eve-joseph/">Griffin Prize-winning poetry title</a>, <em><a href="https://www.anvilpress.com/books/quarrels">Quarrels</a> </em>(Vancouver BC: Anvil Press, 2018) [<a href="https://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2018/06/eve-joseph-quarrels.html">see my review of such here</a>] is <a href="https://evejoseph.wordpress.com/">Victoria poet Eve Joseph&#8217;s</a>, <em><a href="https://www.anvilpress.com/books/dismantling">Dismantling</a></em> (Anvil Press, 2026), a book-length suite of deft, single-stanza prose poems. Her fourth published poetry collection, <em>Dismantling</em> is set in two untitled sections, the second of which is a suite of twenty-six numbered poems, each titled &#8220;cento.&#8221; &#8220;The shades above the city have already been drawn,&#8221; begins the first numbered &#8220;cento,&#8221; &#8220;the pockets of wind emptied. The room is quiet now, everything falling at the same rate of speed.&#8221; There&#8217;s a part of me still frustrated at how her work so quietly floats just under the radar, having only been introduced to her work at all through her third collection, and missing completely her first two&#8212;<em><a href="https://www.straight.com/article/the-startled-heart-by-eve-joseph">The Startled Heart</a></em> (Oolichan Books, 2004) and <em><a href="https://www.brickbooks.ca/shop/the-secret-signature-of-things-by-eve-joseph/">The Secret Signature of Things</a></em> (London ON: Brick Books, 2010)&#8212;although one might say what keeps her just under the radar is exactly the strength of her quietly powerful lyric. &#8220;All history is revisionist.&#8221; begins the poem &#8220;<em>revisions</em>,&#8221; &#8220;Dig down and there&#8217;s so and so with his version of events. A little further and you can hear the song of the last speckled cormorant and before that the ancestors of Przewalski&#8217;s horses no bigger than foxes. What&#8217;s the point of one more poem?&#8221; <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2022/03/eve-joseph-short-takes-on-prose-poem.html">As part of her contribution to &#8220;short takes on the prose poem&#8221; over at </a><em><a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2022/03/eve-joseph-short-takes-on-prose-poem.html">periodicities: a journal of poetry and poetics</a></em><a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2022/03/eve-joseph-short-takes-on-prose-poem.html"> in 2022</a>, she wrote: &#8220;I love prose poetry. There is something about the shape of the form that encourages ranging thought at the same time it demands concise imagery. It is a loping wolf that places each paw precisely.&#8221;</p><p>Composed across firm and precise lines, set with such a delicate touch, Joseph&#8217;s poems are masterfully written, perfectly held together, even through an ongoing conversation around how easily things fall apart. This is a collection of form and attention, carefully layered and precise. As the poem &#8220;the hour before dawn&#8221; begins: &#8220;How many silences penetrate other silences? The monk with his vows. A violin at rest in its black case. Two of Adelaide Crapsey&#8217;s three: the falling snow, the mouth of one just dead. Not the dying or the death itself but the wide-open <em>O</em> of the moment. The breath gone from the lungs yet still in the room.&#8221;</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/05/eve-joseph-dismantling.html">Eve Joseph, Dismantling</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Entire years of your life will blur together, or be forgotten. Eventually, some effort to rescue what is left becomes necessary, and some reckoning with its meaning becomes possible. The poems in <em>The Discarded Life </em>[by Adam Kirsch] are such an effort.</p><p>One of the poems&#8217; pleasures is how well they evoke a time and place. We are in Southern California, in the early 1980&#8217;s. (I grew up there in the same decade.) The Muppets, Atari games, and Sesame Street all make appearances, against the almost-imperceptible gradations of climate that that place calls &#8220;seasons&#8221;:</p><blockquote><p>The most of winter that we ever knew<br>Was a gray, cloudy tincture of the air[.]</p></blockquote><p>For those who did not live through it, the technology of the time will seem insanely primitive, as far from us as the turn of the 20th century was to them. The absence of the internet is only the tip of the iceberg. Kirsch remembers the limited graphics of one video game, which were</p><blockquote><p>All that the bulky monochrome display<br>Could generate from five-inch floppy disks<br>You had to keep inserting and withdrawing,<br>Like turning hand cranks on an early Ford.</p></blockquote><p>While Americans worried about nuclear war, Southern Californians prepared for other disasters. I myself remember the regular drills, but not whether they were for earthquakes, wildfires, or a meltdown at the local nuclear power plant. Kirsch describes a fire coming to his summer camp:</p><blockquote><p>&#8230;red smoke drifted close enough to make<br>Our eyes burn like the chaparral around us,</p></blockquote><p>and I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ve heard the word &#8220;chaparral&#8221; since I moved away.</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://www.mostlyaesthetics.com/p/book-review-the-discarded-life-by">Book Review: The Discarded Life by Adam Kirsch</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Red-Comet-Short-Blazing-Sylvia/dp/0307961168">Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath by Heather Clark<br></a>First, the positive &#8211; I loved the second half of this book, where Clark tied in Plath&#8217;s life to what she was writing at the time. It gave some insight into her writing process and what inspired specific poems, and analyzed the artistry of her work. I also was impressed with Plath&#8217;s ambition and work ethic &#8211; I feel like a champion when I wake up at 4:45 to get a bit of writing done in my morning routine, but Plath wrote from 4 &#8211; 8am, as a single mother with very young children. She puts me to shame!<br><br>The negative&#8230;I did the audiobook for this &#8211; it was 45 hours long. I like Sylvia Plath as much as the next person &#8211;<em> perhaps more </em>&#8211; but I did not care about what she ate at girl scout camp or what grades she made in elementary school. I would have preferred a 300 page condensed version of this, focusing more on her career, development as a poet, and her poetics. I thought too Clark could have gone a bit more into the mental health aspect &#8211; I think she is kind of trying to make the reader think that Plath&#8217;s depression was hereditary and inevitable &#8211; but more could have been explored there.<br><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Red-Comet-Short-Blazing-Sylvia/dp/0307961168"><br></a>But my main complaint is Clark&#8217;s kid-glove handling of the monstrous Ted Hughes. I think Hughes, whether indirectly or not, murdered Plath. Actual quotes from Ted Hughes:<br>&#8220;I murdered her.&#8221;<br>&#8221;It doesn&#8217;t fall to many men to murder a genius&#8221;<br>(at her funeral) &#8220;It was either her or me.&#8221;<br>(also at her funeral) &#8220;You all hated her too, right?&#8221;<br><br>Not to mention that he wrote Plath to tell her it would be better for him if she committed suicide. And don&#8217;t get me started on how he mishandled her work after her death &#8211; destroying her novel-in-progress and current journals, rearranging and editing her manuscript to take out the parts that made him look bad, letting his sister who hated Sylvia write her biography, letting his mistress handle her work&#8230;<br><br>Yet, Clark tries to subtly manipulate the reader of this biography to think of him as a Byronic hero &#8211; comparing him to Heathcliff and Rochester, commenting on his stormy good looks and country ways, his powerful poetic &#8220;talent&#8221; and how much he suffered after Plath&#8217;s death. Oh please! I like a biography that sticks a bit more closely to the facts of what this guy actually did, rather than trying to paint it in a gothic romance light.<br><br>Plath was no Innocent &#8211; the first half of the book slogged along as she dated so and so and cheated with blah blah blah and got drunk here and etc etc etc &#8211; she was not much of a prim 1950s lady. But choosing Hughes as a husband set her on an unstoppable slide to self-destruction. I don&#8217;t think he remotely deserves the wrist-slap of being called a &#8220;Rochester.&#8221;</p><p>I think there is room for another Plath biography to be written &#8211; one that is a little less soft on Hughes, a bit more focused on Sylvia&#8217;s career as a poet, and 1/3rd the length of this one.</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/a-mushroom-of-doom-a-marriage-of">A Mushroom of Doom, a Marriage of Doom, and a Face of Doom</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;Impossible Paradise&#8221; is a selected poems taking from Chen Yuhong&#8217;s collections &#8220;Half-Light&#8221; (2022), &#8220;Trance&#8221; (2016), &#8220;In Between&#8221; (2011), &#8220;Bewitched&#8221; (2007), &#8220;A River Flows Deep in Your Veins&#8221; (2002), &#8220;In Truth the Ocean&#8221; (1999) in English translation. She has been influenced by poets such as Louise Gl&#252;ck, Anne Carson, Margaret Atwood, Alice Oswald and Carol Ann Duffy whom she has translated in Chinese. However, this is the first time Chen&#8217;s own poems have been translated into English. The selections are gathered by collection in reverse order, with the most recent poems first. She relishes in the everyday and natural experiences. [&#8230;]</p><p>In &#8220;Inkstone&#8221; written, &#8216;on seeing a Duan inkstone from the Qian Long period, Qing dynasty&#8217;, the stone is &#8220;ineloquent&#8221;,</p><p>&#8220;yet from it soundlessly<br>flow mountain waters, birds,<br>insects, flowers, fish, people&#8221;</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p>Chen&#8217;s poetry is quietly compelling and concerned with connections between people and between people and the natural world. It&#8217;s an empathetic, measured plea for compassion and understanding. The poem&#8217;s rhythms feel prayer-like, pointing to a space for mindfulness and focus. This collection and English translations are long overdue.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/05/27/impossible-paradise-chen-yuhong-translated-by-george-oconnell-and-diana-shi-carcanet-book-review/">&#8220;Impossible Paradise&#8221; Chen Yuhong translated by George O&#8217;Connell and Diana Shi (Carcanet) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Normally at the top of these posts, you&#8217;ll see details of the publications under review: title, author/editor, etc. However, for If/Then, I list Chris Turnbull as &#8216;instigator&#8217; and I do so for good reason. The genesis behind this most unusual publication was a visual poem by Turnbull which she sent to Linda Russo asking her to write something in response to it and then send her poem on to another writer to repeat the process. The result is a kind of chain art text, or 21st-century renga for longer poems. The final list of contributors is: Chris Turnbull, Linda Russo, Sandra Guerreiro, Anna Reckin, Camilla Nelson, Matti Spence, Sarah Cave, Luke Thompson, Suzanna V. Evans, Anthony Vahni Capildeo, Andre Bagoo, and Richard Georges.</p><p>Of course, the chain art experience is not that unusual, but what makes this one stand out is the physical structure of the object, which Turnbull describes as an ox-plough or boustrophedon, sheets of print bound in a complex folder card binding, not unlike accordion pleats, but reversible in multiple directions. Printed pages are bound into the folds using a loop of strong thread, one or two folded sheets per fold, and the first &#8216;return fold has a bonus of two square postcards with short extracts from a couple of the poems inset into slots in their backing card cover. The images at the link above are a perfect instance of a picture being worth a thousand words.</p><p>The poems set up conversations between them in a variety of ways. Some are straightforward links, as in the closing lines of Linda Russo&#8217;s &#8216;With Our Many Small Faces Turned To The Sun&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>burying the words, finally</p><p>o how long it takes</p><p><em>under onto</em></p></blockquote><p>reconfigured to provide the opening for Sandra Guerreiro&#8217;s untitled response:</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;o how long it takes</p><p><em>under onto</em>&#8221; entering the field</p></blockquote><p>The next fold begins with Camilla Nelson&#8217;s &#8216;from Run&#8217;, a celebration of birds, her:</p><blockquote><p>black bird black bird<br>ch- ch- ch-<br>meutgghhhh</p></blockquote><p>looking back to Anna Reckin&#8217;s preceding &#8216;Now that&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>blackbirds shyer this year, but still there, darting<br>in and out of the ivy on the wall</p></blockquote><p>Later in Nelson&#8217;s poem we read:</p><blockquote><p>ch- ch-<br>click of cows moving<br>up chalk downs<br>and me in the dip<br>gathering sun</p></blockquote><p>Then Matti Spence&#8217;s &#8216;Walk And&#8217; opens:</p><blockquote><p>Hear the chalk-<br>downs drone not white<br>but a proposal of something<br>near to that deflection</p></blockquote><p>This is followed by Sarah Cave&#8217;s &#8216;Walk &amp; Pray, Pilgrim&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>hear the chalk rabbits<br>beneath the mountain<br>&amp; thru the mountain &amp; pray<br>&amp; ray to the mountain</p></blockquote><p>(Rabbits also appear in Spence&#8217;s poem.) The fold ends with Luke Thompson&#8217;s &#8216;Chalk Rabbit&#8217;.</p><p>The fifth fold then opens with Suzanna V. Evans&#8217; &#8216;and sings&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>Sea-sieved melodies, whale melodies, fall like particles of chalk, marine<br>snow, down to the black spines of sea urchins, to the ear-shaped shells of<br>abalones.</p></blockquote><p>There are other threads in these ecologically aware poems that I could have picked up on, but the chalk Downs of South East England have personal resonances for me, so I went with that one.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/05/26/three-pamphlets-and-a-boustrephedon/">Three Pamphlets and a Boustrophedon</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last week I was in London for a couple of days to do various things, but mostly to spend some time in the British Library. One of the items on my to-do list for the BL was to photograph in their entirety the two manuscript notebooks containing most of Payne Fisher&#8217;s earliest recorded poetry. I&#8217;ve known about these manuscripts for a decade or so, and I already had fairly detailed notes on them, but no full images and therefore no complete transcriptions.</p><p>Fisher, a fascinating figure about whom I hope to write a book in due course, went on to be Cromwell&#8217;s poet. I&#8217;ve written about him several times, both in scholarly articles and chapters and also here on substack:</p><p>Fisher came to the attention of Cromwell as a Latin poet, and it is as a Latin poet that he had great success in the 1650s (and diminishing success thereafter). His breakthrough hit was a remarkable Latin poem in the Claudianic style about the siege of York and the battle of Marston Moor in the summer of 1644. It is an excellent and unforgettable poem in large part because it is both genuinely a celebration of Cromwell&#8217;s unstoppable military might <em>and </em>a lament for the suffering of the defeated royalists and the besieged inhabitants of the city. (In this sense, though not really in many others, it is a bit like Lucan&#8217;s <em>Civil War</em>.)</p><p>Fisher had in fact fought at the battle of Marston Moor himself, on the losing royalist side, and the earliest versions of the poem &#8212; which exist in both Latin and English &#8212; are straightforwardly royalist. Here is a fragment of the early English version of the poem that would eventually become <em>Marston Moor</em>, describing the city of York:</p><blockquote><p>That Matron-Citty prostituted now<br>To the leud embracement of hir Ravishers<br>Hung downe hir aged Head disfigur&#8217;d round<br>With Batteries both of Foes, and hir owne Feares.</p></blockquote><p>When we think of &#8216;war poetry&#8217; today we tend not to think of poetry celebrating the victors, but rather the verse that laments the suffering of the participants &#8212; as in the trench warfare of the First World War &#8212; or, as here, of innocent civilians. Conversely, if we think of the poetry associated with the English civil war, we think probably of the &#8216;cavalier&#8217; poets, celebrating honour and chivalry mostly in a rather abstract if beautiful kind of way, as in Lovelace&#8217;s poem, &#8216;To Lucasta, on going to the wars&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>Tell me not (Sweet) I am unkind,<br>That from the nunnery<br>Of thy chaste breast and quiet mind<br>To war and arms I fly.</p><p>True, a new mistress now I chase,<br>The first foe in the field;<br>And with a stronger faith embrace<br>A sword, a horse, a shield.</p><p>Yet this inconstancy is such<br>As you too shall adore;<br>I could not love thee (Dear) so much,<br>Lov&#8217;d I not Honour more.</p></blockquote><p>Fisher and Lovelace were almost exact contemporaries, and in fact Fisher met and became friends with Lovelace during the 1640s, when they were both serving in the army. But Fisher&#8217;s version of war poetry is entirely unlike Lovelace&#8217;s &#8212; and indeed it&#8217;s not much like anything else I can think of from this decade. The style is perhaps best described as &#8216;documentary&#8217;, and indeed several of the poems do seem to have their origins, at least, in material written during a campaign.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/realistic-war-poetry-from-the-1640s">Realistic war poetry from the 1640s</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>[Margaret] Tait was Orcadian; though once she qualified as a doctor she travelled widely. In her mid-thirties, after serving through WWII in the Royal Army Medical Corps, she turned to filmmaking. &#8220;I think I gradually came over to feeling that it was necessary to do something more than just simply bringing people back to bodily health&#8221;. Between 1951 and 1998 she made over 30 films of various lengths, all of which have this sustained focus and attention to detail which I imagine she gave to her patients. Tait also published her own poems in three slight, beautiful hardbacks, the shape and size of a Ladybird book, in 1959 and 1960. Her logo is a cardiograph line, the double beat of the heart.</p><p>In her films and her poetry Tait was, says Ali Smith, instinctively Modernist (Smith links her to the Beats and Whitman, and to Hugh MacDiarmid, a friend and the subject of one of her films &#8211; check it out on YouTube). Interviewed on Channel 4, Tait quoted Lorca: &#8220;an apple is no less intense than the sea, a bee no less astonishing than a forest &#8230; [The artist] enters what may well be called the universe of each thing &#8230; [he/she] takes all materials in the same scale&#8221;. The camera was an impartial witness, she believed: it showed all things in great and equal detail, it could present context and perspective as well as great intimacy. Using collage and disjunction, following associations of ideas and sounds and her own train of thought to move from one shot to the next, without hierarchy. This allowed her to create what she felt was &#8220;a pure form of poetry&#8221;. &#8220;In poetry something else happens &#8230; Presence, let&#8217;s say, soul or spirit, an empathy with whatever it is that&#8217;s dwelt upon, feeling for it &#8211; to the point of identification&#8221;. In <em>The Big Sheep</em>, for example, this dwelling is in accumulated, over-familiar layers. Images &#8216;rhyme&#8217;, and are nested together through repetition and cross-linking; she revisits and revises places, shapes, textures and faces constantly, in subtly interconnected moments. But these are not private exercises. She is constantly aware of us, the audience, peering over her shoulder. <em>Look at this</em>, she says. <em>And this. Now look here</em>.</p><p>&#8220;Poems, like all human fabrications from straw huts to theology, are made to our measure and by our measure, and are not above or beyond us,&#8221; said Charles Simic in &#8216;Notes on Poetry and Philosophy&#8217;. &#8220;Language and paint are not metaphysical and forms are not spectral. Patterning is a universal human act&#8221;. It is in this that I understand her move from &#8220;simply bringing people back to bodily health&#8221; to looking more deeply at how we live, at how we knit our experience together. In her film poetry, she looks to present simply this, &#8220;in a way that only the motion picture camera has a language for&#8221;. Documentary filmmaking was, in her view, ultimately unsuccessful because of the way it isolates its subject from its surroundings in order to study it. &#8220;I think that film is essentially a poetic medium,&#8221; Tait said, &#8220;and although it can be put to all sorts of other &#8211; creditable and discreditable &#8211; uses, these are secondary&#8221;. Her film-poems have been described as anti-narrative. They end by simply ending.</p><p><strong>Lesley Harrison, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/sometimes-its-the-wordiness-of-words">Sometimes it&#8217;s the Wordiness of Words That Gets in the Way</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;<em>Fardistantly past due, we throughganged the outpumpers, the alden gatherers saved from longforetimes.</em>&#8220;</p><p>A couple of years ago, I made a video that used a very early version of MidJourney AI to create some background elements that I did not have my own material for. At the time, MidJourney seemed like an exciting new way to create original material. However, it is now clear that these AI engines illegally use original work and consume massive amounts of power. Therefore, I have completely remade the video using all my own footage. Even so, the images look somewhat unworldly, which is part of my intention. The text is in a kind of future-archaic dialect that I invented.</p><p><strong>Ian Gibbins, <a href="https://www.iangibbins.com.au/2026/05/26/the-bilgestruck-reimagined/">The Bilgestruck reimagined</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i find myself craving primordial. to chart<br>a path across species. wake up in the twilight dawn<br>of a thick-shelled egg. the sun, like a father&#8217;s eye<br>burning through the walls of any house.<br>we wake with hollow bones.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/05/31/5-31-5/">5/31</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Whenever I watch sensei doing an arrangement, I am struck by her care, not only toward the flowers but her attention to the active empty space that is part of the floral field. When I took lessons in <a href="https://dreaminginjapanese.substack.com/p/flowers?utm_source=publication-search">Dutch Still Life flower arrangement</a>, I was surprised by the way the floral field is completely filled, in much the same way that an oil canvas is primed and fully painted. You never glimpse the canvas underneath an oil painting in the same way you see and appreciate the white spaces in a Chinese landscape painting.</p><p>Because, of course, the empty space is doing crucial work. In Japanese this is called &#20313;&#30333;&#12398;&#32654; the &#8220;beauty of the white space.&#8221; As an expression of &#8220;ma,&#8221; it is an emptiness that is active and generative. [&#8230;]</p><p>I also often find myself now thinking about plants as sentient beings&#8212; each, as some Buddhist philosophers might say, on their own path toward salvation and enlightenment. Michael Pollan, in his new book on consciousness, begins his journey with a long meditation on exactly this possibility when he describes the poppies in his Berkeley garden appearing to return his gaze one afternoon, and rather than dismissing the experience, he followed his feeling into the emerging science of plant intelligence.</p><p>Researchers have shown that plants are able to read their environment and solve problems. They appear able to learn, form memories, send signals to other plants, change their behavior in response, and even cooperate with plants they recognize as kin. Pollan stops short of claiming they have reflective selfhood, but he takes their inner life seriously. And so do I.</p><p><strong>Leanne Ogasawara, <a href="https://dreaminginjapanese.substack.com/p/mountain-tiger-sky-mind">Mountain Tiger-Sky Mind &#34394;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>you gave me your hand lens<br>by a mossy tree<br>and I looked up close<br>my eyelashes crushed by its metal rim<br>my nose touching tree bark<br>smelling its tiny life<br>made large.</p><p>On bark cliff faces,<br>dripping dark where the sun can&#8217;t enter,<br>unfathomable life hides<br>itself from view</p><p><strong>Anna Chilvers, <a href="https://blogsandbogs.substack.com/p/confessions-of-a-moss-widow">Confessions of a Moss Widow</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It delights me that <em><a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/">Scientific American</a></em> includes science-related poetry &#8212; and when my monthly issue arrives I turn first to the monthly poem. Here are the opening stanzas of <a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/poem-the-algorithm/">&#8216;The Algorithm&#8217;</a> by California poet <a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/author/barbara-quick/">Barbara Quick</a> from the May, 2022 issue.</p><blockquote><p>Optimization under uncertainty<br>is a field of study in which my grown son<br>will earn his Ph.D. The math, in his case,<br>concerns the production of wind energy.</p><p>He reads his papers aloud on the phone to me<br>as a way to optimize their clarity,<br>so that even a layperson, such as myself,<br>can understand what he&#8217;s saying,<br>in between each beautifully made<br>equation and graph.</p></blockquote><p>Quick&#8217;s complete poem is available <a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/poem-the-algorithm/">at this link</a>.</p><p><strong>JoAnne Growney, <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2026/05/science-in-meter-and-verse-from-sci-amer.html">Science in Meter and Verse (from Sci. Amer.)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been thinking about the wind, its partnership with seeds, with pollen, its agency with water, how it casts it beyond its own reach, and sand, rising as clouds from the desert to whirl and settle to crevices in odd places, and weather, wind its worldwide vehicle. And wind&#8217;s havoc, flattened forests, but from which new growth births, and us, our dust bowls, how wind carries even our own species with it, tangling itself in our hair, lining our faces with its force. But it occurs to me also that we are as wind ourselves, the same force of movement, destruction, new plantings. We also drive ourselves mad with our constant blowing. What can we learn from being like the wind? Could we be more humble? But the very trees themselves bow down. But though we can &#8220;harness the wind&#8221; for our energy generators, we have not yet learned to stop it. There&#8217;s that. This week the wind blew light rain pattering against the window. And here&#8217;s a charming poem by German poet Jan Wagner that translator David Kaplinger has rendered &#8220;portrait of the rain.&#8221; I guess I&#8217;ll have to start studying German, so taken have I become with some of the German poetry I&#8217;ve been dipping into.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/06/01/particles-pollen-all-the-dirt-of-the-world/">particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been thinking about throwaway remarks in poetry recently. Those little bits of speech which don&#8217;t really seem necessary but nevertheless lodge themselves into the felt memory of reading the poem with great force.</p><p>One such moment is the detail that Jaan Kaplinski supplies the reader in these lines, from his poem <a href="https://anthonywilsonpoetry.com/2011/08/28/lifesaving-poems-jaan-kaplinskis-this-morning-was-cold/">&#8216;This morning was cold&#8217;</a>:</p><blockquote><p>I came from a meeting &#8211; a discussion of<br>the teaching of classical languages &#8211;<br>and I was sitting by the river with a friend<br>who wanted to tell me his troubles.</p></blockquote><p>The lines could make perfect sense without the reader learning about the &#8216;discussion of/ the teaching of classical languages&#8217;. There are many Jaan Kaplinski poems which include similar declarative statements without any self-interruption. &#8216;I came from a meeting/ and I was sitting by the river with a friend/ who wanted to tell me his troubles&#8217; is fine. But it&#8217;s the bit in the middle I love, the bit you could argue that we don&#8217;t need. When I first encountered the poem some twenty years ago, I thought its inclusion was slightly knowing, a little on the nose, self-regarding, even. All this time later, I return to the poem to check that the poem&#8217;s speaker has remembered to include this unnecessary yet vital detail that so perfectly captures the urgent liminality of needing to switch between two very different worlds, from theoretical pedagogy to listening to the &#8216;troubles&#8217; of a friend on a &#8216;freezing&#8217; riverbank. The poem makes another, similar turn into the world of domesticity, towards its end: &#8216;I stopped at a shop for oatmeal and bread.&#8217; This is also worth meditating on. But he had me at &#8216;meeting&#8217;.</p><p><strong>Anthony Wilson, <a href="http://anthonywilsonpoetry.com/2026/05/29/lifesaving-lines-a-discussion-of-the-teaching-of-classical-languages-by-jaan-kaplinski/">Lifesaving Lines: A discussion of the teaching of classical languages, by Jaan Kaplinski</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was editing some poems today and thought about one of the strategies that I use a lot when revising any writing. Cutting out the parts that are less interesting. Trimming filler. Pruning around important or more arresting images so that they stand out and aren&#8217;t cluttered up by other material. What would the musical equivalent of that be? I wondered.</p><p>I modifed the backing tracks from my piece <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/poetry-makes-nothing-happen">Nothing Makes Poetry Happen</a> (which I posted yesterday) and improvised an alto saxophone solo on top. I was trying to sound like Julius Hemphill on <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrVZC44qiIs&amp;list=RDZrVZC44qiIs&amp;start_radio=1">Dogon A.D.</a> an album that I adore.</p><p>I took the poetry editing approach and cut out lots of filler. I noted that played too much, trying to capture the feeling of excitement and energy in the tracks. I didn&#8217;t leave much space. (Oh you ADHD!) So I edited out unnecessary parts. I found places where the &#8220;images&#8221; (musical ideas) would be better without the clutter around them. I didn&#8217;t reorder the solo, though sometimes I have done that. Except for adding on a single note at the end which came from the beginning in order to end with something more summative and cadential and a formal callback to the beginning.</p><p>With writing as with music, it&#8217;s easy to think that the flow of a draft is integral and inseparable to the essence of the work. But it isn&#8217;t. Or, in fact, one can craft a flow that better expresses or highlights the core material. And the modified flow often is a better manifestation or expression of the flow one was aiming for in the first place.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/editing-music-as-if-it-were-writing">Editing music as if it were writing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Frances Brawne (later Frances Brawne Lindon) is cast as the girl next door in the Keats story. She literally became the girl next door when her family moved into rooms on one side of Wentworth Place (now Keats House) in Hampstead, London in April 1819. Fanny and Johnny had met the previous November in 1818 and Keats appears to have been initially quite critical and dismissive of her. She, however, showed him enormous kindness, gave him emotional support when his brother died of tuberculosis that December and it&#8217;s easy to reduce her simply to being the poet&#8217;s muse as the two became close during Keats&#8217; most productive period in 1819. Fanny was &#8220;a voluminous reader&#8221; and &#8220;books were her favourite topic of conversation.&#8221; She was also, &#8220;an eager politician&#8221; and is described as being &#8220;fiery in discussion.&#8221; She was vey much Keats&#8217; equal. On 18 October 1819, Keats proposed to Fanny Brawne and she accepted. Keats had given up a career in medicine to pursue poetry and a marriage would not be consented to by Fanny&#8217;s family. They kept their engagement a secret.</p><p>When Keats began coughing blood in February 1820 Fanny was still living next door. His infectious illness meant that meeting in person became problematic and instead they exchanged frequent notes and letters despite being only a few yards apart. Fanny would pass his window returning from her walks. All of this provided condition for an intense yet frustrating affair. We will never know if their relationship was consummated physically. The romance intensified when Keats left for Italy, on health grounds, in September. He never returned. He died in Rome in February 1821 with Fanny still believing he would be back by spring. She was thrown into a profound period of mourning that lasted six years when she learned of his death, cutting her hair short, wearing black and the ring Keats had given her before he left.</p><p>When she eventually married, twelve years after his death, she retained all of the poet&#8217;s letters and keepsakes and her archive provides much colour to the Keats story. It offers little further insight into her own. The letters she wrote to Keats are lost. The last ones she sent to Rome were never even opened and buried with the poet in accordance to his wishes. When the Keats letters were sold into a collection and published after Fanny&#8217;s death there was controversy. Fanny didn&#8217;t quite fit the Victorian narrative that had been established, she was too ordinary, even considered by critics as unworthy to be cast alongside such a distinguished figure as the poet. [&#8230;]</p><p>Frances Brawne Lindon is number ninety two on the top one hundred list at Brompton Cemetery and I go in search of her. I find her in the brambles and the ivy behind a metal, workman&#8217;s fence. She retains a degree of separation, cut off, removed as she was with her poet. Perhaps they have some works in mind here. Perhaps they&#8217;ll clear a path to Fanny, give her a little more status, restore her to a greater and more deserving glory. She doesn&#8217;t need her lines cut back anymore. They&#8217;ve been lost already. I stand respectfully, eagerly behind the metal barrier as if I&#8217;m waiting for a rockstar or a member of the royal family, which, of course, I am.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n66-finding-fanny">N&#186;66 Finding Fanny</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In Prayer (I), George Herbert creates a sonnet out of a series of metaphors for prayer. No explanation is given. The images emerge, disorientingly.</p><blockquote><p>Prayer the church&#8217;s banquet, angel&#8217;s age,<br>God&#8217;s breath in man returning to his birth,<br>The soul in paraphrase, heart in pilgrimage,<br>The Christian plummet sounding heav&#8217;n and earth<br>Engine against th&#8217; Almighty, sinner&#8217;s tow&#8217;r,<br>Reversed thunder, Christ-side-piercing spear,<br>The six-days world transposing in an hour,<br>A kind of tune, which all things hear and fear;<br>Softness, and peace, and joy, and love, and bliss,<br>Exalted manna, gladness of the best,<br>Heaven in ordinary, man well drest,<br>The milky way, the bird of Paradise,<br>Church-bells beyond the stars heard, the soul&#8217;s blood,<br>The land of spices; something understood.</p></blockquote><p>I especially like the line <em>The soul in paraphrase, heart in pilgrimage, </em>as I think it expresses a common feeling of reading poetry&#8212;a half-way feeling between experience and understanding. The soul can only be paraphrased. There are no words that fully express the human soul. The heart in prayer is on a journey to God, it cannot be said to have arrived. Poetry is the soul in paraphrase, the heart in pilgrimage. It is a common clich&#233; that life is a journey&#8212;but it is a clich&#233; because it is true, it has been said for as long as there has been commentary on human life.</p><p>As Thoreau said, being a traveller is the history of every one of us.</p><blockquote><p>A traveller! I love his title. A traveller is to be reverenced as such. His profession is the best symbol of our life. Going from &#8212;&#8212; toward &#8212;&#8212;; it is the history of every one of us.</p></blockquote><p>Poetry is about that traveling. Whether in literal journeys in which we learn to see strangely, as in Bishop, or about spiritual journeys, as in Herbert, travels in our heads and souls, poetry captures the sense of being unsure about the world, but knowing that <em>something is understood</em>. Before we can begin to talk about the specific understanding, we have to be able to enter the dream, and to begin to see the poem as it wishes to be seen. We must read like travelers, coming into a new place, looking for what they can see.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/something-understood-how-to-read">Something understood. How to read poetry.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This time, wedding travel took us to the high mountain country near Boone, NC&#8211;spectacular scenery, very rainy weather, fog rolling in, winding dirt/mud roads.</p><p>I am sitting in a tiny cabin in near dark, and I&#8217;m always surprised at how hard it is for me to work on the computer lit only by the light of the computer. I&#8217;m fine reading online stuff with no other light, but writing a blog post feels hard. Or maybe it&#8217;s the tiredness that makes it hard, the existing outside of my normal routines.</p><p>Let me record a line that came to me this morning, which may find its way into a poem at some point: &#8220;I am the bartender without a corkscrew.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/05/second-spring-wedding.html">Second Spring Wedding</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I began writing this, I saw the bats flitting about in the air but now it&#8217;s so dark that I can&#8217;t see them. When I look up from my word document (white words on dark &#8220;paper&#8221;), I see pale, parallel symbols across the sky.</p><p>It looks like a trace fossil.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/trace">Trace</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This past weekend I was most fortunate to have been interviewed, via Zoom, by four Chilean university students of English and creative writing. They are taking Hern&#225;n Pereira&#8217;s course at Arturo Prat University, Iquique, Chile. In 2014, Hern&#225;n collaborated with Dr. Karen Jogan of <a href="http://www.albright.edu/">Albright College</a> in Reading, Pennsylvania on a poetry and place project that resulted in the book <em>So Far..So Close/Portada y Contraportada: Contemporary Writers of Tarapac&#225; &amp; Pennsylvania</em>. Pamela Daza took the photos for the book; I posted a bit <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2014/08/">about it here</a>. Thanks to social media, which I don&#8217;t often thank, I&#8217;ve kept in touch with Hern&#225;n, who is full of interesting ideas for teaching young people to enjoy poetry and to learn English.</p><p>Now, I&#8217;m retired, and I was pleased to hear from Hern&#225;n that he&#8217;s assigned his students books by English-speaking poets to read and research, and then interview, said writers (with whom he is acquainted). Would I be willing to be interviewed? Why, of course!</p><p>The result of most interviews is that I learn a great deal about my work by having other people ask me questions about it. I usually learn a bit about the interviewer(s) in the process. In this case, I was happy that the students had come up with some good and unexpected questions that really made me pause and ponder. I was also impressed with what excellent English skills they have, and how polite and earnest they are. One of the questions was what makes me motivated to write a poem. Not <em>inspired</em> (the usual question), but <em>motivated</em>&#8211;a slightly different verb and a telling one.</p><p>I answered along the lines of how seeing an image, experiencing an event, learning new information (ie observation), or reading a text with which I might disagree or wonder about leads me to a line of questioning/reflection, and that whole process motivates me to write. I have to say my answer was, in real time, rather vague, and that I was speaking with people for whom English is a second language. But a student named Maximillio said, &#8220;So, would you say then your motivation is responsive?&#8221; Wow, yes! Which clarifies a lot for me. I&#8217;m not a forward-momentum sort of writer who bulls into powerful expression, much as I admire such writers and sometimes wish I were more like them. I&#8217;m the ponderer, the one who imagines being an other and tries to figure out that perspective, the somewhat distant observer who nevertheless wants to bring the feelings and experiences home to whoever my reader may be.</p><p>That was a splendid experience for me. So nice to speak with people under 25 years old again. I miss that. Meanwhile, reading a 1998 edition of <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/953562.Poet_in_New_York">Lorca&#8217;s </a><em><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/953562.Poet_in_New_York">Poet in New York</a></em><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/953562.Poet_in_New_York"> </a>(in translation of course, though I am getting slightly better at reading the Spanish). And drafting new work in my head while watering the garden.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/05/31/interviews/">Interviews</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How to explain to someone else<br>when your basic condition is knowing you barely<br>have words for things in this universe? I try to strip<br>the shelves of my excesses. Why did I need more<br>than one pen, one bottle of ink?</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/05/it-was-11/">It was</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>People who believe in community lean into community. We are doing everything we can to lean in. I have been working seven days a week since becoming Publisher and CEO in January 2024. I haven&#8217;t been paid for three months. I&#8217;m going to keep working, but if it were up to me, I admit, I can&#8217;t carry this press into the future alone.</p><p>Sugar is poured unevenly in the publishing business. Presses without endowments and large operating reserves often go overlooked. I wonder where the sugar was poured for the Literary Arts Fund. I wonder if there was ever actually a chance for Red Hen Press, or if we only imagined there was.</p><p>Meanwhile, Tobi has powers and is hatching a plan, one that includes rebuilding our board. Our staff continues to march ahead. Our work goes on, but we need more support to be sustainable, to survive into the next year. Tobi is our community whisperer, the one who speaks in the clearing in the woods, and they help us believe that if the community wants Red Hen, it will happen.</p><p>The night we found out about the Literary Arts Fund, we had tickets to a play called <em>Exotica</em>, where performers dressed up like animals and performed aerial stunts. There were two dancing chickens (you really can&#8217;t make this up) who got all of us on our feet to conga through the adjoining restaurant. Maybe it was our new board member and Tobi, getting everyone up and dancing, to remind us that we are all in it together.</p><p>At some point, they had a &#8220;slut contest&#8221; to see who would dance on the bar and strip. The twenty-somethings lined up, but nobody took off more than a jacket. I just couldn&#8217;t let this pass. I got up and danced the slut walk, off came the jacket and the top. My bracelets and rings flew in all directions. Sometimes, you have to do it yourself.</p><p>Tobi is creating our future, and the future is a conga line with a chicken in the lead. I like that future. I believe in it.</p><p>We Kates don&#8217;t give up easily. I won the slut contest and walked off with the champagne. Red Hen Press will not go quietly into this good night. Tomorrow is another day.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/not-with-a-bang-finding-our-future">Not With a Bang: Finding Our Future in Community</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My anguish can be washed in warm water, with a mild soap, when it&#8217;s soaked then rolled in an old towel lay it out in the dappled sun, beside lilies of the valley where it can hear the tinkling of its bells and exchange its sour breath for their small beads of sweet aroma smelling of fields and fields of the smallest hope.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3695">Anguish is like Laundry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now here they come again, the immaculate men.<br>Here they come, smelling of incense and failure.<br>They walk past the pot-holes, weeds, broken glass,<br>into my dreams, while I sit in moonlight with my<br>book. What&#8217;s this pressed between the pages?</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/06/01/the-joy-of-stream-writing-is-not-knowing-whats-happening-whats-about-to-happen/">THE JOY OF STREAM-WRITING IS NOT KNOWING WHAT&#8217;S HAPPENING, WHAT&#8217;S ABOUT TO HAPPEN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s summer, for sure this time. Gave my<a href="https://pearlpirie.com/"> author site</a> a cleanup for broken links and to be better organized. Read a bit. Sent a couple more submissions. Took a walk. Transcribed some.</p><p>Birdsong of various chirps, and another, somewhere among cat&#8217;s meow, falsetto donkey and door hinge. Took a horsefly, a wasp, a few deerfly out to see the sky. Snacked, drank, read some more. Received a few more submissions for my one-line chapbook call. Wrote some more.</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/06/01/getting-resettled/">Getting Resettled</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 21]]></title><description><![CDATA[becoming a living ghost, getting football fans to recite poetry, advocating for stupidity and vagueness, letting chaos turn to insight, and other adventures]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-21</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-21</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 23:38:38 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/9dec2d2f-bc4c-4608-afcf-503edfc092c6_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: becoming a living ghost, getting football fans to recite poetry, advocating for stupidity and vagueness, letting chaos turn to insight</em>, <em>and other adventures. Enjoy!</em></p><blockquote><p>Here is the garden<br>where all our sins are remembered, where<br>all the embers are numbered, where the fires<br>join hands and sing across the Gorge: a canticle<br>for rain forests that were never meant to burn.</p><p><strong>Dale Favier, <a href="http://koshtra.blogspot.com/2026/05/a-compost-prayer.html">A Compost Prayer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>let&#8217;s wait for the accident to get cleared out let&#8217;s lie about our diagnoses let&#8217;s watch amerikka&#8217;s lunatic leaders preach like Aimee Semple McPherson back from the dead in a white shirt flapping her wings I dropped the script on the floor they gave me a loaded gun I slithered on my belly toward my car then stopped in the marram grass don&#8217;t forget your permission slips don&#8217;t forget the right side of my mouth all my teeth aching</p><p><strong>Rebecca Loudon, <a href="https://thebeginningofsummersend.blogspot.com/2026/05/pig-and-farm-report.html">Deconstructing the panic</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In March, traveling in Ireland, our guide mentioned almost in passing that the Irish were proud to have had a poet lead them. She meant Seamus Heaney&#8217;s friend Michael D. Higgins, the poet and sociologist who served as President of Ireland from 2011 to 2025, and who was known to quote Neruda in speeches and has written movingly about the duty of the imagination in public life. Our guide said it with a kind of quiet satisfaction, as though this fact alone said something essential about Ireland&#8217;s values.</p><p>I have been thinking about that remark ever since, more urgently since Air Force One landed in Beijing.</p><p>Consider the contrast. In the United States, the executive branch has long been dominated by two professional tribes: lawyers and business executives. This was true when I delivered a paper at a remarkable conference on the spirit of cities in Shanghai many years ago &#8212; a transformative experience that left me with a question I have never quite been able to shake: why does one of the world&#8217;s most powerful democracies hand its government to lawyers and businessmen?</p><p><strong>Leanne Ogasawara, <a href="https://dreaminginjapanese.substack.com/p/how-to-rule-the-world">How To Rule The World</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In 2020 I wrote a considerable number of posts, both prose and poetry, for a series I called &#8220;Musings in a Time of Crisis.&#8221; Below, the twentieth post in the series, is one of the poems I wrote (I wrote another about George Floyd, who was murdered on Memorial Day that year). It seems more than fitting to post the poem again.</p><p>The poem references &#8220;the man in the White House&#8221;; the same one currently occupies &#8220;the People&#8217;s House.&#8221; That fact alone defies all reason, continues a crisis I could not have imagined would define the state of our country in the last third of my life.</p><p>Today, I also remember my father, who received an honors burial at Arlington Memorial Cemetery, where he has lain with two infant children since his death in the summer of 1990. Beside him now is my mother.</p><p>I honor my father today. He served in World War II in the famous all-volunteer group Merrill&#8217;s Marauders (a <em>Time</em> correspondent suggested the name), who were deemed &#8220;expendable&#8221; as they fought, commando-style, behind enemy lines in China, Burma, and India, who, lacking medicines, fought disease of all kinds, suffered a lack of food, and generally experienced all the horror that is war. It was a time my father did not talk about. My father would be appalled by the crisis his America faces today.</p><p>A tiny American flag marks every grave in Arlington on Memorial Day. May wherever it&#8217;s flown have meaning.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/memorial-day">Memorial Day</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>the museum felt like it was holding its breath.<br>clean. white. guards with ear pieces.<br>i wanted to see the declaration of independence<br>mostly because of the movie, national treasure.<br>i hoped it might have a golden map.<br>instead, the document stared back at me<br>from behind its glass. i asked in a whisper,<br>&#8220;is that it?&#8221; a piece of skin &amp; a tissue box.<br>dull &amp; worn. not like an elder fish&#8217;s gills but<br>like old stockings. like polyester thrift store bras.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/05/24/5-24-5/">declaration</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It is seductive, this selective time travel. The perfect weekend with the imperfect lover whose ineptitude at love you didn&#8217;t yet know would break your heart. The languid summer just before the diagnosis, the disaster, the death. The time you were ten pounds lighter and ten choices freer and ten mistakes less marred in the mirror of the mind. Over and over, the hand of memory reaches back, grasps for the bygone moment when life was simpler or brighter or more redolent with aliveness, forgetting that the only thing for the keeping is the naked now, vulnerable as a newborn, total as eternity. The great challenge, the great triumph, is to make of memory an instrument of presence.</p><p>That is what Diane Seuss offers in her splendid poem &#8220;Weeds,&#8221; found in her altogether vivifying collection <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Modern-Poetry-Poems-Diane-Seuss/dp/1644453185/?tag=braipick-20">Modern Poetry</a></em> (<em><a href="https://search.worldcat.org/title/1375543907">public library</a></em>).</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/05/22/diane-seuss-weeds/">How Not to Dwell on the Past</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I chose this poem because it represents that feeling of holding on a little too long to something you know you should let go of. At its essence,<em> Dream Logic</em> is a collection about heartbreak, but with a lower case &#8216;h&#8217;. The poems are quiet and long-suffering.</p><p>It is also about the way the mind can split off and begin rewriting the story, creating a kind of &#8220;what might have been&#8221;, blurring the lines between memory, nostalgia and dreamscape. I have always had an overactive imagination, and writing has been a healthy way to express that. I am often haunted by Miss Havisham in Dickens&#8217; <em>Great Expectations</em>, waiting all those years and becoming a kind of living ghost.</p><p><strong><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/05/23/drop-in-by-satya-bosman/">Drop-in by Satya Bosman</a> (Nigel Kent)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wrote this poem in 2022 in Vamvakou, Greece, where I was introduced to the hawk moth (also called sphinx moth) after running from planter to planter thinking I was watching a rather drab hummingbird at work. Its caterpillar form is called a &#8220;hornworm.&#8221; None of these delightful facts fit comfortably into the poem, but I wanted you to know. I also&#8212;up until six months ago&#8212;had a grammatical error in the poem (dangling modifier) that no one had brought to my attention. Thank goodness for the copy editor that caught it.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/four-new-poems">Four New Poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Much-needed rain has arrived, and therefore I&#8217;ve been inside all day instead of out in the yard and gardens. I thought maybe I would feel motivated to send some of my poems out into the wider world. Turns out that the motivation was a decided maybe, leaning toward lethargy. Instead, I curled up with a cat and Jeff Burt&#8217;s collection <em><a href="https://sheilanagigblog.com/shop-sheila-na-gig-editions/burt_root/">The Root Endures</a></em> (Sheila-na-Gig Editions).</p><p>Actually, I read this book a week ago but decided to take a closer look so I could post about it, because I like it a lot. Jeff Burt&#8217;s poems contain nature-images and close observations of creatures, plants, and weather yet keep reminding the reader that there&#8217;s a decidedly human component here, an interior character who speculates about what human beings are doing here, thinking about, recalling. And how the world is constantly in flux. The rural Wisconsin of the speaker&#8217;s childhood feels vividly authentic, and I learned about lime bogs and de-tasseling corn. (I love it when I learn things from poems.) The book seems autobiographical in narrative but never becomes as specifically personal as a memoir would.</p><p>And frankly, I guess I might identify more deeply with this book than other, perhaps younger or more urban readers would. I grew up in the mid-Atlantic suburbs, but I spent all my childhood summers in the Midwestern small towns where my parents&#8217; extended families lived. I infer that Burt is pretty much my peer, age-wise; some of his remembered details conjure up a kind of resonance I enjoy. What I&#8217;d like to learn from this collection is how to sustain a longer poem, which he does quite well. Not a strength of mine, though I&#8217;ve attempted it once or twice with some success. A poem that has numerous short stanzas and travels several pages needs to keep my attention, whether I&#8217;m reading it or writing it. Burt&#8217;s title poem (the last poem in the book) does this, as does the poem &#8220;As If Copper Wire Sang the Unleashing of Time&#8221; and &#8220;Into the Standing Grain.&#8221; Maybe studying writers like Jeff Burt and others can teach me how to write better medium-long poems when a longer poem seems necessary to whatever I&#8217;m trying to express. I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m interested in writing really long poems&#8211;think A. R. Ammons, C. K. Williams, Robert Lowell&#8211;but I&#8217;d like to explore length a little more.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/05/23/rainy-day-reading/">Rainy-day reading</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Vasiliki Albedo &amp; Lucy Holmes &#8211; Sardines (Dialect Press)</strong></p><p>&#8220;but we hesitated at the prospect of jumping out of our tenuous</p><p>skins, of dampening the fervour to sample the oily salmon curve</p><p>of yet another Bandol Ros&#233;.&#8221;</p><p>My goodness, I am a bit of a fangirl of these two. Singularly, of course, but together is also something different and quite special. Sardines is a gorgeous exploration of artistic friendship and collaboration. It&#8217;s brilliantly put together, with the email exchange between the two poets being just as fascinating as the poems themselves. Being let into these two minds at work, and at play, riffing off each other and their influences, felt like a real treat. It is, as they call it, both intimate and expansive, and it has made me look at collaboration in a new way, as well as introducing me to Frank O&#8217;Hara.</p><p><strong>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/the-thing-is-books">The thing is&#8230; books!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sze writes measured, considered poems with a focus on the natural world and nature&#8217;s ability for re-growth after winter or human-made disasters. Humans here are ciphers, following orders or keeping to a narrow path without deviation. Nature follows different rules with respect for natural cycles, seasons and the ability to bloom after loss. There&#8217;s a quiet assurance here too. The tone is unjudgmental, even when observing that humans are the authors of their own misfortune.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/05/20/into-the-hush-arthur-sze-penguin-books-book-review/">&#8220;Into the Hush&#8221; Arthur Sze (Penguin Books) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was very struck this week by an early poem by Tennyson which I don&#8217;t remember ever reading before, &#8216;<a href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Poems_(Tennyson,_1833)/The_Palace_of_Art">The Palace of Art&#8217;</a>. This poem is &#8212; rather brilliantly, I thought &#8212; the very final poem in the superb <em>New Oxford Book of Romantic Period Verse </em>(OUP, 1994)<em>, </em>edited by Jerome J. McGann. McGann&#8217;s anthology prints a very rich mixture of verse dating from between 1785 and 1832, in chronological order, under the year of publication. &#8216;The Palace of Art&#8217; was first written and published in 1832, in Tennyson&#8217;s <em>Poems</em> &#8212; a collection that also included &#8216;The Lady of Shalott&#8217;, with which it has some obvious similarities. &#8216;The Lady of Shalott&#8217; is much more famous, of course, and on the whole I think deservedly so, since its fable of solitude, the soul and the insufficiency of art (&#8220;I am half-sick of shadows&#8221;) is so much tighter, mysterious and self-sufficient.</p><p>All the same, &#8216;The Palace of Art&#8217; is an extraordinary poem. Tennyson started out as a romantic poet, and this poem is his leave-taking of it: a sort of peak-romanticism that is also the end of it. McGann aptly describes it as his &#8216;hail and farewell&#8217; to romanticism. It&#8217;s a little bit like Milton&#8217;s ravishingly lovely imitation of Virgil in the <em>Epitaphium Damonis</em>, a poem that similarly ends by bidding farewell to the style it has so perfectly inhabited.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/i-have-found-a-new-land-but-i-die">I have found / A new land, but I die.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I take the 75 bus, the service from Withernsea, back to Hull. The automated announcer says, &#8216;Next stop: Hull Prison.&#8217; Do not pass go. The delightful 1932 East Hull Fire station has a motto painted above each of its three arched vehicle doors: &#8216;Ready Aye Ready&#8217;.</p><p>I get off at the interchange, next to Hull Paragon Station, location of both the well-known statue of Larkin and the Royal Hotel featured in his Symbolist-ish poem &#8216;Friday Night at the Royal Station Hotel&#8217;, completed in May 1966. In his biography of Larkin, James Booth claims that the atmosphere of the hotel is largely unchanged since the poem was penned, despite a major fire in 1990 and subsequent restoration.</p><p>It&#8217;s a sonnet, of course, with the turn coming after the ninth line. Although far from being the only poem in his oeuvre to prominently feature light, it starts with &#8216;Light&#8217; and includes the word &#8216;lights&#8217; twice, as though hammering the point that this hotel is, and maybe hotels per se are, very brightly lit: &#8216;In shoeless corridors, the lights burn.&#8217; I love hotels, and I love poems, novels (e.g. <em>Troubles</em> by J.G. Farrell) and films (e.g. <em>The Consequences of Love</em>, <em>Some Like It Hot</em> and <em>The Grand Budapest Hotel</em>) which are at least partially set within them.</p><p>A curious part of &#8216;Friday Night&#8217; is &#8216;all the salesmen have gone back to Leeds, / Leaving full ashtrays in the Conference Room.&#8217; Few of Larkin&#8217;s mature poems mention smoking &#8211; is &#8216;Essential Beauty&#8217; the only other? &#8211; even though he smoked throughout adulthood. In a dissection of &#8216;Cut Grass&#8217;, in which &#8216;Mown stalks exhale&#8217;, Tom Paulin conjured the perfect phrase, &#8216;the anxieties smokers know&#8217;; not all smokers are necessarily anxious (do Mick Jagger and Keith Richards ever get anxious?), but the overlap in a diagram by Mr Venn must be very considerable. All of this is a roundabout way of declaring my surprise that Larkin didn&#8217;t touch on smoking in his poetry more often.</p><p>The part of the poem which is undoubtedly the most intriguing is Larkin&#8217;s pressing-home of the point about the hotel being a bastion of &#8216;loneliness&#8217; by adding the curiosity &#8216;How / Isolated, like a fort, it is&#8217;. Was he thinking of Fort Paull here? Or maybe Bull Sand, one of two Great War forts built in the Humber Estuary, visible from the end of Spurn Point, which is implicitly featured in &#8216;Here&#8217; .</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.substack.com/p/a-bit-of-psychogeography">A bit of psychogeography</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Mid-May is college commencement season here in the United States. It seems fitting, then, this week, to feature a poem about graduation. And our readers may remember George Moses Horton (1798&#8211;1883), whose &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-on-summer?utm_source=publication-search">On Summer</a>&#8221; appeared last July, as a poet whose own biography makes for the sort of triumph-over-adversity story so often embraced by commencement speakers.</p><p>Born into slavery, the sixth of ten children, on the plantation of a William Horton in North Carolina, George Moses Horton was an autodidact, teaching himself to read through hearing the Bible read aloud. He was the first African-American writer since the nation&#8217;s founding to publish a book of any kind (Phillis Wheatley&#8217;s <em>Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral </em>had been published in London in 1773), the first writer to publish a literary work in North Carolina, and the only writer in American history to publish a book with an American press (J. Gales &amp; Son, of Raleigh, North Carolina) while enslaved.</p><p>As a young man, sent from home to sell fruits and vegetables in nearby Chapel Hill, Horton began to make pocket money by composing love poems for students at the University of North Carolina. The students in turn supplied him with books for the furthering of his education. Today&#8217;s Poem, while not a love letter written for a college student, instead constitutes something like a love letter to the idea of The College Graduate and more: to the bittersweet appropriateness of leavetakings.</p><p>The verse itself, in <em>abab</em> quatrains of two tetrameter lines bracketed by trimeter, feels forced in places, with syntax inverted and the passive voice resorted to, to make the rhymes. Yet even where the poem strains to fulfill its form, there&#8217;s something compelling and charming in its voice. Adopting, at least in the first stanza, the persona of The Graduate, but inevitably conscious of the gap between that graduate&#8217;s future possibilities and his own, Horton writes of graduation as a kind of transcendence, as if the departing seniors were bodily assumed into heaven. One day, they&#8217;re at college; the next day they&#8217;ve simply vanished, &#8220;here to be seen no more.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-graduate-leaving">Today&#8217;s Poem: The Graduate Leaving College</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>R&#233;ka Nyitrai </strong>is a spell, a sparrow, a lioness&#8217;s tongue &#8212; a bird nest in a pool of dusk. A Romanian-Hungarian poet, she learned English (her primary language of writing) later in life, moving fluently between prose poems, haiku, and free verse, often channeling the feminist surrealist currents of Leonora Carrington, Aase Berg, and Aglaja Veteranyi. In 2020, she released a bilingual (Spanish and English) collection of haiku known as <em><a href="https://www.amazon.ca/WHILE-DREAMING-YOUR-DREAMS-NYITRAI/dp/8409207265">While Dreaming Your Dreams</a></em> (Mano Ya Mano Books) which received a Touchstone Distinguished Books Award. She then released her debut full-length poetry collection, <em><a href="https://www.brokensleepbooks.com/product-page/reka-nyitrai-moon-flogged">Moon Flogged</a></em>, in 2024 through Broken Sleep Books, and recently released a chapbook through Ethel Zine called <em><a href="https://www.ethelzine.com/with-swans-nest-on-her-back">With a Swan&#8217;s Nest on Her Back</a></em>. Her second full-length poetry collection <em><a href="https://asterismbooks.com/product/split-game-of-little-deaths">Split / Game of Little Deaths</a></em> will be out with Pi&#380;ama Press in May 2026.</p><p><strong>1 &#8211; How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?</strong></p><p>My first book, <em>While Dreaming Your Dreams</em>, is a collection of poems written in the haiku genre. A small independent publishing house in Spain published it in 2020, when I was already 43 years old. Even though my life did not change in a material sense, this debut proved I was resourceful and capable of turning abstract dreams into a tangible reality. Winning the Touchstone Book Award validated my work, but it also introduced an immense pressure: from that moment on, both publishers and readers expected nothing less than exceptional poetry. While writing a haiku seems deceptively simple, crafting a truly resonant one is a difficult feat. I realized quickly that I might not surpass the specific quality of the poems in my debut volume within that same form. Consequently, I put haiku on hold and transitioned toward short, lyrical prose, first in collaboration with my good friend Alan Peat, then independently. In essence, I have integrated a fragmented narrative arc into the surrealism and lyricism of my haiku roots. In comparing my recent work to my previous, I find that while the form has expanded, the core remains unchanged. No matter how much I experiment with structure, lyricism remains my second skin. Brevity and conciseness continue to define the sinews of my style.</p><p><strong>2 &#8211; How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?</strong></p><p>Poetry is an intrinsic part of me. I wrote my first pieces &#8212;if I can even call them poems&#8212; while in grade school, writing in Hungarian, my mother tongue. At the time, I found them utterly silly, yet they must have possessed some merit as they were published in a children&#8217;s magazine. However, following a single rejection letter, I retreated from writing for a significant period. I briefly resumed during my university years, still in Hungarian, but abandoned it again, sensing my work lacked authenticity; I was merely attempting to mirror the voice of a well-known Hungarian poet. For a long while, I set poetry aside to focus on reading&#8212;interestingly, primarily novels rather than verse. Then, on a snowy day in 2018, a fully formed haiku suddenly emerged in my mind, composed in English, my third language. That moment solved my dual dilemma: it defined both the genre I was meant to inhabit and the language in which I would finally find my voice.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/05/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_01252374008.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with R&#233;ka Nyitrai</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I went to find poetry, or those who might inhabit poetry, at a football match. It was a Friday night in Hull. And Friday night in Hull is the last place you&#8217;d expect to find poetry which is precisely why I thought I might find it there. There was of course a poem, <em>Friday Night at the Royal Station Hotel</em> by Hull&#8217;s adopted laureate Philip Larkin. Larkin went out of his way to disengage from what you might describe as a poetic life, living instead as a curmudgeonly librarian in a rather remote corner of England, writing of absence and detachment with exquisite precision.</p><p>My idea was to get football fans to recite his poem. The Royal Hotel in Hull is now a temporary home for those seeking asylum and has been the focus of protest from both sides, the send-em-backers and the let-them-stayers. I&#8217;ll let you use your own prejudice to decide which group you think football fans are more likely to fall into. I felt the poem, written in the 1960s about a hotel in decline from its victorian splendour, carried new potency, might add some nuance, allow people to think differently, consider this delicate situation poetically. Lines like &#8220;writing home / if home existed&#8221; and &#8220;letters of exile&#8221; took on a different significance.</p><p>I had imagined skinheads with bitten off ears weeping and switch bladed hooligans grimacing, all delivering lines of poetry with passion or menace or unexpected sensitivity. It didn&#8217;t quite happen that way. I recorded a lot of footage and the fans were generous but most of them regressed, became nervous nine year olds at school being told by teacher to read out in class. They&#8217;d all much rather be at the football than making fools of themselves with poetry.</p><p><a href="https://www.instagram.com/reel/DYZJzyNiokT/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&amp;igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==">WATCH FULL FILM</a></p><p>I knew there was something in this project, a film of a poem being read by those who inhabit a different kind of poetry. I asked an actor friend and Chelsea fan Mike Grady to help it along, to offer a more considered reading himself. Mike&#8217;s done a tonne of Shakespeare, movies, TV and audio books across the decades and has that voice, you know <em>that</em> voice, the voice you&#8217;d listen to even he was reading an itemised bill.</p><p>Mike is calm and gentle and delivers the poem beautifully. Although he&#8217;s spent his career on stage and in film I believe he&#8217;d prefer his life to be as drama free as possible, that a poetic life is not one that he has any desire to aspire to. I&#8217;m beginning to think that most people probably feel this way. On my poetry walks I find I&#8217;m drawn to the poets who lived gregariously, lives punctuated with spilled drinks and broken hearts, knife fights and mad houses. Perhaps I need to redraw my map.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n65-friday-night-at-the-royal-station">N&#186;65 Friday Night at the Royal Station Hotel</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This poem was a sort of whim I had, which I wrote down, then laid aside. I often saw the title when inside explorer, but didn&#8217;t open the file again, then called, &#8220;I Asked AI,&#8221; until this afternoon. When I read it again, I thought there was something there, and as I edited and rewrote, I ended up somewhere entirely different from what I would have guessed the poem would be. Which is what poetry is really, right? The journey you take while you move through it.</p><p>And I must say that my own ambivalence about the current conversations about AI certainly came out in this poem. I could write a long, long discussion about AI and I may one day, but for now let it suffice that I am a diehard Trekkie before all other things.</p><p>Here it is, thoroughly redone, with a new title. Let me know what you think.</p><p>Space is a Perpetual Motion Machine</p><p>I asked AI<br>the price of milk.</p><p>She gave me a baby.</p><p>I asked AI<br>for breakfast.</p><p>She gave me<br>a potted plant.</p><p>I asked AI the time.<br>She gave me<br>a ball of string.<br>[&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/space-is-a-perpetual-motion-machine">Space is a Perpetual Motion Machine</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Adjacent to my current writing/ researching around memory, I&#8217;ve been thinking about the difference between intimacy and immediacy as both affective experiences and as literary/ artistic techniques. In the realm of experience the gulf between these two states feels immeasurably wide: the former is a slow foliation over time; it is predicated upon mutual vulnerability and care. One <em>grows into</em> the intimate. Immediacy, on the other hand, is a synapse-sparking collision in-the-moment. It&#8217;s the risk of exposure, the giddy high of arousal. Immediacy is instant and kinetic. Intimacy is profound. Both are vital components of what we might rather pompously call &#8220;the human condition&#8221;, but either on its own produces an emotionally and experientially lopsided life.</p><p>Within art and literature, things look a little different: inside of review-space, I see intimacy and immediacy used as virtual synonyms<em> a lot </em>(cards on table, I suspect I am as guilty of this as anyone)<em>, </em>while stylistically, the former often feels sacrificed on the altar of the latter. In poetry &#8211; the one area I&#8217;m actually qualified to talk about &#8211; this appears as, but it not limited to: direct address, and a posture of unfiltered disclosure; a plausible musicality of language, often valorised under the rubric of &#8220;accessibility&#8221;, that presents little difficulty by way of intellectual assimilation and understanding. Immediate poems make a broad appeal to the emotions through the urgency of their themes and what I guess we might call the melodic &#8220;flow&#8221; of their delivery; they excel, I&#8217;d say, at their best, in evocative moments of lyric phrase-making. They tend to centre a stable-speaking lyric subject, and are often concerned with notions of embodiment and authenticity. Intimate poems, on the other hand, are slow-growers: they slightly resist readerly efforts to enter and understand; they might take a little time to parse, to locate who is speaking, where, and to what purpose. Which is not to say that all intimate poems are &#8220;difficult&#8221; or &#8220;obscure&#8221; &#8211; Michael Donaghy&#8217;s poems are intimate, but they also operate within tightly turned and self-contained conceits &#8211; I mean only to suggest that we cannot make the same kinds of ready assumption about authentic and unfiltered writer-to-reader disclosure within an intimate poem; there&#8217;s masking, play, a teasing-out required to identify a speaking voice and its relationship to ourselves. These poems are not necessarily <em>in</em> or <em>of </em>the moment; they posit other places that we have to work to access. I think the best intimate poems are those less concerned with the &#8220;flow&#8221; or &#8220;beauty&#8221; of their lyric phrasing, than they are with judiciously weighing each word and its placement within a line; this often produces slightly strange syntax, and a feeling that pressure is being applied to language in some way; that language is being thought about as substance and structure, not only as a delivery system.</p><p>To be clear, this list of tendencies is not exhaustive, neither are these two toolboxes mutually exclusive: there are plenty of amazing poets living and dead who deploy both sets of technique within their individual poems and across the broad corpus of their work. I&#8217;m not picking a side here either. I read both. I write/ have written / written with both. I like both. Ascribing a moral or political value to a set of stylistic and structural techniques is limited binary thinking that serves absolutely no one and is impoverishing to poetry as an art. What I <em>will </em>say is that we are at a place, in Space Year 2026, when the immediate is in the ascendency, that is, as a dominant style on page and on screen, and as the signal nature of our experience under late-stage blah de blah.</p><p>Here I <em>do</em> have a problem: because immediacy is a condition of capitalism. It is manufactured <em>by </em>capitalism, and it serves the aims and interests <em>of </em>capitalism. What is immediacy, after all, but a denial or a loss of mediation? A desire for the frictionless assimilation of ideas and experiences without the necessity to collide with opposing and obstructing otherness. I follow Hegel and Kornbluh here: the world &#8211; of things and ideas &#8211; only becomes what it is through its relationships with and to (the) other/s.<br>Knowledge and understanding require a process of moving through and bearing with difference and contradiction &#8211; it&#8217;s dialectical, duh.</p><p>And this is self-evidently true, isn&#8217;t it? No one is legitimately going to argue that abdicating thought and choice to an algorithm has enriched our lives or experiences of art, or that the ceaselessly scrolling echo-chambers of social media have benefited anyone but ket-cooked billionaire tech bros, are they? Okay, fabulous. On some level, then, we do acknowledge that social conditions replicate themselves in consciousness, profoundly shaping the ways in which we relate to the world and ourselves. Immediacy as a poetic/ writerly technique can be a useful tool; when used consciously it can also perform a critical reflection of neo-liberal conditions. A problem appears only when this particular technique is granted an undue supremacy (which, to be clear, it has been), owing largely to the dictates of a publishing marketplace driven by demand for zeitgeisty and easily-assimilable dreck &#8211; by capitalism&#8217;s endless cool hunt, and its race-to-the-bottom populism. So far, so icky, but so much worse than a prevailing style is when immediacy becomes a manner of reading, the <em>dominant</em> manner of reading, the way in which editors and publishing professionals are now <em>trained</em> to read &#8211; this, for the practice of art and literature &#8211; is absolutely fucking disastrous.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/grantagate">&#8220;GRANTAGATE&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve become lately very wary of ways of reading poems that assume an overall meaning, or that the poem has established images in it. I need language and articulation to play a role, almost from a dugout. This stanza really answered that need this morning.</p><p>A syllogism relies on simplified language, reduced vocabulary, simplified acts. Then it can assert a truth claim and test it logically. But this stanza isn&#8217;t doing that. I can spot bathos in Pope&#8217;s Rape of the Lock, for example, because the images, argumentation and narrative are clear, so it&#8217;s more like a farce, with twists (the clown unexpectedly doesn&#8217;t fall, the vicar does). In Pope, the play of etymology is clear and the diction under control so much that it&#8217;s like maths (vide D Davie). In this late Hill stanza, Hill is recognising that he has collected vocabulary in order to make Hill Poems in perpetuity. But he catches himself doing it, and throughout the sequence advocates for stupidity and vagueness. Hence the metal detector line. Showing what rings true, and also too automated. And then there is a sad sense of age throughout the sequence and in this stanza, hence that kind of career-bathos. The theme throughout the sequence is &#8220;life is a dream&#8221;, and so there are hallucinations and sour wakings and also glad wakings, both still alive and ailing.</p><p><strong>Ira Lightman, <a href="https://iralightman1.substack.com/p/brief-note-on-late-hill">Brief note on late Hill</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I blame these threads on Roland Barthes, and his &#8220;rustle&#8221;, that sound of fabrics swishing against each other within a sentence or phrase, the position that welcomes friction, as he puts it in <em>The Rustle of Language</em> (italics mine):</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;I am putting myself in the position of someone who <em>does</em> something, and not of someone who <em>talks</em> about something: I am not studying a product, I am <em>taking on</em> a production; I am abolishing the discourse on discourse; the world no longer comes to me in the form of an object, but in that of writing, that is, of a practice; I&#8217;m going on to another type of knowledge (that of the Enthusiast)&#8221; . . .</p></blockquote><p>Elsewhere, Barthes mixes his musings, always imagining that projected work (ultimately, the Proustian novel that never happened). Under the title of &#8220;Book projects&#8221;:</p><blockquote><p>Incidents (mini-texts, wrinkles, haikus, notations, playing with meaning, everything that falls, like a leaf).</p><p>What does that mean?</p><p>A non-book could be conceived: one which would relate a thousand incidents, by keeping itself from ever drawing one line of meaning . . .</p></blockquote><p><em>Incidents </em>kept throwing palimpsests before me, to double the trouble of my overly-entangled interpretations.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/2/28/the-two-faced-self-portrait">The two-faced self-portrait.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It was only a few years ago that I first read Anne Carson&#8217;s <em>The Beauty of a Husband</em>. She writes at the end,</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Well life has some risks. Love is one. Terrible risks.<br>&#8230;<br>On a June Evening<br>Here&#8217;s my advice,<br>hold.<br><br>Hold beauty.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>When I was in undergrad, back in Miranda House, I hated men so much that my friends gave me the nickname of spinster. Before Carson, it had never occurred to me to think of men as beautiful. These past few weeks, my Instagram algorithm has been showing me reels of a woman handing out compliments to men and I thought I have been called beautiful so many times in my life but I have never called a man beautiful even though I have seen the beautiful Flemish painting like hands of men making espresso behind coffee bars in Rome, or the statuesque pose of waiters in Parisian cafes, or Michelangelo&#8217;s David, their noses and day old beards, Caillebotte&#8217;s paintings of men rowing boats or working a wooden floor, their strong forearms seducing women. Their faltering voices over phone calls, their shy disarming smiles, their bicycles, and new sneakers, their excuses to have conversations or to hold a woman&#8217;s hand, their new crisp cotton shirts, or summer haircuts, jackets, and watches, their heads turning in corridors, or attempts at making witty charming comments. Their eyes full of weight and sadness, having seen life pass them by, the undereye bags after a night of insomnia, or throats almost choked with tears. Their fear, cowardice, and exhaustion. Their helplessness and repressed anger. They, too, were children once. Their restless fingers and nails and mouths that sometimes say things I barely hear. If one looked at them long enough, they seem almost as beautiful as Vermeer&#8217;s <em>Girl with a Pearl Earring</em>.</p><p><strong>Saudamini Deo, <a href="https://beyondsixrivers.fr/2026/05/20/on-seeing-men/">On seeing men</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I imagine the shape of air, the way the air moves with the wingbeats of birds. How the air vibrates when it is moved by birdsong. I imagine how the air might remember those movements it was once made of, that it was once the medium for. Lost birds. Birds that once were. Their flight, their song. The geometry of a place: its birds, trees, voices, rocks, water, air. I imagine as scaffolding for time and space as time as space are scaffolding for those things. The air is and stands in for possibility. What was possible in the past, what is possible now, what might be possible in the future. What we still have and what we have lost. How might I consider it as an instrument to play, an archive to explore, and medium to live in. I frequently consider Walter Benjamin&#8217;s angel of history and the wind of history that blows it away from history. But I think also of the entire space it is in. The wind that blows the angel back into the future is somewhere. It doesn&#8217;t exist in a vacuum, but in a somewhere. I think of this somewhere as having multiple dimensions: time and space, certainly, but also memory, and possibility. This is the place where I find myself. Like the self, it is both a medium, a concert hall and a harp to play.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/ghost-birds-memory-and-the-shape">Ghost Birds: memory and the shape of life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Shield of Mnemosyne</em> is not my first extended, large-scale <em>poema</em> (Russian term for such things). I&#8217;ve written around 10 of them over the last 40 years. What is the primary, underlying literary impulse here (aside from all the other forms and phenomena of motivation)?</p><p><em>I am traveling a path opened by Hart Crane</em>. His path, in turn, was opened by Walt Whitman. Hart followed Walt down that Open Road into America&#8230; and built a <em>Bridge</em> for it. I am trying to build a poetic House (or Temple, or Church) &#8211; a way station along, or at the never-ending end of, that cosmic trail.</p><p>There was another modernist &#8220;epic&#8221; poet, who like Crane formally announced his Whitman affiliation : Ezra Pound. And a few of my few though very fit readers have noted Poundian echoes in my efforts. But it is the gift of Hart Crane, not Pound, which has offered me the closest aesthetic model and deepest poetic inspiration. My long poems are <em>buildings</em>. Humble shacks, homes, temples&#8230; made with song.</p><p>I have been an outlier in American literature for so long, it&#8217;s become second nature. But I think our literary and intellectual culture simply does not know how to pigeonhole, bracket and brand me to suit its (generally commercial/ephemeral) purposes. I&#8217;m not so easy to read : you have to climb into the rafters. You have to put two-&amp;-two together. But my idiom is music &#8211; which itself comes to me from a deep well of air, a basic joy of breathing. I mean this in very a literal sense : because when I was four years old, back in 1956, I contracted GBS (Guillain-Barre Syndrome), a rare disease similar to polio. I was paralyzed up to my neck, and kept alive by a breathing apparatus called an &#8220;iron lung&#8221;. So I&#8217;ve had a special appreciation for the breezy river of air that is poetry ever since.</p><p>As it happens, I composed my first known poem later that year, in 1956 : a brief ditty about work vs. play, addressed to my father. He scribbled it down on a little cardboard key card, on his way out the door to work. My mother saved that little card; she put it in the mail to me, sometime around 2006.</p><p><strong>Henry Gould, <a href="https://henryghenrik.substack.com/p/behind-the-shield-of-mnemosyne">Behind the SHIELD OF MNEMOSYNE</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have a broader idea around what a &#8216;successful&#8217; writing life might constitute for a poet. To have five or six poems that last a hundred years already includes you in the highest rung. Three or four, is sustained brilliance, and far beyond your generation. One or two, is the goal for the most of us &#8211; to have made the hours, the life&#8217;s commitment, somewhat worthwhile. Auden is very clearly of that second group. But I cannot help but now see an infecting slackness to the majority of his verse.</p><p>Before collaborating with Stravinsky, Auden also worked with Benjamin Britten on the operetta <em>Paul Bunyan</em> (1941). What rigour did he bring to the project? First, let me show the rigour he demands of others. Here is Auden writing on Hamlet:</p><blockquote><p><em>Hamlet</em> has many faults &#8211; it is full of holes both in action and motivation. The sketchy portrayal of Fortinbras is one. We hear early about his plans, when Claudius sends word for him to stop. Fortinbras agrees, but wants permission to pass through Denmark on his way to Poland. We see him pass across the stage on the way to Poland, and he returns when everyone is dead. This subplot is needed, but it is not properly incorporated into the play. The action involving Laertes also poses problems. When Laertes returns from France the second time, why hasn&#8217;t someone told him Hamlet killed his father, and when he storms the palace, why is all the excitement over in a few moments? Polonius is secretly buried. Why? Polonius&#8217; death is necessary to get Laertes back to England, but again the subplot is not really knit into the action. And why does Claudius delay in killing Hamlet and make elaborate plans which could miscarry? Ophelia is a silly, repressed girl and is obscene and embarrassing when she loses her mind over her father&#8217;s death. But though her madness is very shocking and horrible, it is not well motivated. She was not so wild about her meddling Papa, nor was she tremendously <em>interested</em> in Papa.</p></blockquote><p>We have arguments about the deftness of sub-plot integrations, plot inaccuracies, and, of special note, issues with character motivation. In fact, Auden&#8217;s series of Shakespeare lectures display numerous instances of sensitivity towards character actions and motivations &#8211; those of Iago and Othello a particular standout.</p><p>How does this compare then to his self-critique of his own opera, <em>Paul Bunyan</em>:</p><blockquote><p>Babe, the blue ox who gives him [Paul Bunyan] advice, remains a puzzle; I conceive of her quite arbitrarily, as a symbol of his anima, but, so far as I know, one explanation is as valid as another. Nor have I the slightest idea why he should fail to get on with his wife, unless it signify that those who, like lumbermen, are often away from home, rarely develop the domestic virtues.</p></blockquote><p>Here, we have the librettist confessing an ambivalence as to both <em>why the characters exist</em> and, also, <em>why they act in the manner that they do</em>. How do we begin to square the discrepancy between the two stances? On days that I am feeling unkind, today is one such day, I think that Auden felt the latter statement was allowably, flippantly brilliant because, well, it came from Auden.</p><p>On more objective days, my relationship with Auden is similar to my thoughts on Hugh MacDiarmid. Admiration tinged with a weary dissatisfaction. Yes, yes, there are those wonderful few pieces, but look at the lazy slagheap of dashed-off dross&#8230; Countered by: yes, yes, look at the lazy slagheap of dashed-off dross, but there are those wonderful few pieces.</p><p>I wonder what the community thinks. Does all the poor work even count when we consider a poet and their legacy? Or does this not matter, and do only the brief heights that a poet reaches count?</p><p><strong>Niall Campbell, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/being-frustrated-with-one-of-the">Being Frustrated With One of the Greats</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Spring cleaning seems like an obvious metaphor for revision and assembling a poetry ms. It&#8217;s not unlike casting a hard look at the poems you&#8217;ve accumulated and clearing out the debris that clogs their pipes, whatever elements might interrupt their force for a reader: clich&#233;, unproductive digression, wordy moments.</p><p>I&#8217;ve done some beyond-the-ordinary cleaning this year, too, as a person on sabbatical tends to&#8211;and maybe a person winding up the whirlwind of a book launch, too. First ritual is clearing junk out of the office, which is both helpful (what have I lost track of?) and restless procrastination (I think of a dog or cat circling around before settling into a comfortable position). I also clean, literally and metaphorically, between hard writing pushes. For a few weeks I keep my head down and focus; then I get tired and fuzzy, unable to see the project, so I do a variety of chores. This includes professional stuff like reference letters; personal stuff like getting a haircut; and home tasks such as tackling a closet that suddenly looks dysfunctional. Visiting my kids as they struggled also meant tackling cleaning tasks that overwhelmed them&#8211;hard work but genuinely helpful, unlike some other parental behaviors in face of crisis. While I sorted and scrubbed, I thought a lot about cleaning my mother&#8217;s home during her final illness five years ago. Sort the pills into a dispenser, throw out expired foods and buy new, and shine up the sink because you can&#8217;t shine up the future or make medicine actually cure a person&#8211;that sort of desperate labor standing in for all that I could not do.</p><p>While polishing poems is a good and necessary step, though, I&#8217;ll make a case for dirtying them up first. At least for me, first drafts usually hide something important. It&#8217;s <em>hard </em>to dig into the real mess of my thinking and feeling. That stuff is ugly, burdened with shame, jealousy, misdirected anger, lazy illogic, and other emotional and intellectual habits that make me look bad. But poems become more valuable to others when I&#8217;m willing to do the work.</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/05/19/getting-dirty-for-poetry/">Getting dirty for poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Then I was right in there<br>amongst bouncy pond weed, <br>straggly ribbons of leaves<br>and those shades of brown and black in close-up.<br>Oh, the depths of it.<br>I was so cold amongst the stale green smell<br>but happy.</p><p>They shouldn&#8217;t have ripped me from it<br>just to wrap me in a stranger&#8217;s dog blanket.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/05/25/finding-the-shape-of-the-garden/">FINDING THE SHAPE OF THE GARDEN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Poetry in part is a way to impose order, or find and highlight order or patterns. It is skill of finding significance and meaning, but if you try too hard, are too attached, remember that meaning isn&#8217;t hard to confer randomly. Try &#8220;he&#8217;s such a ___&#8221; and add a random noun. {cucumber, cummerbund, paper cut}. Meaning isn&#8217;t hard. It&#8217;s near unavoidable with our meaning-addled brains.</p><p>The danger in poetry is to hard-close, to soothe too soon, to give a satisfying shape before the work. It is to speak like a bland or witty horoscope containing no actual thought, but flattering appearance of it, thereby manufacturing a patronizing poet voice of authority.</p><p>A risk is to make the work the packaging words and poetic devices, the hook and the resolution, instead of the deeper work of changing self, disturbing system defaults, growth, depth, letting chaos turn to genuine insight into systems or witness the discomfiting.</p><p>As hard as it can be to be published, with 1% to 3% acceptance rates, the hard part of writing, the most active time is the making, the improving, the shaking up your own practice, the expanding or leaning into the weirdness of your brain. The sporadic hurry-scurry of pitching poems is work but is not The Work.</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/05/20/the-work/">The Work</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am not being dishonest when I say I don&#8217;t like waking up at 6am. It makes me negative. I hear stories of high-achieving friends waking at sunbreak to write, to lift weights at the gym &#8230;different species. It&#8217;s only the leaking of the sun through the blinds that stirs me &#8211; I take in the morning&#8217;s emanation, all objects like clay just thrown and still wet in that bluish light, waiting to be fired. My nerves, like theirs, also quiver&#8230;</p><p>If I have no obligations, I will drift asleep at 7 into a savage world of my own interior, my dreamer standing at the glass, eavesdropping and observing myself with such precision I am often aghast. I have dreams that enact social satire about our tourist class &#8211; &#8216;What actually IS a Rhode Island?&#8221; &#8211; to appalling tests of motherhood &#8211; I&#8217;m really eating live flesh? &#8211; to surprises of who&#8217;s in bed with whom in what country &#8211; the full screen of entanglements. Then there&#8217;s the Russian doll metaphor. Walking into a Banana Republic while living in a Banana Republic &#8212; oh images on the screen, how crisp and precise! Get out your pith helmet, your jeeps, your fake smiles&#8230;.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3692">Savage Truths of 7am</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m planning for a writer&#8217;s residency and thinking about what makes for a successful residency &#8211; crunchy snacks? comfortable pants and shoes? Inspiring reading material? A set of goals? I want to work on my book that I&#8217;m still sending out and write some new work &#8211; either essays or flash or poems. I haven&#8217;t felt very creative the last few months for some reason.</p><p>So I&#8217;m hoping this time away will give me some new perspectives, some time away from social media, television, and the routine.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/green-herons-and-goslings-ai-lit-mag-scandals-planning-for-writing-residencies/">Green Herons and Goslings, AI Lit Mag Scandals, Planning for Writing Residencies</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s been a long time since I did a guest slot reading &#8211; my own fault, I withdrew following a now-long-ago (first) heart attack &#8211; but I&#8217;m really pleased to say I&#8217;ve been pencilled in for the excellent Buzzwords in Cheltenham on Sunday, February 14, 2027.</p><p>Yes, it&#8217;s a long way off but that shows just how popular the Buzzwords set-up is &#8211; held upstairs at the Exmouth Arms in Bath Road on the second Sunday of the month except, if memory serves me well, for August.</p><p>I&#8217;m already looking forward to it. I read there years ago and tried to contribute to the open mic session when I could, but as I said, fell out of the habit.</p><p>Now, with the publication of Poems In The Key Of Aardvark (see image of cover below), I have a responsibility to get off my behind and do readings again and anything else I can to promote it.</p><p>I&#8217;ll get out to do some open mics where I can. It&#8217;s sad that Stratford Literary Festival no longer caters for poetry &#8211; ancient or modern &#8211; but I&#8217;ll see where the new determination to socialise leads. It&#8217;s brought back fond memories of reading at a variety of festivals, poetry groups etc over many years, so this, I suppose, is something of a comeback.</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/05/23/of-poetry-readings-and-mindless-folk-who-steal-chickens/">OF POETRY READINGS AND MINDLESS FOLK WHO STEAL CHICKENS</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It feels like the first week of summer, although it&#8217;s hard for me to pin down when summer starts precisely. The last day of in-person class feels like a demarcation line, as does turning in grades, as does graduation. I want to spend some time this week planning for ways to get back to creative writing, the non-seminary, non-sermon writing. I want more poetry. I also want to remember that this summer is the time I planned to put a new poetry collection together.</p><p>Here&#8217;s what I wrote in <a href="https://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2025/12/publication-ponderings-in-mid-december.html">a December blog post</a>: &#8221; I&#8217;m going to wait until summer to do a deeper dive into manuscript assembly. I&#8217;m going to create a new manuscript called <em>Higher Ground</em>. The title works on several levels with the climate change poems along with spirituality poems.&#8221; That blog post reminded me that I had looked at past manuscripts&#8211;do I want to use one of them as a skeleton/scaffolding or start by looking at files of individual poems?</p><p>I also want to return to my New Year&#8217;s resolution, which was also my 2025 resolution: &#8220;I am not feeling OK about how many poems I am not writing. I do a good job of writing down fragments and inspirations, but I&#8217;m also aware that I have fewer inspirations and fragments in the past year or two than has been usual. I want to end the year with 52 poems written, finished poems. They may not be worth sending out, but they need to be finished. Fifty-two poems gives me space to catch up, and space to have a white hot streak that sets me ahead.&#8221;</p><p>Here&#8217;s hoping for some white hot writing streaks this summer!</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/05/summer-writing-intentions.html">Summer Writing Intentions</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The cusp of summer always means summer projects, which, despite my not being beholden to academic calendars any longer, still seems like a nice time to try to get some things done, although not with as much fervor and doggedness as that which comes with autumn. This summer, after I finish a couple of play scripts that are in various stages, next up will be my next installment in the Antiquities series. I have only been in research mode of late and made a few collages a couple years back, but I am determined to get at least a good first draft by September on a series of Calypso-inspired poems. Considering one of the first unpublished poems I wrote in my very first year of writing seriously in the late 90s, a poem called &#8220;Plentitude&#8221; that is probably way too bad to share now, it seems fitting this is where I go next. [&#8230;]</p><p>My other goal for the summer is to start dipping my toe into submitting plays to theaters and contests once I&#8217;ve built up something of a body of work to actually show off. Things have been going well, and just this weekend, I was able to put a bow on the final version of my Macbeth witches retelling, as well as get the first act roughly rendered of something else that mixes 90s culture, teen dieting, and demonology that&#8217;s turning out to be a lot of fun.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="https://kristybowen.substack.com/p/may-paper-boat-ea8">May Paper Boat</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have to say that the research I&#8217;m doing on the novel I&#8217;m writing about libraries and card catalogues and the future, is so much fun and taking me to the coolest places. In the old days, I&#8217;d probably share some of that here, but it&#8217;s the new upside down secretive world of writing that we now inhabit I suppose and it seems folly to speak about one&#8217;s projects. But one essay that pops out is by <a href="https://www.medievalists.net/2025/07/the-medievalist-who-taught-us-how-to-spot-a-fascist/">Umberto Eco</a>, on censorship. He wrote it in 2009 and it feels like he knew what our times would be like, because it was a lesser version of the noise filled world then. This is when the world began filling with digital noise, &#8220;an excess of information.&#8221; He says, &#8220;This great need for noise is like a drug: it is a way to avoid focusing on what is really important&#8230;.&#8221; He refers to Saint Augustine and &#8220;Redi in interiorem hominem,&#8221; return to the interior (hu)man.</p><p>The thing I find most interesting is that he also says that even when people are oppressed by &#8220;the most censorious tyrants&#8221; they have been &#8220;able to find out all that is going on in the world through popular word of mouth.&#8221; And this is why he says that the biggest &#8220;ethical problems we face today is how to return to silence.&#8221; He calls for a study of semiotics of reticence, a semiotics of silence in political debate, in theater, and in other forms of communication. He asks us to consider the long pause, &#8220;silence as creation of suspense, silence as threat, silence as agreement, silence as denial, silence in music.&#8221; [&#8230;]</p><p>We are in an imagination battle, as adrienne marie brown has said in her book on emergence. We need to invent new ways to see, to write, to be. Or maybe it&#8217;s a reclaiming of the old ways. I&#8217;ve been embracing my film camera, I always write with a fountain pen. I&#8217;m going to be on social media a bit less, I swear lol, or at least be there more on my own terms. I&#8217;m planning a reset time, turning it off for a week or so here and there. Maybe even a month at some point in the near future.</p><p>O&#8217;Donohue talks about the imagination. It is like a lantern, &#8220;it illuminates the inner landscapes of our life and helps us discover their secret archaeologies.&#8221; How to see the mystery and beauty ever-present?</p><p>We can cultivate the &#8220;grace of innocence&#8221; and tap into our &#8220;passion for freedom.&#8221; Our hearts are wild, naturally. We can still answer the call to a creative life for we know instinctively what that is. The imaginative life is one of mystery, ecstasy, joy, possibility, delight, revelation, and with some perseverance, perhaps transcendence.</p><p>Times are always changing; let us use this time, we creative souls, spirits, to reinvent what creativity is even. Let&#8217;s find new ways to share our work, new ways to create, perhaps more secretly or word of mouth. Let&#8217;s share with those who approach with reverence. The others never wanted our offerings anyway.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/wordofmouth">Let&#8217;s Talk About Word of Mouth, the Unforeseen, and Delicious Trouble</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I have created art that denies my authentic self&#8212;whether by erasing my shadow self, over-extending anchors, over-clarifying my interiority, self-questioning my patterns and symbols, or cleaning up language so that it doesn&#8217;t feel &#8220;too obscure&#8221; for the reader&#8212;I have felt a primordial sting of shame.</p><p>But when I&#8217;ve generously translated <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Andalucia-Lisa-Marie-Basile/dp/0983421714">the creative currents within me</a> without diluting them, I felt an existential, euphoric liberation.</p><p>What I have learned is that the writing doesn&#8217;t need to come with a map or key. Trust that the human heart will know its way. Indulge the mystery. Bend time. Let blue be green be garnet be gold. Resist the need to hold everyone&#8217;s hands, &amp; to have your hands held. Let the underbelly speak. Get lost in the process. Push past the illusory. Relish in the lostness. Quiet the noise. Descend and translate. Look for the <a href="https://citylights.com/staff-picks-archive/catching-the-big-fish-10th-anniv-ed/">big fish</a> in the deepest of waters.</p><p>You also <em>never</em> need to explain or justify your process. It&#8217;s not really about you or me. It&#8217;s bigger and deeper than us all. We are a splendid conduit when we get out of the way.</p><p><strong>Lisa Marie Basile, <a href="https://lisamariebasile.substack.com/p/the-poetic-permissions-of-dream-logic">The poetic permissions of dream logic &amp; otherworlds</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I keep trying to break<br>language into patterns that will mean something</p><p>beyond myself. I think of the mulberries I picked<br>from a friend&#8217;s garden, how even as half of them</p><p>sank into swift ferment, their skin still gleamed.<br>Night, too, presses its blue bruise against</p><p>the house walls. Everything can fold back into itself,<br>and my ghosts slip back like leaves into the pages of</p><p>a book. After, the air feels like it does after someone<br>has said something so real, it becomes unrepeatable</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/05/veined/">Veined</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Because we&#8217;ve lived in our house for forty years, my garden has suffered many changes of mind. And because roots can be very persistent, sometimes my older ideas re-emerge. This poem is the story of one of those reappearances, told in the classical meter known as the Sapphic stanza, one of my favorite ancient rhythms. [&#8230;]</p><p>Stand there still, O vegetable love. Grow taller.<br>Soar and soften out to a ferny greenness<br>feathered open, branched to adorn these hoped-for<br>armfuls of roses.</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/asparagus">Asparagus</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s the toadflax that gets me; those clusters of tiny violet flowers, pushing through gravel and tar. It&#8217;s the plaintain and horse tail ferns too, the black merrick, its optimistic puffs of yellow; it&#8217;s the dandelion, stonethrift, wild clary. It&#8217;s the beautiful bright things growing where they are not valued, or wanted; which insist on existing. A single purple Columbine, tall and conspicuous: I think of my trans friend in the Church reading hate mail signed <em>In Jesus&#8217; Name</em>. All the people I have known who have grown in hard land, who flower, who were sometimes cut down much too soon.</p><p>I think of what lies under the tarmac; a cool world of roots, roots reaching to mycelium, a fungal network stretching far beyond the reach of each plant. I think of community, interconnection, mutual aid &#8211; the plants and mycelium network exchange sugars and minerals, water; how the network protects the plants from drought and disease. I think of pesticides and diggers: the best way to kill a flower is to take away sunlight and rain. The flowers will grow regardless of what laws are passed, what anyone thinks of us.</p><p>I think hard times are upon us and ahead of us. But we are flowers. We will continue to bloom.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/wildflowers-and-transphobia">Wildflowers and transphobia</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 20]]></title><description><![CDATA[a lion-faced serpent god, the preserved body of a billionaire, memories of tap dancing, a brown-paper-bag existence, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-20</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-20</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2026 00:10:25 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/ec70a955-6212-4743-a23a-29374c5e32c5_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: a lion-faced serpent god, the preserved body of a billionaire, memories of tap dancing, a brown-paper-bag existence, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>The first bird I hear as I wake this morning is a wood pigeon; the promise of spring in its echoing tones. In the damp morning the cheerful chorusing of many birds is welcoming the day, and the air brings the scent of rosemary and twigs.</p><p>Alt text says this week&#8217;s photo is a beaver in a muddy puddle. I say it is a capybara sitting in the mud at Chester Zoo. I photographed it during a visit back in 2015 and the photo came to mind this week after a conversation with a wonderful friend.</p><p>Part of our conversation centred around the importance of being able to sit with someone when they are in the emotional equivalent of a muddy puddle. I loved the analogy&#8230; being alongside the person, acknowledging that it is indeed a swampy place, sitting with their thoughts and feelings for a while without rushing them to get out, without offering to try to solve it&#8230; bringing presence not solutions&#8230; simply being there with them in that muddy puddle.</p><p>I love a metaphor and after our chat I spent some time thinking about the times I have sat in muddy puddles of my own as well as the times I have meandered off my path to sit with others in their puddles. Those puddles have held a lot. Times of pondering, times of deep thinking, time to respect the need to be still for a while, times of silence, time to figure out the feelings and what is needed right now.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/05/18/sitting-in-the-mud/">SITTING IN THE MUD</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>At one point yesterday morning, a sea turtle patrol truck drove down the beach away from the sunrise, with one young worker guy hanging out the window taking pictures. I assume that the workers get to see a beach sunrise every morning. The fact that one of them went to such an effort to get a picture made me happy.</p><p>I&#8217;ve said before, and I&#8217;ll continue to remind myself that the human capacity for wonder makes me think that humans may survive after all.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/05/beach-sunrises.html">Beach Sunrises</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Recently, I enjoyed/endured a string of late nights (I&#8217;ll only do it for poetry), first in New York, where I heard extraordinary poets including Richard Siken, Ilya Kaminsky, and Ocean Vuong, and then in Chicago, where I heard debut writers including I.S. Jones and Noa Micaela Fields. I love the mix of improvisation and preparation that goes into introducing a poem&#8212;I learn as much about the poet from those candid moments as I do from the work itself.</p><p>This week, I attended a wonderful dinner for the National Poetry Series, which does invaluable work in support of poets, and had the pleasure of sitting alongside three former teachers: Deborah Landau, Brenda Shaughnessy, and Meghan O&#8217;Rourke. Fifteen years after my MFA, it feels especially meaningful to find myself working alongside them and still learning from them.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/poems-for-your-weekend-a40">Poems for Your Weekend</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Recently, <a href="https://woodenbrain.substack.com/p/einstein-was-a-pisces?r=2wckb">I posted about some poems</a> of mine published in Creative Writing Department&#8217;s <em>Print Journal. </em>They were a set of seven pieces, all of similar style, called &#8220;Rat Heart Nebula.&#8221; Below, I&#8217;m sharing three more sections of it, rounding out the set to ten. I am eventually going to collect all these in a chapbook, but I&#8217;m not sure how many of them there will end up being. They are extremely fun to write. [&#8230;]</p><p>Monstrous child of Sophia in the Gnostic cosmology, Yaldabaoth is the lion-faced serpent god who created our insane world. It does not matter if you think about this or not when reading.</p><p><strong>R.M. Haines, <a href="https://woodenbrain.substack.com/p/bluetooth-speaker-yadlabaoth">BLUETOOTH SPEAKER YALDABAOTH</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This is &#8220;Cupid and Psyche&#8221; (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge) by Jacopo del Sellaio, from about 1473. Fifteen scenes from the same story are merged together, Psyche appearing 11 times. A tree in the foreground of one scene may form the background of another.</p><p>Time goes left-to-right along the lower part of the painting. Higher up, more liberties are taken. This style is called &#8216;continuous narrative&#8217; &#8211; because, I suppose, there are no dividing lines between the different scenes/times.</p><p>I think it&#8217;s an idea that&#8217;s sometimes replicated in poetry, the same phrase representing a cause in one moment of time, and an effect in another. Recall and foreboding are intermixed with the present.</p><p><strong>Tim Love, <a href="http://litrefs.blogspot.com/2026/05/continuous-narrative.html">Continuous narrative</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>After the art gallery I had<br>skin tags removed<br>at my dermatologist&#8217;s office.<br>where I bought the most expensive<br>cosmetic I have ever bought.<br>I decided not to feel guilty about it&#8211;<br>my birthday was in two weeks.</p><p>This was the day after<br>the day I&#8217;d had<br>two poetry groups<br>back to back<br>where I wrote<br>poems<br>as vigorously<br>as a Baptist pastor<br>can preach<br>hell fire.</p><p><strong>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/the-sound-of-the-ocean">The Sound of The Ocean</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A gorgeous day as I rode the waves of a county road up from the river and into the glacial-carved bays and fjords of this county, rising into the air to crest a blind hill, easing past the slower vessels, a horse and buggy, a man in a flat brimmed hat pushing a bike, all sparkling in spring sun and new leaves pattering in the wind. Arrived lakeside, a park spread like its own picnic. A windsurfer coursed the chop of the dark blue lake. And I entered the community of food-bringers, of neighbors and friends, mostly strangers to me, chatting, no real laughter yet, as people assembled in slow spurts, some signing the guest book, some leafing through the photo albums, some pausing to hug hard the bereaved. I&#8217;ve done this a few too many times in the past six months. A spate of funerals and memorials. This one for a man I&#8217;d only known as a towheaded boy flinging himself around the yard, pausing briefly to pee in the bushes, too busy to bother with the niceties of a bathroom, or settling beside his tiny little sister to smooch or tickle. His mother, my friend. After we wailed together briefly, struck senseless by the simple devastation of her loss, broke apart to hold each other at arm&#8217;s length, enjoying seeing ourselves much unchanged after all this time. &#8220;He grew up to be a nice person,&#8221; she assured me, knowing I&#8217;d been a stranger to him, as we do not live near each other and had drifted apart. I will never know. Sudden death or slow, predicted or out of the blue, the shock of it remains much the same. Wait a minute, we wake to realize, day after day. Wait a minute.</p><p>Here is a poem by the ancient Japanese writer Isumi Shikibu, as translated by Jane Hirshfield, with Mariko Aratani.</p><p>&#8220;Why did you vanish&#8230;&#8221;</p><p>Isumi Shikibu (tr. Jane Hirshfield with Mariko Aratani)</p><p>Why did you vanish<br>into empty sky?<br>Even the fragile snow,<br>when it falls,<br>falls in this world.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/05/18/into-empty-sky/">into empty sky</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>What I am referring to here is my long, missed diagnosis of OCD.</p><p>I have found myself fully tethered to Larry, so I resist forming bonds with anyone. It&#8217;s too painful. I don&#8217;t want to lose someone else. Yet I want a witness. We all do.</p><p>There is a feeling of duty and obligation to ensuring his work stays out there, so his presence stays&#8230;present. I want people to see my love for him. I want people to keep loving him and appreciating his work. Yet I am in a loop. Often, I cannot leave my apartment. It takes me awhile to detach myself from him as I am convinced he is with me (his ashes are in my apartment).</p><p>Via repetitive tasks, and mind-numbing repetition and panic, I do things that provide a false sense of comfort that life is moving on without him. Since he died, I&#8217;ve been legacy building. Because he was a poet and so prolific, such a talented writer, a beautiful soul. Because I love him and my connection to him is through poetry.</p><p>And if I repeat myself through these posts it is because I am re-processing, meta-processing, or processing things for the first time now, with some&#8212;albeit very little&#8212;distance. It&#8217;s only been 15 months.</p><p>The book I am working on of his, for example, had to be pulled apart and re-laid out. All 800 pages of it (long story which I will detail another time). So after I painstakingly worked through thousands of pages of his hard copy poems to get them organized, labeled, edited, and collection into an 800-page volume of never-seen-before poems, I had to read them all again, reliving each love poem, each drawing, each haiku.</p><p>And my algorithm feeds me more grief, I feel more grief, feel guilty for not feeling more grief. On repeat. Constantly in grief mode.</p><p>And then there is the very accurate notion in grief that we don&#8217;t experience just the one loss, it is loss over and over. Every time you hear, see, or feel something that triggers you, you miss your person and your brain has to adjust and say to you: &#8220;Remember? They are not here anymore.&#8221;</p><p>It is looping loss upon loss.</p><p><strong>Lina Ramona Vitkauskas, <a href="https://linaramonavitkauskas.substack.com/p/to-play-with-catastrophe">To play with catastrophe.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The grammar of archives, of our accounting&#8212;<br>more than just the language of the incident report</p><p>Dalamhati&#8212; grief of the deepest kind, <br>from the Malay root for interior, something seated<br>in the liver or the heart</p><p>Sorrow as more than affliction, because lodged<br>in the body</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/05/souls-on-board/">Souls on Board</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i asked myself what i thought grief was. i used to know. or else, i used to <em>think</em> i knew, when i was young and young-in-grief, when grief felt as immediate and instinctive as arousal. when i thought i could name it; could call it by any single name. i thought that grief was an absence and an urgency. which it is, but not only this. it is also an accretion, a <em>thickening </em>in time and texture. grief has a taste, a colour and a shape, is shaping &#8211; reshaping &#8211; my attachments to others, to the world, to the body, to the &#8220;self&#8221;. yes, it is reshaping still. against the implied trajectory contained within much of western thought, that says beyond its immediate moment, your grief will diminish or fade. i used to dread this as betrayal and failure; found ways to &#8211; as i saw it &#8211; keep my grief alive and livid, insisted upon it as an ethics: that which we owe to the dead. silly girl, grief does not diminish. grief, if we allow it, is intimate, metabolic, and slow. grief is transformative. that is, as it transforms us, grief also transforms: from the emptying distress of acute personal hurt, to a rich and weighty way of <em>being with. </em>i think we are looking at healing through the wrong end of the telescope. perhaps we are using the wrong word altogether. supposing the aim was to <em>acclimatise</em>? suppose we sought not to reduce, but to deepen? to lean into this deepening.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/on-memory-2">ON MEMORY #2</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>(Art unburnt in the pyre&#8212;a <a href="https://www.moma.org/magazine/articles/1361">Cornell box carousel.<br></a>The chorus of little birds in the yard, psychopomp<br>for our cat&#8217;s last breath rising like smoke. Tears<br>I&#8217;ve kept close, waiting to share them with you.)</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="https://luxannica.wordpress.com/2026/05/14/smoke/">Smoke</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Tom Sastry has published one pamphlet and three collections. Carol Ann Duffy said he &#8220;makes friendships and love affairs new and strange&#8221; and Hera Lindsay Bird call him &#8220;a magician of deadpan&#8221;. His poems have appeared in The Guardian and Poetry Review. His latest book is <em>Life Expectancy Begins to Fall</em> is described by Jonathan Edwards as &#8220;the most important &#8211; and certainly the most entertaining &#8211; book about the end of the world I&#8217;ve yet found&#8221;. Tom himself describes it as the perfect birthday present for someone with a sense of humour about their mortality.</p><p>The title poem &#8211; a sequence of six titled poems, each consisting of six couplets &#8211; is at the core of the book. It is linked to the Covid-19 pandemic and government decisions.</p><p>The collection is also a short master class on making titles work:</p><ul><li><p>How to tell the apocalypse is happening when you get all your news from Instagram</p></li><li><p>Navigating the Peri-Apocalypse with Radical Self-Care</p></li><li><p>The preserved body of a billionaire slowly defrosts in a devastated world</p></li></ul><p>[&#8230;]</p><p>As I was preparing this post, Tom wrote to me: &#8216;You can be pessimistic about the drift of world-historical events and still hopeful about human nature and human connection. You can be hopeful about what might happen next week or about the reception of your friend&#8217;s new book. There&#8217;s no link between optimism and virtue or between pessimism and cynicism. So that&#8217;s really the moral centre of the book &#8211; the belief that an age of pessimism doesn&#8217;t condemn us to live mean lives. We can live well as pessimists.&#8217;</p><p><strong>Fokkina McDonnell, <a href="https://fokkinadutch.substack.com/p/life-expectancy-begins-to-fall-poems">Life expectancy begins to fall &#8211; poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Big workday today for me. And an exercise in joy. One of the greatest happiness an author can experience in the process of creating a book is receiving the first &#8220;proof&#8221; from the book designer, assuming you have a brilliant and conscientious designer, which I do in <a href="https://markmelnick.com/">Mark Melnick</a> who I recommend. Today I&#8217;ll be proofing my 2027 book <em>COLLATERAL DAMAGE BLUES</em> which, to my relief, pulls off one of my most ambitious literary structures to date. That is, I first wrote a novel. Then I had one of the novel&#8217;s characters create a poetry collection. Both are featured in CDB.</p><p>It was an arduous process over the past 3-4 years to create CDB. I first wrote another novel that wasn&#8217;t good enough (yet) to leave my files where it&#8217;s shelved as a &#8220;trunk novel.&#8221; I wrote a second novel, and from that novel birthed CDB. Literally a poet-novelist I am. From my Author&#8217;s Note, you&#8217;ll see that CDB has something for every type of literary reader.</p><p>The featured doll by my manuscript is the avatar for my novel&#8217;s primary protagonist, Kris&#8211;an orphan, a spy, a lethal killer, former head of the C I A, a community organizer, and a lover. He&#8217;s stared at me in my writing studio for the years it took me to create this book. He&#8217;s been ensconced over my computer to encourage&#8211;and pressure&#8211;me to finish this project. I look forward to the day I can present the actual book before his nose and hear him say, &#8220;I told you so!&#8221;</p><p>And someday I hope you will read CDB, which critiques Empire by going right to its root source: Sargon of Akkad, known for his conquests of Sumerian city-states in the 24th to 23rd centuries BC (last image). He&#8217;s been identified as the first person in recorded history to rule over an empire.</p><p>And yet this is also a rom-com. So: something for everyone.</p><p><strong>Eileen Tabios, <a href="http://eileenverbsbooks.blogspot.com/2026/05/pre-release-notes-collateral-damage.html">PRE-RELEASE NOTES: COLLATERAL DAMAGE BLUES</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As I&#8217;ve been getting ready to get a final version of my next collection, MARRY | KISS |KILL together and issue it this summer, I&#8217;ve been thinking about my own experiences with self-publishing my work (at least the full-length projects, but this applies to chapbooks as well) and how that might be of interest to other poets if they are considering doing the same in this age of dwindling publishers, slashed funding, and general upheaval in the arts.</p><p>While I spent many years waffling over the logistics and benefits of self-publishing, there were many benefits once I took the plunge. One was more control over timelines and design (including books, like GRANATA above, with an art element, not always welcomed by other presses) Another benefit is a greater share of the list price. This happens in a time when poets, even publishing with traditional presses, often share the brunt of promotion anyway for any collection, so that was nothing new under the sun. I also was producing work at a steady clip, impossible to publish all of them with the press that had issued my last three books. I also did not want to go through the work and expense of entering manuscripts in open reading periods and spendy contests, having already played that game earlier in my career. I was also in a great place to make it happen, having my own imprint and book design experience, as well as an existing audience for my work this many books and years in.</p><p>When I was initially contemplating self-publication in the early aughts, it was still very much a no-no if you wanted to be taken seriously and be seen with legitimacy (though I wonder how much of this was just the poets I was in community with.) Other communities had different ideas about it. There were spoken word poets who regularly issued their own work to sell at readings. The zine makers I knew regularly published their own editions of new work. When I started DGP, the first trial chapbook was my own, and when that went well, I moved on to publishing other authors. As time went on, there were more chapbooks and zines, but I still entrusted other presses with my full-length manuscripts. While I loved the presses and editors I worked with, it became steadily apparent over the years that traditional publishing, while nice, was not always ideal. My first publisher issued one book and accepted a second, but shuttered before it bore fruit. Ditto with another I later published with&#8211;same situation, one book released and another in-progress and abandoned when the publisher closed (I later issued this one myself, first as an e-book and now in print.) Other books closed out the print run after a decade (I have a handful of copies of these, but they are only available direct from me now.)</p><p>Since 2021 or so, I&#8217;ve been happily typing and designing away since, issuing 1-2 projects each year on my own, usually available to all, though there are also some Patreon-only offerings. But there are a few misconceptions I have often come across that bear mentioning when discussing self-publishing your poetry. that seemed fruitful to discuss.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/05/self-publishing-myths-dispelled.html">Self Publishing Myths Dispelled</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>To found the publishing company New Directions, James Laughlin invested $100,000 of his family&#8217;s wealth (about $2 million today) into the company. While he ran New Directions, James Laughlin lived on family property in a large country house in Connecticut. He lived off his investments in the stock market, as well as his generational wealth. Over time, he kept investing his family&#8217;s money.</p><p>I like New Directions; it&#8217;s a revered press. But Red Hen Press has no family money. Last night I was at a dinner, and someone said, <em>I would never want to work at a nonprofit. Too unstable</em>.</p><p>I know what you mean. It is too unstable.</p><p>There are many things I don&#8217;t understand. Can I make it from Point A to Point B? Why is Point B always so far away?</p><p>For me, Point B is the amount of money I need to raise for Red Hen to make it to the end of the fiscal year, June 30<sup>th</sup>.</p><p>In this struggle, people might care, but no one is coming to save me. Despite some incredible ongoing donors, no one can guarantee the survival of Red Hen; few people have been able to connect me with new foundations, donors, or sources of income.</p><p>When I was in my fifties, considering the path of James Laughlin, I looked into the stock market. I didn&#8217;t put any money into it then or since, but I did look into it. It was another thing I didn&#8217;t quite know enough about. What exactly was the stock market doing over there? What was it up to?</p><p>We recently decided to sell some of our personal books that we didn&#8217;t need. I said to Mark, if you had a tiny amount of money, what would you do with it? Savings account? Stock market? Get a car that won&#8217;t break down?</p><p>I started without generational wealth. I did not have any investment income. Out of the cult, I had nothing. Later, I was earning wages teaching, writing, and speaking. Then, I started a publishing company. That&#8217;s when everything shifted.</p><p>I thought that publishing was an enterprise worth saving; that the building of literary culture was an enterprise worth keeping. I still hold this belief, still say this to myself, but maintaining the physical reality is harder. Nonprofit publishing in the U.S. comes from a small batch of people who decide to build literary culture. Most of them are writers. Those without pre-existing wealth often give up their own literary lives and are written out of the story.</p><p>My goal this fiscal year is to get Red Hen fiscally healthy. My other goal is to get myself an additional job so that I can be fiscally healthy. To be fiscally literate and stable, I need to make a living, and I am going to figure it out. I am going to carry Red Hen forward.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/what-we-know-what-we-weather-what">What We Know, What We Weather, What We Climb</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Starting a poetry press was always going to be an education, but I didn&#8217;t expect to be learning quite so fast. Headless Poet is dedicated to the art of the introduction: you can read about the idea <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/why-im-starting-a-poetry-press-and">here</a>, and an interview with <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/111379771-victoria?utm_source=mentions">Victoria</a> Moul, editor of our first pamphlet, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/rewarding-in-a-rather-straightforward">here</a>. The response so far has been really encouraging, and there&#8217;s <a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/subscribe">a lot more to look forward to</a>.</p><p>One question, rather obvious in retrospect, which has been preoccupying me recently: how exactly does one go about promoting poetry that has been (in the words of my mission statement)<em> </em>buried by time? Time isn&#8217;t the easiest material to shift. Come to think about it, how do you market poetry at all? Perhaps you just keep writing blogs. That was always the original plan.</p><p>Today, Headless Poet publishes <em>Some Poems by Thomas Hood</em>, selected and introduced by Alex Wong. Alex is the author of two collections of poetry,<em> Poems Without Irony</em> (2016) and <em>Shadow and Refrain </em>(2021), both from <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/42768433-carcanet-press?utm_source=mentions">Carcanet Press</a>. He has also previously selected from the work of Victorian writers A. C. Swinburne, Walter Pater and Alice Meynell. When I first approached Alex last year, I didn&#8217;t have a particular writer in mind: he brings such a deep reading of and appreciation for the poetry of the era that we might have gone in any number of directions. But soon as he mentioned Hood, I knew it would have to be him.</p><p>Thomas Hood (1799-1845) hasn&#8217;t so much been buried by time as dismembered and deposited in various places &#8212; known for the odd anthology piece, but rarely read as a whole. <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44387/i-remember-i-remember">I Remember, I Remember</a> might be familiar to some (and it is a far stranger poem than it seems) but it doesn&#8217;t necessarily prepare you for the sheer exuberance of Hood&#8217;s <a href="https://poets.org/poem/no">comic verse</a> or the astonishing, sing-song social criticism of poems like <a href="https://poets.org/poem/song-shirt">The Song of the Shirt</a>. And yet: Hood was also a contemporary of Keats and Shelley, and could write a <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/52339/silence-56d230b89fd5e">sonnet</a> with the lyric intensity of either of them.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/new-to-headless-poet-some-poems-by">New to Headless Poet: Some Poems by Thomas Hood, selected &amp; introduced by Alex Wong</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>What I loved [&#8230;]</p><p>was the man, out of place like the rest,<br>telling a bawdy story of standing</p><p>at the urinal many weddings ago,<br>when something drifted from his inner coat pocket<br><br>as he stood pissing beside an editor &#8212;<br>his poem, having escaped confinement,<br>landed in the froth.</p><p>The gentle man, already zipped up,<br>delicately picked the page up by its corner</p><p>and published it.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3688">Wedding Miracles</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is an actual Lake Isle of Innisfree. The note that accompanies the photograph says, &#8220;It is difficult to imagine scraping a living on the unpromising terrain of this island.&#8221; (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_Lake_Isle_of_Innisfree_-_geograph.org.uk_-_826444.jpg">Wikimedia Commons</a>)</p><p>For most of the poem&#8217;s twelve lines, that place does exist, shining and almost reachable, in the evocative liquid sounds of its hexameter lines, dropping to tetrameter at the end of the first two <em>abab</em> quatrains, and resolving in pentameter in the poem&#8217;s last line. There&#8217;s a quality in these longer lines of, simultaneously, languor and urgency: the timelessness of the place, the exiled speaker&#8217;s haste to get there.</p><p>But can such a place exist? This poem, despite its maker&#8217;s dyspeptic later opinion of it, saves itself from the poisoning of nostalgia in its last lines. This Innisfree is real, more real even than the physical islet in the actual Irish lake &#8212; but only in one man&#8217;s &#8220;deep heart&#8217;s core,&#8221; where he carries the memory, which has become his own creation. It exists, but nowhere in external reality. You might want to arise and go now, and go to Innisfree, but you can&#8217;t get there from here.</p><p><strong>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-lake-isle-of-innisfree-21a">Today&#8217;s Poem: The Lake Isle of Innisfree</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m delighted to feature today a poem by Ricky Monahan Brown, taken from his recent pamphlet, <em>Drawer of Letters</em> (Broken Sleep Books, 2025).</p><p>The piece I&#8217;ve chosen is titled &#8216;Drawer&#8217;, so its significance within the manuscript as a whole is pretty clear. I don&#8217;t tend to be a fan of poems that use the passive voice a lot, nor of poems that don&#8217;t contain any main verbs. However, those two devices are actually used to terrific effect here, holding back narrative details that the reader is allowed to fill in, such as the identity of the protagonists. Meanwhile, progressively tweaked repetition is clearly a driving force, used deftly, moving us forward without any punctuation towards the poem&#8217;s emotional core.</p><p><strong>Matthew Stewart, <a href="http://roguestrands.blogspot.com/2026/05/a-poem-by-ricky-monahan-brown.html">A poem by Ricky Monahan Brown</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Anthony Barnett is a kind of one-man cultural institution, poet, editor, publisher, translator, musician and scholar. He has published, amongst others, the original Collected Poems by Jeremy Prynne, and Veronica Forrest-Thomson&#8217;s Collected Poems and Translations. He has also co-edited and published the journal Snow lit rev since 2013.</p><p>The first two volumes here display something of his range as a translator. &#8216;Whoever Has Found a Horseshoe&#8217; is significant for being a rare unrhymed poem by Osip Mandelstam; it&#8217;s also his longest poem. Subtitled &#8216;A Pindaric fragment&#8217;, it reads to me, in Barnett&#8217;s version at least, as a meditation on the difficulty of art, of making things that are not, to echo David Jones, valued for being utile.</p><p>Barnett presents the poem&#8217;s ten parts one per verso page, each with a facing recto page illustrative drawing by Lucy Rose Cunningham, drawings which strike me as being integral, not decorative. The opening section, facing a drawing of a tree, presents a view of woodland as raw material:</p><blockquote><p>We may face the forest and say:<br>Here is a forest with ship masts and timbers:<br>The pink-tinged pines<br>Freed from the weight of their clumps to their crowns<br>Should groan in a gale</p></blockquote><p>Straight away, the utilitarian is undercut by the aesthetic; nobody will build a ship from a drawing of a tree, and for the shipwright, that &#8216;pink-tinged&#8217; is entirely superfluous.</p><p>The fourth section addresses the difficulty of art, specifically the art of poetry:</p><blockquote><p>Where shall we start?<br>Everything sways and splits,<br>Similes quiver in the air</p></blockquote><p>While the next section addresses its value:</p><blockquote><p>Thrice blessed whoever enshrines a name in a song,&#8212;<br>A song graced with a name<br>Outshines those that are not&#8212;</p></blockquote><p>The penultimate section revolves around the title line:</p><blockquote><p>So<br>Whoever has found a horseshoe blows away the dust,<br>Buffs it up with wool<br>Until it shines.<br>Then<br>Hangs it over the door,<br>To rest,<br>No striking sparks on flint again.</p></blockquote><p>The polished horseshoe hung over the door has transcended its utilitarian origins to become, in its own small way, a work of art, of the impulse to make things over for no end beyond the pleasure it gives. The final section emphasises the poet&#8217;s identification with the finder, the trouv&#232;re, whose words are like objects dug from the earth.</p><p>In an afterword, Barnett describes the process of translation, this being his fifth version of the Horseshoe poem. He describes it as still potentially not finished, but it&#8217;s hard to imagine how he would come up with a more enjoyable version.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/05/13/a-basket-of-barnetts/">A Basket of Barnetts</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://carleton.ca/english/people/mekyle-ali-qadir/">Mekyle Ali Qadir</a> is a Pakistani poet currently pursuing his Master&#8217;s degree at Carleton University in Ottawa. His writing explores the negotiation of culture and ethnicity he enacts in his life as an immigrant from Pakistan. Writing in both English and Urdu, his emerging work explores South Asian cultural traditions, migrant identity, mysticism, and intertextual art. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>6 &#8211; Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?</strong></p><p>My writing is probably too theoretical. I&#8217;m very occupied with intercultural knowledges, negotiating my home traditions with Western modernity. My writing interrogates the assumptions that come with intercultural dialogues, especially in a place like Canada with all its performative multiculturalism rhetoric. I draw much of my inspiration from postcolonial thinkers who challenge hegemonic and Imperialist epistemologies, especially <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Edward-Said">Edward Said</a>, <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/12/06/frantz-fanons-enduring-legacy">Fanon</a>, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/aimae-fernand-caesaire">Cesaire</a>, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Muhammad-Iqbal">Iqbal</a>, and <a href="https://globalsocialtheory.org/thinkers/shariati-ali/">Shariati</a>. I&#8217;m just regurgitating their words and adding personal anecdotes along the way. Aside from that, though I don&#8217;t count it as a &#8220;theoretical concern,&#8221; my writing is steeped in mystical thought and teachings. As I repeat throughout my answers, the Sufi traditions give me inspiration beyond these great thinkers. Mystical inspiration doesn&#8217;t work in the question-answer structure because it&#8217;s beyond language so it&#8217;s hard to say what questions I answer when I write through this inspiration. But a tangible result of it is a keen sense of empathy that pushes beyond personal and cultural barriers and lets me capture intense personal and social experiences.</p><p><strong>7 &#8211; What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?</strong></p><p>I think there&#8217;s more creative writers operating at multiple levels of culture than we tend to acknowledge because they don&#8217;t call their work &#8216;creative&#8217; even though it is. I think writers always find themselves in strange &#8216;moments&#8217; in history, but now especially their work has been threatened by AI and slowly, their value is starting to be remembered in the wake of AI&#8217;s disappointing capabilities. I also think writers should see their work beyond its political impact. It&#8217;s a result of Eurocentric reductionism that writers are encouraged to think only in terms of political, material ends. I don&#8217;t think all writing is or should be political, though you can stretch definitions to fit your argument as much as you want. There are truths that transcend that, which all writing, but especially poetry, can uncover. I guess that&#8217;s what writers should be chasing after, to unveil <em>Maya</em> and reach the <em>Gha&#8217;ib</em>. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>13 &#8211; David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?</strong></p><p>I see what he means I guess, but I don&#8217;t like to think of it that way. Writing for me is one form of art that has to coexist with others. The creatives I admire most are creative in multiple ways, it&#8217;s only now that we&#8217;re siloing ourselves into discrete &#8216;disciplines&#8217;. I like to draw and play music, both of which make their way into my writing. Poetry is a mathematical activity, sometimes a scientific one. Poetry for me is tied to my religious expression concurrently with all of these other forms. Defining poetry through delimitations leads to dead ends, I think.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/05/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_0977232603.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Mekyle Ali Qadir</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The famine in Damascus fell so hard that year<br>that friends forgot what affection felt like.<br>The sky above them grew so tight-fisted<br>that neither crops nor date palms drank a drop.<br>The ancient springs ran dry, and orphans&#8217; tears<br>was the only water anyone could find.<br>If plumes of smoke rose from a household&#8217;s vent,<br>it was nothing but a widow&#8217;s sigh of grief.<br>I saw the once well-muscled trees unleaved,<br>each one poor and weak as the poorest darvish.<br>The orchard and the mountain, both were bare:<br>locusts had eaten the gardens; people the locusts!</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/from-saadis-bustan-a-noble-man-suffers-with-the-victims-of-a-famine/">From Saadi&#8217;s Bustan: A Noble Man Suffers With The Victims of a Famine</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Over the past few weeks I&#8217;ve been reviewing a couple of different books about Homer and his &#8220;afterlife&#8221; &#8212; the myriad ways in which the <em>Iliad </em>and the <em>Odyssey</em> stand behind and within so much of our literature but also off at an angle to it. Texts can be both foundational and also irreducibly strange and distant. (The Bible is another good example of this.) Very few people can read Homeric Greek, let alone with real ease and pleasure. But at the same time more people, I would guess, know something of the Homeric myths than any other classical work. Stories from the <em>Iliad </em>and the <em>Odyssey </em>are a popular basis for children&#8217;s picture books and early readers as well as the fashionable mythological kind of fantasy aimed at older children and teenagers. This just isn&#8217;t true in the same way of the story of the <em>Aeneid</em> or the <em>Metamorphoses </em>(though those poems incorporate Homeric material, of course), and even less so of, say, Herodotus, Livy or Lucan. Homer occupies a peculiar cultural space: both almost entirely unread (in Greek) and at the same time familiar, friendly, even cosy perhaps, in a way that is unlike most other &#8220;classics&#8221;.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/bifold-authority-shakespeares-troilus">Bifold authority: Shakespeare&#8217;s &#8220;Troilus and Cressida&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the years since his death, no age of English poetry has been without its tributes to Shakespeare. Ben Jonson&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44466/to-the-memory-of-my-beloved-the-author-mr-william-shakespeare">To the Memory of My Beloved Master William Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us</a>,&#8221; written in 1616, the year Shakespeare died, graced the prefactory material in the 1623 <em>First Folio</em> of Shakespeare&#8217;s plays, and John Milton&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46453/on-shakespeare-1630">On Shakespeare. 1630</a>&#8221; appeared in the 1632 <em>Second Folio</em> &#8212; which is praise from a pair of poets hard to match. And on the tradition goes to the 21st century with, for example, Wendy Cope&#8217;s lighthearted 2016 &#8220;<a href="https://www.poetrybyheart.org.uk/poems/shakespeare-at-school">Shakespeare at School</a>.&#8221;</p><p>The centuries between saw plenty of work in this line, but, curiously, only Today&#8217;s Poem, &#8220;Shakespeare,&#8221; seems much anthologized &#8212; a sonnet written in his twenties, which appeared in his first collection, <em>The Strayed Reveller and Other Poems</em>, in 1849.</p><p>I haven&#8217;t managed to decide what I think of [Matthew] Arnold&#8217;s poetry. His reputation declined in the 20th century, partly with the rise of awareness of Gerard Manley Hopkins, but the 1939 <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Matthew-Arnold-Additional-Lionel-Trilling/dp/0156577348/?tag=josebott-20">study of Arnold</a> by Lionel Trilling, a critic I admire, took the poetry seriously, as I have grown to suspect we must. Here at <em>Poems Ancient and Modern</em>, we have looked previously at only two of his poems, &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-dover-beach">Dover Beach</a>&#8221; and the strangely constructed &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-growing-old">Growing Old</a>.&#8221; And I find, in my teaching and lecturing, that &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-dover-beach">Dover Beach</a>&#8221; comes easily to mind, easily to hand as a way to convey <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-world-is-too-much">the sense of something lost</a> in the rise of modernity &#8212; something that large swathes of 19th- and 20th-century artists felt.</p><p>The argument of the poem is that Shakespeare stands alone, and the tremendous opening line, expressing that thought &#8212; &#8220;Others abide our question. Thou art free.&#8221; &#8212; is probably why the poem joined the standards of English verse.</p><p>(A test I use for literary reference is whether P.G. Wodehouse would use it for comedy, with an expectation that his readers wouldn&#8217;t scratch their heads. And sure enough, it appears in such stories as &#8220;<a href="https://americanliterature.com/author/p-g-wodehouse/short-story/the-reverent-wooing-of-archibald">The Reverent Wooing of Archibald</a>&#8221;: &#8220;At imitating a hen laying an egg he was admittedly a master. His fame in that one respect had spread all over the West-end of London. &#8216;Others abide our question. Thou art free,&#8217; was the verdict of London&#8217;s gilded youth on Archibald Mulliner when considered purely in the light of a man who could imitate a hen laying an egg. &#8216;Mulliner,&#8217; they said to one another, &#8216;may be a pretty total loss in many ways, but he can imitate a hen laying an egg.&#8217;&#8221;)</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-shakespeare">Today&#8217;s Poem: Shakespeare</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In &#8220;Material Witness&#8221; Edward Ragg turns his forensic eye towards material details often overlooked or taken for granted, e.g. rock formations, coral reefs, bower birds, an old photo, and what these artefacts might show or reveal. The specific details of a small starting point widens out to a relationship, family history or connection to the natural world, giving an universal appeal to a personal starting point.</p><p>In &#8220;The Tap Dancer&#8221;, a photo of a dancer &#8220;with a Nazi stamp on the back&#8221; is revealed to be the poem&#8217;s speaker&#8217;s mother.</p><p>&#8220;My father recalled bright-faced GIs breakfasting.<br>So enthusiastically polite. How they&#8217;d throw kids<br>sweets from their jeeps (candy they called them)<br>before most girls and boys knew to brush their teeth.<br>My father wept for those pearl toothed men until<br>his death. My mother remembered tap dancing<br>and often said: <em>I was always so lucky, so lucky</em>.&#8221;</p><p>The poem shows the different attitudes towards the war. The father remembering candy thrown at children from soldiers facing going to war. For him, the war is a tragedy of these men who never returned. The mother, the girl in the photo, focuses on memories of tap dancing. She is not being flippant, however, as she considers herself fortunate to survive. Her attitude is one of fortitude and survival. The war is something she&#8217;s put behind her.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/05/13/material-witness-edward-ragg-cinnamon-press-book-review/">&#8220;Material Witness&#8221; Edward Ragg (Cinnamon Press) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Taken as a whole, <em>Mountains that See in the Dark</em> is a striking collection in which the austerity of the desert becomes a means of exploring emotional depth, endurance, and renewal. [Regine] Ebner&#8217;s imagist precision allows her to distil large truths into brief, resonant poems, revealing a world in which beauty and hardship are inseparable, and in which hope persists even in the harshest conditions. The collection confirms her as a poet of remarkable economy and insight, one whose work transforms the physical landscape into a profound meditation on what it means to survive, to love, and to begin again.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/05/16/review-of-mountains-that-see-in-the-dark/">Review of &#8216;Mountains that See in the Dark&#8217;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was having one of those dumb human hissy fits wherein one believes she will never again encounter another example of a beloved thing, i.e. a poem that seems to have been written specifically for her, when, lo and behold, Bob Hicok&#8217;s latest, <em>Breathe</em>, appeared unbidden in my mailbox last Saturday, courtesy of one of those remarkable human treasures, i.e. a friend who doesn&#8217;t actually know what is wrong with you yet seems to know the cure. These are the third and fourth Bob Hicok poems to appear in this publication, so I guess it qualifies now as a Bob Hicok appreciation vehicle, and that&#8217;s fine with me, especially since <em>Breathe</em> contains its own Gerald Stern appreciation vehicle in &#8220;A little wave of my hand goodbye,&#8221; my own love of that poet being <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/god-of-rain-god-of-water-by-gerald?r=9w2">decidedly</a> <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/lucky-life-by-gerald-stern?r=9w2">well</a>&#8211;<a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-dancing-by-gerald-stern?r=9w2">established</a>. Ideally those warblings have also made Gerald Stern one of your favourite poets, but just in case: &#8220;Logic&#8221; felt to me like a perfect Hicok poem, one you need not possess any particular poetic affection/affliction to appreciate.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/two-poems-by-bob-hicok">Two poems by Bob Hicok</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I love the specificity of the blue tits, Lookout Hill (the one in Greenwich?), wild thyme, the Sphinx moth, the evening primroses, the turtledoves &#8211; it&#8217;s exemplary in how these are deployed without seeming in any way fake or outlandish.</p><p>I love, too, how &#8216;a rich lentil stew&#8217; will replace &#8216;the gnarled leavings of a slaughterhouse&#8217; (and not just because I haven&#8217;t eaten meat since 1982). My 1978 edition of the <em>Collins Concise English Dictionary</em> gives &#8216;leavings&#8217; as an alternative for &#8216;leftovers&#8217;, but I suspect it&#8217;s an anachronism now &#8211; I wonder if it&#8217;s still used in Wombwell/Barnsley where Sue is from, though despite the places&#8217; close proximity, my Sheffield-native wife Lyn says she&#8217;s never heard it. Either way, it looks and sounds just right, doesn&#8217;t it? When I attended &#8216;Poetry from Art sessions at Tate Modern from 2008 to c.2014, Pascale Petit exhorted participants to &#8216;use all the senses&#8217;, and that&#8217;s certainly what Sue did in this poem.</p><p>Above all, I adore how Sue ends the poem so beautifully, with &#8216;the crooning turtledoves&#8217; &#8211; one of our most extinction-threatened bird species &#8211; and invites us readers to hear their song instead of the tomcats on their night-time prowl.</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/05/12/on-sue-rileys-cats-meat-man/">On Sue Riley&#8217;s &#8216;Cats&#8217; Meat Man&#8217;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>14 May is #dylanday, a day to remember Dylan Thomas. I am posting this as part of a Facebook celebration initiated by Lidia Chiarelli of Immagine e Poesia.</p><p><em>Under Milk Wood</em> was first read on stage at The Poetry Centre in New York on 14 May 1953.</p><p>Please find below some lines from my poem in memory of the poet. My poem was first published in <em>Places within Reach</em> (2006), an anthology from Indigo Dreams Press, edited by Ronnie Goodyer.</p><p><strong>Tycoch</strong></p><p>Tall rows of rainbow tulips line these ways<br>where poets, lovers, dreamers stoop to gaze<br>upon the mirror of the pool. A sudden spark<br>shakes up the surface like a burning coal.<br>We jump, and vow to leave before the night<br>sweeps down from Kilvey Hill: a rook in flight<br>spreads shadows on the bay and bares its soul.<br>We climb the hill where ponies used to roam<br>and reach at last the red, red walls of home.</p><p><strong>Caroline Gill, <a href="http://carolinegillpoetry.blogspot.com/2026/05/14-may-is-dylanday.html">14 May is #dylanday</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I promised a review of Juliana Spahr&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.weslpress.org/9780819501523/ars-poeticas/">Ars Poetica</a></em>, which, as the title promises, is a lot of poems about poetry&#8212;kind of a slim volume, not that many poems, and an unexpected large chunk of prose in the middle, talking about attending antifascist rallies where violence breaks out, being threatened by the ex of a friend with gun violence at her workplace and consequently going to the shooting range and thinking about a bulletproof vest&#8212;probably the most interesting part of the book. Juliana is seven years older than me but still in my age group (Gen X), started blogging and such around the same time I did, lived a large part of her life in Ohio (which I also did), and she&#8217;s a feminist who struggles with what that means. She also has some privileges&#8212;a lot of famous writer friends and a steady paying fancy academic job&#8212;that I don&#8217;t have, which she makes pretty clear in her acknowledgements, all ten pages of them (!). Is it worth reading? Probably. Is the best book of poetry I read in the last year? Absolutely not. (I would give it to Martha Silano&#8217;s <em><a href="https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/T/bo257335994.html">Terminal Surreal</a></em>, such a searing book about dying of ALS, or Lesley Wheeler&#8217;s <em><a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/mycocosmic/">Mycocosmic</a></em>, such an intensely intelligent meditation on mushrooms and death. I think the people that choose the Pulitzer Prize are probably picking friends from their own cohort of academics, not reading too far outside their comfort zones, and boy, do they love poems about poetry. (Remember Diane Seuss&#8217; <em><a href="https://www.graywolfpress.org/books/frank-sonnets">frank: sonnets</a></em> also had a lot of poetry talk, though her style is pretty different than Spahr&#8217;s.) I absolutely adored Marie Howe&#8217;s Pulitzer winning <em><a href="https://wwnorton.com/books/9781324075035">New and Selected Poems</a></em>, which had a totally different flavor, which won the year before, so I guess it just varies by year. If I was a judge, I would have probably fought for a different book, but no one has asked me yet, LOL.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/personality-and-poetry-hummingbirds-and-goldfinches-and-butterflies-surviving-root-canals-and-melancholy-seasons/">Personality and Poetry, Hummingbirds and Goldfinches and Butterflies, Surviving Root Canals, and Melancholy Seasons</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This sort of critique has been around forever: </p><div class="embedded-post-wrap" data-attrs="{&quot;id&quot;:195170318,&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://themagialipoetryshow.substack.com/p/peeing-in-the-pool-of-poetic-mediocrity&quot;,&quot;publication_id&quot;:4099828,&quot;publication_name&quot;:&quot;The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show&quot;,&quot;publication_logo_url&quot;:&quot;https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!47nF!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F41d6ad05-819f-4bdc-8026-d9d78edf4154_1280x1280.png&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;PEEING IN THE POOL OF POETIC MEDIOCRITY&quot;,&quot;truncated_body_text&quot;:&quot;Lately the poetry world feels as though it&#8217;s become an Amazon Fulfilment Centre. Poets in utilitarian garb toiling on warehouse floors being paid next to nothing all in service of some imaginary Poetry God who will finally recognise their brilliance and catapult them into international poetry fame. Shelf upon shelf of dull poems suffocating in grey plas&#8230;&quot;,&quot;date&quot;:&quot;2026-04-23T17:19:21.383Z&quot;,&quot;like_count&quot;:69,&quot;comment_count&quot;:69,&quot;bylines&quot;:[{&quot;id&quot;:317889168,&quot;name&quot;:&quot;The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show&quot;,&quot;handle&quot;:&quot;themagialipoetryshow&quot;,&quot;previous_name&quot;:null,&quot;photo_url&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/c3dba129-b8ab-4426-94f4-13124fb044a5_1440x1440.png&quot;,&quot;bio&quot;:&quot;Two Glasgow poets talk poetry. Fuck mediocrity! &quot;,&quot;profile_set_up_at&quot;:&quot;2025-02-12T21:12:23.908Z&quot;,&quot;reader_installed_at&quot;:null,&quot;publicationUsers&quot;:[{&quot;id&quot;:4180833,&quot;user_id&quot;:317889168,&quot;publication_id&quot;:4099828,&quot;role&quot;:&quot;admin&quot;,&quot;public&quot;:true,&quot;is_primary&quot;:true,&quot;publication&quot;:{&quot;id&quot;:4099828,&quot;name&quot;:&quot;The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show&quot;,&quot;subdomain&quot;:&quot;themagialipoetryshow&quot;,&quot;custom_domain&quot;:null,&quot;custom_domain_optional&quot;:false,&quot;hero_text&quot;:&quot;My personal Substack&quot;,&quot;logo_url&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/41d6ad05-819f-4bdc-8026-d9d78edf4154_1280x1280.png&quot;,&quot;author_id&quot;:317889168,&quot;primary_user_id&quot;:317889168,&quot;theme_var_background_pop&quot;:&quot;#FF6719&quot;,&quot;created_at&quot;:&quot;2025-02-12T21:12:40.402Z&quot;,&quot;email_from_name&quot;:&quot;The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show&quot;,&quot;founding_plan_name&quot;:&quot;Founding Member&quot;,&quot;community_enabled&quot;:true,&quot;invite_only&quot;:false,&quot;payments_state&quot;:&quot;enabled&quot;,&quot;language&quot;:null,&quot;explicit&quot;:false,&quot;homepage_type&quot;:&quot;magaziney&quot;,&quot;is_personal_mode&quot;:false,&quot;logo_url_wide&quot;:null}}],&quot;is_guest&quot;:false,&quot;bestseller_tier&quot;:null,&quot;status&quot;:{&quot;bestsellerTier&quot;:null,&quot;subscriberTier&quot;:null,&quot;leaderboard&quot;:null,&quot;vip&quot;:false,&quot;badge&quot;:null,&quot;paidPublicationIds&quot;:[],&quot;subscriber&quot;:null}}],&quot;utm_campaign&quot;:null,&quot;belowTheFold&quot;:true,&quot;type&quot;:&quot;newsletter&quot;,&quot;language&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;source&quot;:null}" data-component-name="EmbeddedPostToDOM"><a class="embedded-post" native="true" href="https://themagialipoetryshow.substack.com/p/peeing-in-the-pool-of-poetic-mediocrity?utm_source=substack&amp;utm_campaign=post_embed&amp;utm_medium=web"><div class="embedded-post-header"><img class="embedded-post-publication-logo" src="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!47nF!,w_56,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F41d6ad05-819f-4bdc-8026-d9d78edf4154_1280x1280.png" loading="lazy"><span class="embedded-post-publication-name">The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show</span></div><div class="embedded-post-title-wrapper"><div class="embedded-post-title">PEEING IN THE POOL OF POETIC MEDIOCRITY</div></div><div class="embedded-post-body">Lately the poetry world feels as though it&#8217;s become an Amazon Fulfilment Centre. Poets in utilitarian garb toiling on warehouse floors being paid next to nothing all in service of some imaginary Poetry God who will finally recognise their brilliance and catapult them into international poetry fame. Shelf upon shelf of dull poems suffocating in grey plas&#8230;</div><div class="embedded-post-cta-wrapper"><span class="embedded-post-cta">Read more</span></div><div class="embedded-post-meta">2 months ago &#183; 69 likes &#183; 69 comments &#183; The Magi &amp; Ali Poetry Show</div></a></div><p>. I recall such chat when I was 20 years old and all poetry was print; there was much to-do about whether being a poet associated with a university was the only way to be taken seriously or at any rate recognized at all. There were complaints that celebrities got books published while excellent un-famous writers struggled, waiting for rejections by SASE*. Poets often complained of cliques, of infighting and pettiness. There was a certain railing against mediocre free verse and &#8220;overly-confessional&#8221; poetry; writers threw barbs at those deemed too political or not political enough, or too feminist or not feminist enough, or writing that was deemed too formal for contemporary times. <em>Recognition</em> was a term I heard often in the 1980s. It was what mattered, apparently. Needless to say, I did not attain it. I think, in retrospect, I&#8217;m glad I didn&#8217;t.</p><p>Author Ali Whitelock&#8217;s points are not all off the mark, in fact; who has not suffered through listening to some embarrassingly bad (well, we have to learn somehow) or, worse yet, egotistical/narcissistic readers at open mikes? All I can say for myself is that when I was starting out I recognized my work was not brilliant&#8211;but I needed the practice and tried not to overstay my welcome on stage. Even as a featured reader, I tended not to fill the time allotted. Granted, it helps that I don&#8217;t write epics! But I&#8217;ve heard these criticisms of open mike readings and about gate-keeping literary magazine editors for decades, and also the charge that poets are aiming more for recognition (today read: &#8220;likes&#8221;) than for highly-crafted work. <em>And</em> also the claim that there&#8217;s a sudden proliferation of &#8220;half-arsed poetry&#8221; in the world. Nope. Not sudden or new.</p><p>Whitelock&#8217;s essay is likely meant to be a bit provocative. Otherwise why use such freighted language, or make sarcastic remarks like &#8220;Poetry, as we all know, is competitive&#8230;&#8221;? And her bullet points about how to know when you&#8217;ve achieved a poem worth publishing&#8211;Eh. Not objective or even particularly actionable, and what if the writer really feels that her mediocre poem meets those points, even if few others agree? Taste, after all, is personal. However, I do like what she says about writing poems: &#8220;The poem itself &#8211; and the process whereby it is achieved &#8211; is the reward. Not the likes, not the prizes, not the comments &#8211; true, false or otherwise.&#8221; I&#8217;m definitely into the process. &#8220;Likes&#8221; on social media are nice, I suppose, but they tend not to mean much.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/05/17/complaints-critiques/">Complaints, critiques</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A poem that disappears. A poem you can hold. In this self-interview, writer and artist Josh Medsker opens up about his evolving practice and the intimate, tactile world of his Container Poems&#8212;art objects built around a single emotional or thematic thread. As he puts it, each one is &#8220;an art object built around a theme &#8212; every element of the piece supports that theme,&#8221; a definition that becomes richer the deeper you go into his process.</p><p>What makes this conversation especially compelling is how it mirrors the work itself: personal, reflective, and rooted in relationship. Medsker traces the surprising connections between his <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/03/14/disappearing-poems-on-instagram-interview-with-josh-medsker/">Disappearing Poems</a> and these new physical pieces, exploring how ephemerality and permanence can answer the same artistic question from opposite directions.</p><p>This guest post dives into the origins of the project, the emotional labor behind each object, and the way making physical containers has reshaped his understanding of what a poem <em>is</em>&#8212;not just text, but an experience.</p><p><strong>Trish Hopkinson, <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/05/11/inside-the-box-a-self-interview-with-josh-medsker-on-container-poems/">Inside the Box: A Self-Interview with Josh Medsker on Container Poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Prose, a punch in the face, a feather in the armpit, a snake that sticks its tail in one of its ears so it doesn&#8217;t hear too much music. I want my prose to be as tricksterish, as surprising, as osmotic as is my experience of the world, not just from A to B, but all points between and also those points that are not on that line. I want my prose to be as quicksilver as a mind and as tawdry or broke, as rich and as broken, as plain spoken or baroque. A passage of prose could be a various as what might happen from morning until night. I wish my prose to be as vivid and changeable as weather, as a drive through a city, sometimes with your eyes closed, sometimes with everyone else&#8217;s eyes closed.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/prose-like-a-feather-in-face-a-snake">Prose like a feather in face, a snake in the armpit</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Two fairly different haiku of mine, both published by Tinywords over the last few days. I consider myself blessed with good fortune! That sort of thing doesn&#8217;t happen often with my poems and there are often long periods when I get nothing but rejections. That&#8217;s good too though &#8211; all part of the process. And polishing them up to send them out is also a necessary part of it too. I&#8217;m always learning new things, about the craft and myself, which is what keeps me interested.</p><p><strong>Julie Mellor, <a href="https://juliemellorpoetsite.wordpress.com/2026/05/13/tinywords-4/">Tinywords</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Some of my early poems (in books now out of print, in online magazines that have disappeared into the ether) contended with my feelings about the general rebelliousness of our then-college-age children. Those feelings are now part of the deep past, but I can easily recall the self-questioning of that time, which lies behind this poem and others like it. [&#8230;]</p><p>What business did I have<br>aiming the star-eyed young at physics departments,<br>at nights in mountain observatories<br>listening for beings who might not even have breath,<br>when all I want from the night<br>is whatever the psalmist heard, that shout of glory?</p><p>I know this much: the cosmos<br>is flying apart. The old drift off the signal.<br>The children have reached lightspeed.<br>The galaxies move away<br>in search of work in a more exciting city.</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/failing-astronomy">Failing Astronomy</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m sitting in a Bentley on Brick Lane eating a bagel from a brown paper bag. I&#8217;ve always been more of a brown paper bag kind of a guy than a Bentley man. You&#8217;d probably say I live a brown paper bag life. I would reply that you&#8217;re more likely to find poetry in a brown paper bag than in a Bentley. I may be wrong. I&#8217;m generally wrong. Sometimes I actually like being wrong. I think that&#8217;s my problem. I try to convince myself that wrong is where the art is. Isn&#8217;t that where you&#8217;ll find it? At the wrong side of town. In the wrong bar. At the wrong time. With the wrong people.</p><p>We&#8217;ve just been sitting in the right kind of place with the right kind of people. All of the beautiful, young and buzzing, hip and hopeful East London creatives. This place even has a sober open mic night. I&#8217;m sober but the idea of a sober open mic night brings me out in hives. Is that wrong? &#8220;Ya know what?&#8221; I say to Rob, &#8220;If there&#8217;s anything that&#8217;d make me want to pick up a drink, it&#8217;d probably be going to a sober open mic night.&#8221; And I know that&#8217;s wrong.</p><p>What I&#8217;m doing right know feels wrong. Rob has &#8216;got me in a room&#8217; with a guy who might be able to help me navigate away from a brown paper bag existence and I&#8217;m pitching (I think I&#8217;m <em>pitching</em>) a poetry project. I&#8217;m pitching a poetry project to a guy who&#8217;s also done everything wrong but ended up with a Bentley. I need to qualify this: There&#8217;s a difference here between wrong and bad. He&#8217;s not done bad things (I try hard not to do bad things too). What I mean is wrong, as in being told &#8220;there&#8217;s no way that&#8217;ll work&#8221; and trying it or hearing &#8220;Oh, you can&#8217;t do it like that&#8221; and doing it.</p><p>Wrong is e.e. cummings dropping his caps, is Joyce abandoning commas and fullstops in a novel, is Kit Marlowe busting free from tight rhymes into blank verse then passing the mic over to Shakespeare. OK so Marlowe did a bunch of bad things too but all that other shit is wrong. It&#8217;s wrong and it&#8217;s good. It&#8217;s wrong and it keeps poetry alive and vital. It&#8217;s wrong to break the rules. But it isn&#8217;t bad.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n64-what-the-hell-is-wrong-with-you">N&#186;64 What the hell is wrong with you?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m not a natural runner, but I have become a habitual one. I like the almost weekly feeling of surprise I experience when I turn up at 9am to the start of a run (not a race) with 100s of other participants. Finishing, however, is never a surprise because I&#8217;ve made that my only goal. Were I more of a risk-taker, more hare and less tortoise (to borrow from Aesop), I might run faster earlier, but then I might have to give up (so my thinking goes) and nap en route. As soon as I reach the home stretch, especially when I can see the finish flag, I feel confident and pick up speed.</p><p>I&#8217;ve had several other finish lines to cross this week. These finishes have included the usual ones for teaching sessions at work; a printing deadline for the 2nd edition of a poetry collection I&#8217;ve edited for a friend (more on this soon); my own poetry submission for a collaborative exhibition in Girona in the autumn (more on this soon); a mid-May aim to get sweet corn planted in the new badger-proof section of my allotment (more on this now): [photo]</p><p>This flurry of finishes has been satisfying but also perturbing- maybe my motivation levels are shallow, and it&#8217;s only a deadline which results in completion?</p><p>But reflecting further on what I&#8217;ve learned from all those Parkruns leads me to think a little differently. I had, after all, to do the first 199 in order to complete the 200th. Slow and steady. The sight of the finish each time has been the measurement I need to judge the equation between the resources at my disposal and the task in hand.</p><p><strong>Liz Lefroy, <a href="https://someonesmumsays.blogspot.com/2026/05/i-sprint-to-finish.html">I Sprint to the Finish</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t think my desk or study has been messier. I keep meaning to tidy it up, make a plan, figure out what to do with the accumulation of books. And I will but I wonder if subconsciously the books that are piling up are an encouragement, a comfort. There are all these amazing books still being written that I am excited to read. I feel like I need to read them! So the books are shoring me up a little against despair.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/letsjusttitlethis">Let&#8217;s Just Title This Random Notes and See What Happens</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>this desire to just be<br>alone<br>with all these poems<br>swept away again and again <br>by the bigger poem of my life</p><p><strong>Tom Clausen, <a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/05/12/matrix-by-tom-clausen-2/">matrix</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Little Woolden stole my heart. Follow the sat nav, and it might take you through a network of uneven roads, their surfaces alarmingly cambered by the old bog which sinks below them, or up a small, rough track, to an unmarked space for around 6 cars, and a burnt-out portaloo. Or walk there from Caddishead Library, down the dusty Old Moss Road, through wide open landscapes of wheat, low hills on the far horizon.</p><p>This is Greater Manchester, and the city centre is just ten miles away, but it feels like a different country. Directions to some of the smaller flashes, or areas of restored bog might read like <em>follow the road through the estate, down the cul-de-sac, park up by the old folk&#8217;s home and take the path on your left</em>. I&#8217;d walk down paths only trodden by dog walkers and find myself transported from the sort of depressed Northern towns I grew up in, to a sea of cotton grass, or a stretch of shimmering water where you might hear a nightingale sing.</p><p><em>I think magic comes in many forms. Waking to a snowy day, falling in love, stars. When I started my residency in 2021, I realized that Lancashire was full of secret doors, tucked down cul-de-sacs, next to schools, nursing homes, takeaways, off the main road, round the back of the estate. Gateways and tracks too often go unnoticed, but if you pass through them, you enter a different world and you leave transformed.</em></p><p>These words are taken from an audio trail I wrote as part of my efforts to open those secret doors so that more people can enter. Because if you&#8217;ve heard of Wigan in the last week, it&#8217;s probably because 24 of the 25 council seats up for election were taken by Reform. If you&#8217;ve heard of Leigh in recent years, it might be the murder of Brianna Ghey. And in coming weeks, the old cotton-and-coal town of Ashton-in-Makerfield will be the site of frantic campaigning and speculation as Andy Burnham seeks election in a local struggle that might decide the next PM.</p><p>But my concern is not party politics: it&#8217;s the bog. The bogs held my grief and my fear, and the surface of the flashes shone with hope. Call me obsessed, call me na&#239;ve (I&#8217;ve been called a whole lot worse) but if everyone felt a connection with the live green singing world around them, many of our divisions would melt away. As part of my residency, I took groups of young carers, asylum seekers, schools groups, onto those bogs. For a short time, what mattered most was how the ground shook when we jumped on it together, how the sky told the story of our loss, whether we had biscuits. How a stick could be a wand, how stones were precious.</p><p>When we connect with the land around us, we belong. When we listen to a bird, we are still, we are together, the environment is present to us in a living, singing form. It matters, and we matter within it. When you are digging, or cooking, or carrying a heavy load, difference melts away. When you are picking litter, or planting cottongrass, you start to see the land, and it sees you. When we are outside, or in the warm shared spaces after walking or work, there is air and light enough for all our stories.</p><p>The work of connecting everyone to our land is slow, sometimes so slow it looks like nothing. It looks like a cup of tea outside, or shared food. It looks like walking slowly so someone can catch up. It looks like teenagers swimming in Pennington Flash on a hot day. It looks like what we need to do, regardless of whatever we see it as success. It looks like light on the water. It looks like hope.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://blogsandbogs.substack.com/p/bogs-against-fascism-or">BOGS AGAINST FASCISM</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>after the rain<br>sunshine dripping<br>from the fig tree</p><p><strong>Jim Young <a href="http://haikueye.blogspot.com/2026/05/blog-post_479.html">[no title]</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 19]]></title><description><![CDATA[speech bubbles, egoistic namby-pambyness, the staid denizens of heaven, a rainbow in a storm, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-19</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-19</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 23:36:33 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/c674612b-b56f-4480-9281-63cb59b8993a_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: speech bubbles, egoistic namby-pambyness, the staid denizens of heaven, a rainbow in a storm, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>/ hope&#8217;s ache, pinkly.<br>/ in the mind&#8217;s ill-mannered museum.<br>/ something is stirring.<br>/ claustrophobic and soft.<br>/ the bad idea. with its octopus of arms and gossip.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/opaque-or-durational-11">OPAQUE OR &#8220;DURATIONAL #11&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Some flowers hold their petals for only a few days and in those few days they are likely witnessed time and again by what is most important, the pollinators, be it winged, footed, or the wind. The more-than-human world is always announcing itself, a lot of it silently, invisibly. The swarm of insects indicate the announcement of flowers. The perching of birds announces the quiet leafing-out of trees, the whispering growth of berries, the stock-still readiness of seeds. You smell of lilac announces the high-up cones of flowers waving at the sky.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/quiet-announcement">Quiet Announcement</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On the nearby peat bog and in patches on the croft, bog myrtle flowers opened. They turned from bright orange to peach and cinnamon. Each day the heavenly perfume rises and threads through everything, caught and transferred by wind. For me, the essence of spring, the herald to a year of light, colour and smell, of growth and possibilities, the fragrance of life itself, is found in this combination of myrtle-incense and peat. When cold easterlies blew, I sat in a sheltered nook near the cliff-top, facing west to the sea, and almost felt the scent of bog myrtle as a tangible thing, a stream of life, overpowering even the aroma of salt, seaweed and rock. This,<em> this</em>, marks the real beginning of a new year &#8211; when I am submerged in, cleansed and blessed by attar of myrtle.</p><p>On April 22<sup>nd</sup> I take a break from writing to catch up with the latest news. I see a picture of a small boy in a woollen jumper and long pants holding on to a chair and am completely undone. He is very young, with the stance toddlers adopt when they are first learning to walk independently &#8211; widely space legs, arms spread. His hesitant smile is that of all children at that age, wide-eyed, hopeful, ready to explore. He looks so like my youngest grandchild I need to study the image carefully to be certain it isn&#8217;t her. She is at the same stage, tottering around with her arms held out for balance, a smile of delight on her face as she investigates her world. Tears flow. I can&#8217;t stop them. Hot tears and a rage-sweat. I let it all burn out of me.</p><p><strong>Annie O&#8217;Garra Worsley, <a href="https://notesfromasmallcroftbythesea.wordpress.com/2026/05/05/april-may-the-force-be-with-you/">April-May&#8230; the force be with you</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This week saw my friend Catherine Broadwall launch her book <em><a href="https://www.girlnoise.press/collections/our-books/products/aftermath">Aftermath</a></em> at the downtown gallery/bar <a href="https://www.vermillionseattle.com/">Vermillion</a>, the announcement of the Pulitzer Prizes, a new poem in the lit mag <em>Assaracus</em>, and the return of some favorite birds, like the Black-Headed Grosbeak and the Rufous Hummingbird.</p><p>Also, the Iran war continues and a hantavirus scare from a cruise ship. Plus, the Supreme Court continues to abuse the &#8220;shadow docket&#8221; in order to support an evil, racist regime. Is this all discouraging and apocalyptic? It is.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/a-book-launch-at-vermillion-a-desert-rat-poem-in-assaracus-spring-bird-appearances-the-pulitzer-prize-for-poetry/">A Book Launch at Vermillion, a Desert Rat Poem in Assaracus, Spring Bird Appearances, The Pulitzer Prize for Poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Are you getting much sleep? Are you awake with me at 4am? Can you see this beautiful May dawn light? I&#8217;m not supposed to be here, but here I am, watching and noticing the soft peach and pinks in the May skies, listening to the dawn chorus and sipping some mint tea. Are you ok? Are you looking after your bold hearts and big dreams? Not easy is it.</p><p>What a mess.</p><p>In every direction there is chaos, calamity, catastrophe. It feels like all the sections are wrong, like the forks are muddled up in the spoons section, like all the pieces of us are scattered. It feels like the script of this episode of you and me is being writen by a maniac sniffing glue. The news keeps reminding me of boys in the playground at school kicking the bins to make wasps fly out and getting angry when they get stung. Fuck about and find out over and over again. The consequences of all of this, the divisions, the bubbling hatred, the violence, this vibration, this unease, all the energy of humanity is cornered and angry and confused and frustrated and frightened and sick and tired as this ooze of misinformation and wildly unchecked macho egomania spreads like a stinky toxic treacle sticking to every leaf and idea, every wing and cloud of thought. It feels like our world needs to be drenched with sea salt and sage and rose petals and rosemary, take a deep breath, but maybe that&#8217;s just me.</p><p>I&#8217;m going away on a Writers Retreat and just packing.</p><p><strong>Salena Godden, <a href="https://salenagodden.substack.com/p/death-is-another-country">Death is another country</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The other day I went out for walk. I went out for a walk in the same way I would go about making a poem &#8211; and I do believe you make a poem, you do not simply write it. I went out to seek connection. I went with an idea of where I was going but, as with a poem, without knowing exactly what I might find. I went with purpose. I went, as one goes to poetry, with the cautious endeavour of bringing elements together. [&#8230;]</p><p>The walk began in Moorgate, London, beside the bronze cast of a life mask of the poet John Keats. The sculpture itself marks the poet&#8217;s birthplace, a London pub now called <em>The Globe</em>. It was originally called <em>The Swan and Hoop</em>. Ten years ago I took my poem, <em>My Name is Swan</em>, to every pub in London that, like <em>The Swan and Hoop</em>, had the word <em>Swan</em> in its name. I read my poem in around twenty <em>Swan</em> pubs. The performances were documented in film. The poem is now due to appear in a book. My publisher will be making an announcement about <em>My Name is Swan</em> and other fine titles on their list at 4:30pm UK time. [&#8230;]</p><p>The walk took me north to Bunhill fields and to the grave of William Blake. Here I began to conceive of a series of walks, with each walk connecting two points of literary or poetic history within a roughly one mile radius of each other. The walks form single scenes, short acts, that move toward a much larger play slowly unfolding across the city. The course is plotted weekly and broadcast live, here on Substack on Sundays at 5pm.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n63-poetry-is-mobility-contrary-to">N&#186;63 Poetry is mobility contrary to the viral thesis</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>So here&#8217;s something I&#8217;ve wondering&#8212;do you ever wake up and feel you should be happy, but melancholy feels like a heavy blanket someone keeps putting on your shoulders? That&#8217;s how I&#8217;ve been feeling lately, besides all the beauty around me&#8212;I&#8217;m thinking springtime birds, cherry blossoms in bloom, sunshine, so much we decided to skip going into the Two Sylvias Press office this week and instead are working from home. But to look at one&#8217;s life and feel SO grateful and thankful for all you have, but then also kind of sad.</p><p>I&#8217;ve carried this feeling a lot throughout my life (it&#8217;s come and gone and returned) and I know with the state of our country, things are feeling a bit harder everywhere. So there&#8217;s that. . .unfortunately. (Also, <a href="http://www.tinyurl.com/OrderAccidentalDevotions">promoting a book</a> at that time feels <em>beyond</em> ridiculous.) I&#8217;ve found planting stargazer lilies feels hopeful. I&#8217;m learning how much of my hope is tied to plants, maybe because they are a quiet insistence that something is growing despite our human world. Maybe it&#8217;s the agreement a seed makes with the future&#8212;<em>possibility,</em> it whispers.</p><p>Last week I met with two good friends and one said she believes things will get better, but first they have to break open before they can be repaired. And I&#8217;m like, <em>Great, love that for us&#8212;but is there an express lane to the healing part?</em> I&#8217;m so impatient these days and just like with movies, I want to fast forward past the bad/scary parts. But time, right? We have to day-by-day it with our fingers crossed and hope in our back pocket.<br><br>I think that&#8217;s why I&#8217;ve been writing more&#8212;writing has always helped me, even writing these little letters to you. I found myself writing a lot of prose poems too, I think because they feel as if I can get <em>all the stuffs</em> in there. I&#8217;ve been waking up, putting on &#8220;Goodbye Stranger&#8221; by Supertramp (wait, maybe this is why I&#8217;m sad, that song has lots of minor notes!). Also, please don&#8217;t think these poems are good&#8212;there are many many many really bad ones, but it feels good to be writing.</p><p><strong>Kelli Russell Agodon, <a href="https://kelliagodon.substack.com/p/do-you-ever-wake-up-and-feel-you">Do You Ever Wake Up and Feel You Should Be Happy?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The cartoonist&#8217;s shape of speech,<br>its pinch-pot gnomon pointing out<br>whose breath it is, and isn&#8217;t. As if<br>the boundary was real, as if every<br>exhalation wasn&#8217;t both a way to<br>wipe clean the mirrored self and<br>a fog of unknowing. Those soap<br>bubbles in a vanitas still life. Your<br>warm breath in the shell of my ear.</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="https://luxannica.wordpress.com/2026/05/06/bubbles/">Bubbles</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m writing a bit but not with vim. Whatever vim is. A wonderful word. I&#8217;m painting. I&#8217;m plunking on my piano. I love that this is my life. But I&#8217;m wasting an awful lot of time wasting time. I&#8217;ve been pretty creative in my life, but I feel the potential in me to be more so, bigger in thought, farther in reach, giddier in play, bolder, broader, braver, more wonder-full, more experimental. But I don&#8217;t seem to know how to get from this chair to whatever that is, that place where I&#8217;m being bold and giddy. What is the environment that will best draw this effort out of me? It does not seem to be this chair. It&#8217;s not the chair&#8217;s fault. (Is it?) Are there people who can help shift me to this mythical place? Is it inspiration? As I&#8217;ve said previously, I don&#8217;t believe in &#8220;muses,&#8221; alas, or I could blame THEM, their mulish absence. No, it&#8217;s the brain. My brain. That wrinkly thing that&#8217;s currently a bit soggy with allergy snot. It&#8217;s a nay-sayer often, a builder of obstacles, a doubting thomas. How do I call it to order? How do I poke it into action? I feel a little lost, in fact. Do you ever feel this way?</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/05/11/text-of-earth-ocean-and-breath-let-me-too-inhabit/">text of earth, ocean, and breath. Let me, too, inhabit</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am easing back into my Substack reading, so if you haven&#8217;t seen me around, trust me, I will return. When life is this uncertain, it&#8217;s hard to concentrate&#8212;I keep running into these walls where I just, very calmly, stop doing. I just sit down on my suitcase and refuse to move. It&#8217;s called burnout. I&#8217;m working on taking care of myself, on having fun, on doing the things I need to do. Substack is one of them.</p><p>This morning I grabbed a few moments and ended up working on this poem. It&#8217;s been a while in the making. I dug it out and started to play with it. I have three versions here. Mostly, its the pronoun usage that I&#8217;m interested in. I would love your feedback.</p><p><strong>VERSION #1</strong><br><br>How can we not love this world,<br>the elegance of it,<br>the way it lifts itself<br>up from sleeping,<br>the way it spreads<br>a blanket on the ground<br>and carefully sets out<br>the potato salad<br>the chicken<br>the cold slices of pie.<br><br>How can we not love this world,<br>the mothering of it,<br>how she catches the newborns<br>and lifts them to the sun,<br>how she lays the backs of her cool hands<br>across forehands to gauge fevers<br>how she rubs salve on the congested chests,<br>ladles up cool water<br>whispers sleep sleep<br><em>sleep. </em>[&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/3-versions-which-do-you-prefer">3 Versions. Which Do You Prefer?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Wow.</em> There&#8217;s nothing like typing a poem out to realize it really is pitch perfect. Between 15 &#8211; 21 syllables in every line. Nothing misplaced. I think again of Elizabeth Bishop&#8217;s line that what she wants most in poetry is <em>to see the mind in action. </em>The leaps here from Dr. Martins to wild flowers to black widows to smoking to eating shrimp and making honey&#8212;to the speaker&#8217;s need to be seen as good. It all makes sense in the context of the piece. Beautiful, stunning sense. I adore this poem. I adore Jen.</p><p>The one time I was lucky enough to read with Jen was in Gloucester, Massachusetts. It must have been shortly after COVID. Jen offered to host me at her home which meant we had a good long time together. That night 5 minutes before our reading, I asked Jen if she would be willing to try a braided reading where one poet reads two poems and then the next poet reads work that somehow echoes what&#8217;s been read before. For example if Jen read her &#8220;Dr. Martins 1460 Wild Botanica&#8221; poem, I might read my poem with the line, &#8220;The season&#8217;s don&#8217;t fuck with me boots.&#8221;</p><p>In true Jen Martelli style she said &#8220;let&#8217;s do it,&#8221; and with no time to prepare we improvised back and forth choosing poems from our own book that chimed with the other. It was the most fun I&#8217;ve ever had doing a reading.</p><p><strong>Susan Rich, <a href="https://susanrichpoet.substack.com/p/jennifer-martelli-way-too-early">Jennifer Martelli, Way Too Early</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>why not?<br>she stands in the sunshine<br>blowing bubbles</p><p><strong>Bill Waters, <a href="https://billwatershaiku.wordpress.com/2026/05/07/hopewell-valley-neighbors-magazine-may-26/">Hopewell Valley Neighbors magazine: May &#8217;26</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t know who reads this. I don&#8217;t know who reads anything I write anymore, or whether that matters. I&#8217;m not sure it should&#8230; but writing, to me, has always involved this effort to transcend loneliness, however brief.</p><p>A poem and a painting then, since poems and paintings are less canny than human beings. Poems and paintings cannot &#8212; and therefore do not&#8212; condescend to you. Nor are they careerists. However much the poet or painter who created the poem or painting may be a late capitalist careerist, the poem and the painting are free to repudiate their creators. In this sense, the poem and the painting are better than us.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/4/24/frank-stewarts-marriage-among-friends">Frank Stewart&#8217;s &#8220;Marriage Among Friends&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I can only read in tiny snatches at the moment. G&#233;rard de Nerval&#8217;s sonnets have been a great recourse in such a situation: brief, crystalline and endlessly evocative, they&#8217;re things I can dip into in spare moments, particularly the ones I know by heart and can think about as I walk to the shops or do the dishes. I have no academic grounding in them and my French is limited so my responses are personal and subjective, but I think in the case of these poems that&#8217;s as it should be. [&#8230;]</p><p>Loss and recovery are fundamental, recurrent notes in the Nerval poems I&#8217;ve read. We see them here in &#8220;l&#8217;ardeur d&#8217;autrefois brilla dans ses yeux verts&#8221;, in &#8220;J&#8217;ai rev&#234;tu pour lui la robe de Cyb&#232;le&#8221; and in &#8220;la mer nous renvoyait son image adore&#8221; &#8211; the first two full of energy and forward-looking purpose, the third ethereally reflective. In fact the more I think about it the more the whole poem seems a magical orchestration of the tenses in three movements &#8211; a first, eight line movement revolving round the bitter stasis of a present that seems inescapable, a second, forward-looking three line movement which draws life from an eagerly anticipated future, and a third three-line movement of rapt retrospection.</p><p><strong>Edmund Prestwich, <a href="https://edmundprestwich.co.uk/?p=2929">Gerard de Nerval &#8211; Horus, a personal reading</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Beautiful, filthy Pittsburgh</em>,<strong> </strong>I think, is all ye need to know. Like the key of a map, the phrase collects the poem&#8217;s principal features in one clarifying legend. Perhaps <em>microcosm</em> makes a better metaphor in the context of &#8220;The Dancing,&#8221; which is more interested in connectedness, in complexity and wildness, than a map&#8217;s simplified order can represent. At any rate, I think of it as a kind of signifier, distilling both the poem&#8217;s linguistic strategy and worldview.</p><p>[Gerald] Stern&#8217;s music is built of accretion, a stacking up of sounds into a sonic lushness that foregoes the simultaneously anticipatory and analeptic distance of traditional forms in favour of something I want to call more organic, arising from a corporeal present instead of a telegraphed future or reverberated past: one sound gives rise to its twin with a wild spontaneity. The assonance of &#8220;rotten shops,&#8221; the liquid consonance of &#8220;beautiful, filthy,&#8221; the pairs of present participles: there is patternless patterning here, the sense of both randomness and design.</p><p>Beyond the musical pleasure, there&#8217;s a familiar delight in the yoking of praise and denigration: how we love to hate our hometowns, or secretly cherish certain exasperating persons, the places and people who teach us the protean nature of our attachments. How quickly we shift, out of a need&#8212;real or imagined&#8212;for self-preservation, fall in and out of devotion. How tenuous the divide between what is precious and what profane. &#8220;The Dancing&#8221; holds this egoistic namby-pambyness in check, tames our proclivity for simplifying our inherent ambivalence into <em>for</em> or <em>against</em>, love or fear, praise or denigration. Pittsburgh <em>is</em> beautiful. It is also filthy. You can love something broken, imperfect. Even&#8212;in 1945&#8212;the world.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-dancing-by-gerald-stern">&#8220;The Dancing&#8221; by Gerald Stern</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The British poet <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._H._Prynne">J. H. Prynne</a> died a couple of weeks ago, prompting several touching responses from his relatively small but loyal group of readers. Coincidentally, this past week I&#8217;ve been reading some of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Melnick">David Melnick&#8217;s </a>weird and extraordinary version of the <em>Iliad</em>, <em>Men in A&#239;da</em>. That poem is an example of an unusual (but not unique) approach to translation that prioritises the sound, the music of the original &#8212; I mean not just that the translator has attempted to use the same or a roughly equivalent metre, or even that they&#8217;ve taken the opportunity (as surely all good translators do) to echo the sound of the original where possible, but that this version of Homer chooses English words based primarily on their sonic similarity to the Greek. So &#8216;Men in A&#239;da&#8217;, the title and the first words of the poem, translates <em>menin aeide</em>, the first two words in Greek (&#8216;Sing [of] the anger&#8217;).</p><p>Melnick is not the only poet to have tried something like this. Louis and Celia Zukofsky produced a similar &#8216;homophonic&#8217; translation of the poems of Catullus, which is quite often quoted in passing by classicists. (And can be useful for teaching.) The reason I mention this mode of translation is because, reading Melnick, I was surprisingly often reminded of the particular pleasures (and frustrations) of reading Prynne. Quite often Prynne&#8217;s poetry sounds rather as if it might be this sort of sonic translation of something else, of a ravishing poem in a language I do not know; which is not to say that the English words he chooses have no meaning. (Melnick&#8217;s words, too, convey meaning and even a loose sort of plot, albeit more often impressionistically than by conventional syntax.) Here&#8217;s a representative sample, from <em>Down Where Changed </em>(1979):</p><blockquote><p>The creamy recruit pines<br>for his stone, down under<br>the second-best hiding</p><p>white at the foot of green</p><p>still white, ever green, love<br>offers the perfect match<br>ignites the perfect loan.</p></blockquote><p>I think this is a pretty fair example. It&#8217;s far from the best or most beautiful bit of Prynne but it&#8217;s far from the most obscure or difficult either. And it ends on <em>loan</em>, one of his signature words. Prynne&#8217;s poetry pushes you up hard against the sheer strangeness of language and languages. But it also <em>delights </em>in language in the simplest and most musical kind of way.</p><p>Rather surprisingly, Prynne has himself been translated a lot &#8212; most noticeably into French (many separate pamphlets), but also (according to Wikipedia) into Chinese and German, and he even composed some poetry in Chinese himself. This week, I was rather charmed to discover that his first published poem, as a schoolboy, was a translation of Thomas Hood into German verse. Not long after we moved here I picked up the bilingual French edition of the 1999 pamphlet <em>Pearls That Were (Perles qui furent, </em>French edition by &#201;ric Pesty, 2013<em>), </em>with astonishing translations by Pierre Alferi. I found reading Prynne alongside a translation in this way extremely stimulating: I suppose this is partly because the translator is rarely able to reproduce identical ambiguities; he or she must, instead, adjudicate between meanings held in suspension in the original, while attempting to introduce alternative ambiguities. [&#8230;]</p><p>When I asked on social media whether people thought [Geoffrey] Hill or Prynne would have the more enduring reputation, almost everyone who replied made it obvious &#8212; more or less politely &#8212; that they thought this was a no-brainer in Hill&#8217;s favour. But I find so much of Prynne&#8217;s poetry, for all its obscurity, exceptionally beautiful and unmistakably profound. The fact remains that I am more often moved to tears reading Prynne than almost any other recent poet in English. This just isn&#8217;t true in the same way of most of Hill, even though I am in variously ways unusually well equipped to enjoy him and do indeed sincerely admire and enjoy much of Hill&#8217;s later verse. How is it that two poets who have embraced difficulty and the limits of language in such apparently similar ways can produce such different results?</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/bank-on-the-grammar-flowing-on-prynnes">Bank on the grammar flowing: on Prynne&#8217;s music</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Catching the Light</em> (Fairfield Books, 2026), the anthology of cricket poetry edited by Nicholas Hogg and Tim Beard, contains, as it should, several poems by the doyen of cricket poets, Alan Ross, including &#8216;Watching Benaud Bowl&#8217;: &#8216;Leg-spinners pose problems much like love, / Requiring commitment, the taking of a chance.&#8217; But among the great and the good (Agard, Arlott, Dabydeen, Hughes, Brian Jones, Kunial, McMillan, O&#8217;Brien, Rollinson, Selby, etc.), there are many individual poems which leap out, especially those by S.J. Litherland &#8211; one of only nine female contributors &#8211; and Matt Merritt; the latter&#8217;s poignant pair of portraits &#8216;Two Orthodox Left-armers&#8217; celebrates two Yorkshire and England greats, Wilfred Rhodes (&#8216;Every ball an interrogation, / every over a conspiracy of art and science&#8217;), and Hedley Verity, who died in an Italian hospital of wounds sustained from fighting the Germans in Sicily (&#8216;Shell-bursts, a net of tracers closing fast, / but as upright among blazing Sicilian corn / as on any Scarborough dog day.)</p><p>Another of the fine contributors to <em>Catching the Light</em>, Rishi Distidar, has just had his fourth collection published: <em>Cherry Blossom at Nightbreak</em> (Nine Arches Press, 2026). In it, his trademark quirky wordplay and use of form gets full rein &#8211; just a scan of the titles gives you the idea. At times, his wish to entertain occasionally spills into silliness, but that&#8217;s no bad thing in my book, and there are precious few other UK poets around &#8211; Selima Hill and Mark Waldron come to mind &#8211; who seem to remember that poetry can be something to enjoy as well as be moved by. Those familiar with Rishi&#8217;s oeuvre will know that he also writes poems on the most important subjects, like &#8216;On board the &#8216;Tynesider&#8217;&#8217;, concerning Martin Luther King&#8217;s visit to Newcastle in 1967, which ends with these beautiful lines:</p><blockquote><p>But actually he was at his best<br>when he was harried, harassed &#8211;<br>by time as well as the times &#8211;<br>at 1am on a slow train to somewhere<br>he would never go again, minting<br>coin as easily as he breathed, currency<br>we still spend in the realm of hope.</p></blockquote><p>It feels apposite that Rishi&#8217;s books should sit on my shelves between the Dickman brothers and Michael Donaghy.</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/05/10/recent-and-future-readings-and-recent-reading/">Recent and future readings and recent reading</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I reread Heaney&#8217;s worst book, <em>Electric Light,</em> in prep for an upcoming webinar on his style &#8211; something more clearly observed when he&#8217;s in cruise control. It&#8217;s fine; it lacks only a real sense of necessity, and is mostly superfluous to his oeuvre. Disconcertingly, though, it&#8217;s still better than almost everything else. So many poems of Heaney&#8217;s seem written at the golden hour, with the shadows stretching to infinity. The sense of history carried in his language &#8211; indeed in his use of almost every single word &#8211; never fails to humble me.</p><p><strong>Don Paterson, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/our-spring-reading-part-i">Our Spring Reading: Part I</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;And that sweet man, John Clare.&#8221; So, famously, ends the 20th-century poet Theodore Roethke&#8217;s brief poem, &#8220;<a href="https://davidevanthomas.com/that-sweet-man-john-clare/">Heard in a Violent Ward,</a>&#8221; grouping Clare (1793&#8211;1864) with two other poetic visionaries, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-holy-thursday?utm_source=publication-search">William Blake</a> (1757&#8211;1827) and <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-my-cat-jeoffry?utm_source=publication-search">Christopher Smart</a> (1722&#8211;1771). Roethke&#8217;s speaker prophesies to some unknown companion in an insane asylum that &#8220;in heaven you&#8217;d be institutionalized,&#8221; classing this mentally ill person, given to violence, with the three poets, and consigning them to the same ward in the afterlife. If this classification is jarring in its equation of violent madness with mysticism, it&#8217;s also a little odd, or else a little too conventional, in its view of heaven.</p><p>This speaker suggests that aside from the whiff of actual violence, to be a mystic in the vein of these three poets would imperil the presumed tidiness of the celestial order &#8212; as though the nine choirs of angels themselves would not know what to do with such a person, except to lock him up. Possibly Roethke&#8217;s speaker underestimates the nine choirs of angels and their capacity for dealing with people who think in visions. Also possibly, Roethke&#8217;s speaker underestimates heaven itself, casting it implicitly as a place where nobody colors outside strictly drawn lines and gets away with it.</p><p>Not that Smart and Clare, at any rate, really meant to color outside the lines. Like Smart, in conscious belief and practice Clare remained, all his life, a straightforwardly devout Anglican, orthodox in all his outlooks. Unlike Blake, he was not in any deliberate way a radical. But again unlike Blake, and again like Smart, he was given to what was delicately called &#8220;infirmity&#8221; of mind, and less delicately labeled &#8220;lunacy.&#8221; Sensitive and susceptible to disturbances as natural and predictable as the change of seasons, he was given to terrors as well as glimpses of sublime things beyond the defined and rational boundaries of ordinary piety. Or perhaps, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-spots-of-time-273?utm_source=publication-search">as Wordsworth before him had suggested</a>, the terror and the sublime were all one.</p><p>In Clare&#8217;s poems we might find the reminder that while the God in whom he believed might have established and endorsed those rational boundaries of ordinary piety, this God himself, with all the reality that flows from him, is not limited by them. It&#8217;s the visionary who glimpses something of that unlimited, and therefore unsettling, reality. Sometimes this looks like madness; perhaps sometimes it <em>is </em>madness. Suffice it to say that often enough, Clare&#8217;s poems arise from those moments when in one way or another, his own mental clarity dissolves and re-resolves on new terms.</p><p>His &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-i-am?utm_source=publication-search">I Am</a>,&#8221; for example, written during a stay in the Northampton General Lunatic Asylum, gives voice to a mind striving to assert itself in darkness, while &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-i-am?utm_source=publication-search">Autumn</a>&#8221; renders in verse the sensory warping that turns the vividness of a hot harvest-time day apocalyptically strange and terrifying. This turn of mind, in which mere <em>sight</em> becomes <em>vision</em>, transfiguring reality into something alien, simultaneously more threatening and more glorious than it ordinarily appears, may be what prompts Roethke&#8217;s speaker to assume that for the staid denizens of heaven, a poet such as Clare would be too hot to handle without a straitjacket.</p><p><strong>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-a-look-at-the-heavens">Today&#8217;s Poem: A Look at the Heavens</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Winner of the Hudson Book Prize from Black Lawrence Press, Bettina Judd&#8217;s debut collection of poetry, <em>patient. poems</em>, takes as its subject the history of medical experimentation on Black women. Her poems evolved, Judd explains on her website, from a series of watercolors she had been painting while healing from surgery. The paintings themselves, she says, &#8220;were influenced by the work of artists in the service of science and medicine who painted portraits of indigenous and African peoples for the purpose of study.&#8221;<strong>*</strong> For Judd, an African American, that source material raised innumerable ethical questions about the use of Black women&#8217;s bodies (e.g., as exploited medical subjects, as slaves denied their humanity). Given her academic research interests and the fact her own surgery had been performed at a teaching hospital, and thus was subject to possible study, it was perhaps inevitable that Judd would undertake a more involved project. What ultimately came into being was a multi-voiced series of poems, each able to stand on its own, that provide a narrative about some aspect of Black women&#8217;s violation and suffering at the hands of doctors and scientific researchers.</p><p>The history that Judd resurrects in her poems is, all at once, eye-opening, traumatic, disturbing. It is also sourced in facts. [&#8230;]</p><p>In &#8220;Pathology.&#8221;, Judd introduces us to &#8220;the researcher&#8221;, who is both unnamed and embodied in the character of the antagonist J. Marion Sims, a 19th Century physician, called by some the &#8220;Father of Modern Gynecology,&#8221; who developed groundbreaking surgical techniques but whose medical ethics and experiments on Black female slaves were highly controversial and damnable.</p><blockquote><p>How to Measure Pain I</p><p>In the woman it is a checklist:</p><p>Can you imagine anything<br>worse than this?</p><p>If the answer is no, ask again.</p></blockquote><p>It is in this first section that we first hear from &#8220;the researcher&#8221; about the Black women Anarcha Wescott, Lucy Zimmerman, and Betsey Harris &#8212; dubbed &#8220;The Mothers of Modern Gynecology&#8221; &#8212; who &#8220;are taken into the care of a reluctant country surgeon in Montgomery, Alabama&#8221; and are experimented on: &#8220;In these three, Sims shapes his speculum, invents his silver sutures, perfects protocol for proper handling of the female pelvis&#8221; &#8212; without anesthesia or consent. (&#8220;The Researcher Discovers Anarcha, Betsey, Lucy&#8221;)</p><blockquote><p>Lucy didn&#8217;t scream like most. Though sometimes she would moan&#8212;deep, long and overdue. I&#8217;d wake thinking death. It&#8217;s her, knees curled under, head face down, her body trying to move out of itself. [. . .]</p><p><strong>~ from &#8220;The Inauguration of Experiments&#8221;</strong></p></blockquote><p>As the collection unfolds, Judd tells by turn the stories of these three &#8220;patients,&#8221; as well as those of Joice Heth, Saartjie Baartman, and Henrietta Lacks, also African-Americans who suffered their own &#8220;ordeal[s] with medicine.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/bettina-judds-patient-poems">Bettina Judd&#8217;s &#8216;patient. poems&#8217;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong><a href="https://www.simmons.edu/people/patrick-sylvain">Patrick Sylvain</a></strong> is a Haitian-American educator, poet, writer, social and literary critic, and translator whose work explores Haiti and the Haitian diaspora&#8217;s culture, politics, language, and religion. The author of several poetry collections in English and Haitian, Sylvain&#8217;s poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and appear in leading journals including <em>Ploughshares</em>, <em>Callaloo</em>, <em>Transition</em>, <em>Prairie Schooner</em>, <em>Agni</em>, <em>American Poetry Review</em>, <em>SpoKe</em>, <em>The Caribbean Writer</em>, and <em>African American Review</em>. His short stories are also widely published. He holds degrees from UMass-Boston, Harvard, Boston University, and Brandeis University, where he was the Shirle Dorothy Robbins Creative Writing Prize Fellow. Sylvain recently taught Global, Transnational, and Postcolonial Literature at Simmons University and served on Harvard&#8217;s History and Literature Tutorial Board. As of Fall 2026, Sylvain is Associate Professor in the Department of Women&#8217;s, Gender, &amp; Sexuality Studies, and Director of the minor in Human Rights at UMass Boston. His publications include <em><a href="https://www.strandbooks.com/education-across-borders-immigration-race-and-identity-in-the-classroom-9780807052808.html">Education Across Borders</a></em> (Beacon Press, 2022) and <em><a href="https://centralsquarepress.com/sylvain.html">Underworlds</a></em> (Central Square Press, 2018). Forthcoming works in 2026 include: <em>Scorched Pearl of the Antilles</em> (Palgrave Macmillan) and poetry collections from Arrowsmith Press (<em><a href="https://askold-melnyczuk-s57n.squarespace.com/order/p/fire-on-the-tongue-sylvain">Fire on the Tongue</a></em>), Finishing Line press (<em><a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DWzIdwEkSlz/">Habits of Light</a></em>), and Central Square Press (<em><a href="https://bookscouter.com/book/9781680841244-unfinished-dreams-rev-san-bout">Unfinished Dreams</a></em><a href="https://bookscouter.com/book/9781680841244-unfinished-dreams-rev-san-bout"> / </a><em><a href="https://bookscouter.com/book/9781680841244-unfinished-dreams-rev-san-bout">R&#232;v San Bout</a></em>).</p><p><strong>1 &#8211; How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?</strong></p><p><strong>P.S.:</strong> My first full collection, <em>Zans&#232;t</em> (Ancestors), written in Haitian Creole in 1994, marked a turning point in my life. At the time, I was a member of the <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/education/glossary/dark-room-collective">Dark Room Collective</a>, a public school teacher in Cambridge, and deeply engaged in activism around democracy and human rights. I set out to write a book that would embrace the full essence of poetry without retreating from the political. I wanted to experiment with language and offer an aesthetic that departed from what many Haitian readers expected.</p><p>The book became, in many ways, a hybrid form&#8212;merging American poetics, which tend toward the imagistic, exploratory, and personal, with Franco-Haitian traditions that are philosophical, surrealist-leaning, and socially engaged. Its reception, including the generous preface by <a href="https://www.idea.int/about-us/people/marie-laurence-jocelyn-lassegue">Marie-Laurence Jocelyn Lass&#232;gue</a>, the former Haitian Minister of Information and Culture, affirmed for me that I could dwell seriously in the craft. It gave me permission to see myself as a poet.</p><p><em>Fire on the Tongue</em>, by contrast, reflects a more elastic and mature poetic consciousness. If my early work emerged from instinct and urgency, this later work arises from a deeper sense of intentionality and self-possession. But that evolution has not been linear. What I once understood as personal growth has revealed itself to be inseparable from history, displacement, and the political conditions that shaped my earliest awareness. This collection engages themes of identity, memory, exile, and cultural buoyancy. It navigates immigration, adaptation, loss, and self-understanding&#8212;what it means to live with two feet on different soils. While grounded in a Haitian-American experience, the work seeks resonance with the broader condition of migration and belonging.</p><p><strong>2 &#8211; How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, non-fiction or fiction?</strong></p><p><strong>P.S.: </strong>I came to poetry at fifteen, through love and through history. I fell deeply for a girl who had just moved into my neighborhood in Port-au-Prince. Like many adolescents, I discovered language through longing&#8212;the way words could carry desire, absence, and imagination.</p><p>At the same time, I was coming of age under the dictatorship of Jean-Claude Duvalier. I began writing with what I think of now as a split tongue: privately composing poems of resistance against the regime, and love poems for the girl who stirred me profoundly. From the beginning, poetry became a space where intimacy and politics converged.</p><p>Over time, poetry ceased to be merely an artistic practice and became a mode of consciousness&#8212;a way of testing truth against lived experience. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>9 &#8211; What is the best piece of advice you&#8217;ve heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?</strong></p><p><strong>P.S.: </strong>&#8220;Trust the poem, but do not trust your first impulse.&#8221; That advice has stayed with me because it honors intuition while insisting on discipline&#8212;it reminds me that the initial spark matters, but it must be tested and refined through craft and revision.</p><p>Yusef Komunyakaa often echoed a similar balance when he said, &#8220;write with your heart, and edit with your mind.&#8221; I remember him once, sitting outside the Carpenter Center on Quincy Street at Harvard, saying, &#8220;allow yourself to be surprised by what the poem is revealing, and don&#8217;t force it to reveal something that the voice in the poem did not ask of it.&#8221; That idea&#8212;of discovery rather than control&#8212;continues to shape how I approach writing.</p><p>When I sit down to write, I often feel the presence of both <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/robert-pinsky">Robert Pinsky</a> and <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/yusef-komunyakaa">Komunyakaa</a> not too far off in my cognitive and poetic distance, as reminders to balance instinct with intention, and openness with precision.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/05/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_02132308036.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Patrick Sylvain</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last night (7th May) I had my Manchester book launch at Manchester Poetry Library. It was a really lovely event, hosted by my friend and colleague Malika Booker. This event was a little different to Sunday &#8211; I did a fifteen minute reading, followed by a fifteen minute Q &amp; A with Malika and the audience, and then a poem to finish. This time Blackwells was the bookseller &#8211; they bought thirty copies and sold out!</p><p>Actually, the real story is that the bookseller bought 30 copies but only sold 29 &#8211; someone either loved my poetry so much they stole a copy, or someone absent mindedly wandered off without paying&#8230;I prefer the desperate-for-my-poetry-so-they-stole-a-copy version of the story.</p><p>This week I also ordered a box of one hundred books, ready to take round to smaller events that don&#8217;t have their own bookseller. This also means I&#8217;ve got some to sell through my own website as signed copies &#8211; another way of getting the book into the world.</p><p>When I first published my pamphlet back in 2011, I bought some postcards and some tissue paper and wrapped it up before posting it to my first buyer. I found this process both time-consuming and strangely satisfying, and have done it ever since. My friend John Foggin (sadly missed) on receiving a tissue-wrapped pamphlet said that I always do everything with my whole heart, and I think he was right &#8211; what other way is there of doing anything?</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/adventures-of-the-house">Adventures of the House</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Kim wasn&#8217;t exaggerating &#8211; the launch of <em>The House of Broken Things</em> was magic. Up at Wainsgate Chapel, off the road where the ponies gallop to the fence to see me when I walk over the moors by night, up the stoney lane which leads past the chapel to my home. [&#8230;]</p><p>And in the second half, after a break filled with cake and booksales, Jodie (Kim&#8217;s identical twin sister) played her french horn with Dave Nelson&#8217;s expert piano, and the chapel filled with a perfect sound, and I didn&#8217;t know whether to laugh or cry before Kim took to the stage again and settled the matter.</p><p>I would love to leave it there. I&#8217;d love to say that I had a wonderful time, and that I left smiling and feeling lucky and fulfilled but &#8211; that&#8217;s not how it goes for me. Time with people is costly, and there was so much chat; there were crowds and emotions and sitting still; too much sugar. I&#8217;d forgotten to wear my &#8220;I&#8217;m faceblind: please introduce yourself&#8221; badge so there was the strain of half-known faces, unfamiliar shifting etiquette, noise. I&#8217;d a migraine by the time I left, and come evening, I walked a long time in the darkness considering the strange animal I am, how I have no name for myself, how I don&#8217;t seem to fit in anywhere.</p><p>Then out of the blue, Kim texted to tell me how&#8217;d she felt calm when I arrived at the Wainsgate, and I realised that this place here, however rocky, however changeable the weather, is where I fit. And I carried on walking into the night taking photographs of lichen and bluebells with the UV torch Amy brought to my house because she thought I might like it, because I am a strange animal, and my strange little flock is right here. Here&#8217;s to <em>The House of Broken Things</em>. Here&#8217;s to poetry and friendship. Here&#8217;s to finding your kin.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/different-forms-of-magic">Different Forms of Magic</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Then one of the women who organized the gathering wondered aloud how it would change things if every reading series in New York included somewhere in its web presence, or at its venue if that were possible, a written commitment to what we now call diversity, equity, and inclusion, incorporating specifically a zero tolerance statement about sexual victimization of any kind. I thought this was a brilliant idea. Such a statement would allow me at the very least to establish publicly both a set of expectations and a standard of accountability for my series&#8217; content, management, and audience. It would serve as a resource I or anyone else involved with First Tuesdays could refer people to when telling them about the series, as well as a publicly accessible code of conduct should it ever become necessary to call someone to account for their behavior, including me.</p><p>I wrote a statement, circulated it on the series mailing list to get buy-in from as many regulars as possible, and posted it to the <a href="https://firsttuesdays.net/what-is-first-tuesdays">First Tuesdays website</a>, where it has lived now for more than ten years. I did not feel the need to incorporate it into our regular meetings, though, until we began once again to meet in person after the pandemic shutdown and I actually had to ban a fellow poet from our open mic. He&#8217;d read an egregiously sexist and implicitly racist poem for which he refused to take any responsibility despite the ample room I gave him to do so, first during the break between the open mic and our featured reader and then in an email exchange over the course of the next week or so. In that exchange, he criticized me for calling him out publicly, immediately after he read the poem. He felt blind-sided, he said, which struck me as a point worth considering, not because I thought I shouldn&#8217;t have called him out like that, but because if he&#8217;d never read what I&#8217;d begun to call the First Tuesdays vision statement, there was no reason for him not to assume our open mic was, like so many open mics are, more of a public square where anything goes than a curated literary space.</p><p>That&#8217;s when I decided to start reading the statement out loud at the beginning of every meeting:</p><blockquote><p>First Tuesdays is an open mic/featured reader literary gathering where writers who wrestle with the issues of our day&#8212;from racism and sexual violence to climate change and economic inequality&#8212;can find an audience willing to embrace the risk and discomfort that come with sharing politically engaged, satirical, or otherwise edgy material; where those writers can coexist, in an atmosphere of mutual respect and camaraderie, with writers whose work is more traditional and conservative; where anyone who comes only to listen, even if they just happen to walk in off the street, can sit down with a cup of tea or glass of wine and feel not just welcomed, but challenged, engaged, comforted, seen, maybe even inspired.</p><p>At the heart of First Tuesdays, in other words, is an ongoing, proactive commitment to diversity and inclusivity, in both the kinds of literary work we welcome into our community and the people who come to share it. Nothing will erode that sense of community more surely, however, than the mistrust and hatred borne of sexism, racism, antisemitism, Islamophobia, homophobia, transphobia, or any of the other far-too-many ways that human beings have learned to target each other for who they or what they believe. So I will state this plainly. Neither work nor behavior that bespeaks any of those &#8220;isms&#8221; or &#8220;phobias&#8221; is welcome at First Tuesdays, and I will, as host, confront and hold accountable anyone who brings either into our midst.</p></blockquote><p>When I first started this practice, I explained it by talking about my exchange with that banned poet. Over the last four years, though, and especially since the beginning of Donald Trump&#8217;s second term, it has become something more important: an affirmation that gathering as we do every month, as we have been doing for the thirteen years that I&#8217;ve been running the series&#8212;and by &#8220;we&#8221; I mean everyone: the regulars, the newcomers, the featured readers, the people who just happen to be in the caf&#233; when the reading starts&#8212;that gathering as we do to share the literature we make is in and of itself a form of resistance that we should not take for granted.</p><p>When I think about the impact that reading this statement aloud has had on the First Tuesdays community, I think about the people who nod along as I read, even those who&#8217;ve heard it month after month since I started, and about the applause the statement sometimes gets, and the softly spoken&#8212;and sometimes not so softly spoken&#8212;expressions of support I hear when I&#8217;m done reading. Listening as I read the statement out loud, in other words, matters to them, just as reading it matters to me. Because even if it feels like all we&#8217;ve done on the first Tuesday of the month is walk a block or two to the caf&#233; to hang out with friends and listen to and talk about literature, we should not forget that there are an awful lot of powerful people in this country who would very much like to undo not just the community that we have formed, but also the capacity inherent in literature to build that kind of community in the first place.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.fernwoodpress.com/2026/05/08/sometimes-resisting-means-recommitting-yourself-to-what-youre-already-doing/">Sometimes Resisting Means Recommitting Yourself to What You&#8217;re Already Doing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Is it fair to say, as <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/849005-micah-mattix?utm_source=mentions">Micah Mattix</a> does, that &#8220;The Nigerian poet and critic Ernest Jesuyemi was selected as a National Book Critics Circle Emerging Critics Fellow&#8230;until they discovered he was a Christian&#8221;?</p><p>Or is this too simplistic a description for what happened?</p><p>Was the NBCC board right to withdraw the full fellowship? Or is this religious discrimination? Does it matter that this is a fellowship, which requires working among community? Is this another artist cancellation, or is this categorically different?</p><p><strong>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/i-can-buy-myself-lit-mags">I Can Buy Myself Lit Mags!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On a long oak table in a formal room<br>in Rare Books, on the library&#8217;s seventh floor,<br>is the fifteenth-century manuscript&#8212;Middle English&#8212;<br>from which I mean to wring a dissertation.<br>The work is verse, a church-year&#8217;s worth of sermons<br>probably copied by an earnest monk.<br>The librarian, anxious for this precious object<br>left to my handling, offers me a bookweight.<br>I settle into the captain&#8217;s chair and the task.</p><p>These first steps are detective work, forensics.<br>Hand: Anglicana; Secretary features.<br>Materials: paper. Visible watermarks.<br>A lot of Northern spellings. I warm to this,<br>matter and form, but I&#8217;m especially held<br>by matter, tangibles: the ink, the paper.<br>Though faded, the pen strokes have the ebb and flow<br>of a bending quill tip in a moving hand.<br>The heavy paper still shows peaks and troughs<br>that speak to the moving pen. My own right hand,<br>knows pens and writing, and it feels these moves,<br>knows in its bones another hand was here.</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/academic-dreams">Academic dreams . . .</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was surprised and a little unsettled by Kariega, the last poem in the book, in which the narrator and a companion paddle upstream through the game reserve of this name in the Eastern Cape. The journey is to escape the &#8216;concrete, tar or plastic&#8217; of so-called civilisation, to explore the river &#8211; &#8216;And there&#8217;s an island far ahead where we&#8217;ll rest and eat/ with the waterbuck, the crabs and blacksmith plovers/ where the world is as it has always been, quiet and slow&#8217;. He ponders the passing of time and the inevitable end to life that I suppose most of us who have long kissed goodbye to seventy will think on here and there and considers if the end were to come it would not seem tragic if it happened in such a place. It&#8217;s a fine poem. My surprise was because, having only a very limited knowledge of South Africa, I looked up Kariega before reading the poem. It is home to a vast Volkswagen factory, supposedly the largest car factory in Africa. I expected this to come into the poem somewhere in contrast to the reserve and wonderful natural wilderness that stretches away from the town. I thought about why [Harry] Owen avoided this rather obvious contrast &#8211; and concluded that sometimes, perhaps, the power is in what is left unsaid. That view, however, relies on a knowledge of place that perhaps only a few outside South Africa would connect with.</p><p>Following on, I think when a poet is from another country &#8211; Owen was born in Liverpool but has lived in South Africa a long time now &#8211; the reader needs to attempt to understand at least the sense of the place in which a book is written. Mindforest is not exclusively bound to South Africa but it supplies much of the backdrop. My glimpses of the world in which he immerses himself, and hopefully via the poems us, were long ago. I had a couple of work trips to South Africa in 1994 and 2001 and they were confined largely to the surreal creation that is Sun City and to Johannesburg, where I found, at that time, the city centre was more dangerous, darker and considerably less welcoming than Soweto, where I needed to go to visit a boxing gym and so obviously took time to look around. Necessity and time confined me. The wider landscape of the country I experienced only in passing, in travelling through. Still, it&#8217;s something I could work with in reading the book.</p><p>I think it&#8217;s fair to say that Owen has developed as a poet later in life and perhaps this is to his advantage. Those who find a &#8216;voice&#8217; or success early on sometimes burn out and the opportunity to use the supposed wisdom that comes with age is lost. Not so here, as the poet acknowledges in the poem Epiphany, which perhaps describes what it feels like for so many of us not born into financial privilege and academic expectation.</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/05/07/reflections-on-mindforest-by-harry-owen/">REFLECTIONS ON MINDFOREST by HARRY OWEN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Back in January, I attended a conference in Cambridge on &#8220;Creative Medievalisms&#8221;. Among recurring threads of conversations throughout the event was a ripple of ideas about voice &#8212; the human voice, the creative voice, our personal voice. Margery Kempe cropped up repeatedly in these discussions, as did the ventriloquized voice of Chaucer&#8217;s Wife of Bath. In &#8220;The Wife of Bath&#8217;s Prologue&#8221;, Chaucer lets the garrulous, &#8220;gat-toothed&#8221;, bawdy Wife speak at length, giving her free rein in the longest prologue of any pilgrim-teller in <em>The Canterbury Tales</em>. Veering between learned argument in which she takes on Church teaching on marriage and virginity and earthy vignettes of her life with her five husbands (&#8220;in his owene grece I made hym frye&#8221; she says acerbically of husband number four), the Wife is a lively, funny, engaging interlocutor. As she courts controversy she is interrupted within the Prologue by (male clerical) pilgrims who don&#8217;t like what she is saying or object to her going on for so long.</p><p>In fact, the Wife is such a distinctive character that, as <a href="https://www.folger.edu/podcasts/shakespeare-unlimited/wife-of-bath-turner/">Marion Turner observes</a>, she is referred to by other speakers in <em>The Canterbury Tales </em>and emerges after Chaucer&#8217;s lifetime as a literary figure in her own right. She is even described by Thomas Hoccleve (1368-1426), a poet who knew Chaucer and promoted his reputation after his death, as a specifically female authority (<em>auctrice</em>) on the subject of women&#8217;s displeasure at men&#8217;s depiction of the female sex: &#8220;The wyf of Bathe, take I for auctrice&#8221; (&#8220;Dialogue&#8221;, 694). The Wife is the Chaucerian voice that escapes the bounds of the text and the control of its author to take on a life of her own.</p><p>Yet despite her unique voice, Chaucer&#8217;s Wife is also in some ways utterly unoriginal, a creation based on the anti-feminist discourse of the time, sometimes viewed as nothing more than a collection of misogynist ideas brought to life. Chaucer was entering into a contemporary debate that was crowded with authorial opinions. Christine de Pizan&#8217;s <em>The Book of the City of Ladies</em> (1405) a catalogue of illustrious women is designed to respond to the anti-feminists. Although the style and form is very different, there is a common purpose with Chaucer&#8217;s Wife. Where Chaucer offers us the voice of an ordinary middle-aged woman with a wealth of experience of marriage, in <em>The Book of the City of Ladies </em>we encounter a dreamscape in which the Lady Reason, the Lady Rectitude and the Lady Justice explain to Christine that they will debunk all the misconceptions about women. Abounding in examples from history and myth, with a core of philosophy and a sharp critical eye for inconsistency, we can detect in Christine&#8217;s detailed rebuttal to the misogynists, something akin to the Wife&#8217;s vivacious and rather one-sided argument with the clerks. The subject matter overlaps, but the individual voices of the authors take the material in different directions.</p><p>The creative voice then is the thin thread, the wisp of experience and meaning that the individual brings to the discourse, orchestrating the interplay between the living and the dead. In the words of John Keating, the teacher played by Robin Williams in <em>Dead Poets Society, </em>it is the verse that we contribute to the play. Now, whenever we talk about voice, there is the unavoidable subtext of what it means to write in the age of AI when a pattern-recognition machine can spew out sense-making words. As someone who loves the struggle of writing and wrestling with words on the page, I cannot imagine why I would want my creative hand guided by a robot and I find it difficult to care about text that is not written by a human. It&#8217;s ersatz writing to me, no more than a poor substitute for the real thing. It removes the thin thread that makes the writing worthwhile for the author and meaningful for the reader.</p><p><strong>Ruth Lexton, <a href="https://inkwasting.substack.com/p/the-creative-voice">The Creative Voice</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The voice that is great outside us. Between us. That is all of us.</p><p>So often we&#8217;re taught to find our &#8220;voice&#8221;&#8212;both as people and as writers. But I&#8217;ve always thought that this notion of &#8220;voice&#8221; is reductive and essentialist. I&#8217;d rather imagine our &#8220;voice&#8221; to be more about the range of ways that we interact with the world and the range of relationships we have. As a writer, also. What are the ways we relate to language, culture, writing, to process. To our processing of the world and how we (and our words and our notion of words) are processed by the world.</p><p>Imagine a sculptor bringing a set of objects with which to build a sculpture. I feel that their &#8220;voice&#8221; is not so much about the objects as it is their way of considering and engaging with these objects. Perhaps the process of accumulating the objects, the way they put those objects together. The way they are open to what the object are saying.</p><p>We are always already part of the work, the world. We don&#8217;t have a singular &#8220;voice,&#8221; any more than we exist as independent organisms apart from the world. Our bodies/selves require the infrastructure of the world: air, warmth, food, bacteria, shelter, other humans. Each individual is the result of their engagement with this infrastructure. So, all writing relies on the infrastructure, the betweenness, the interrelationships, of language and humanity, readers and the society and culture that by definition surrounds the writer, their work, and the process of their work.</p><p>A writer doesn&#8217;t need to find their &#8220;voice,&#8221; but instead to develop awareness and tools for considering and realizing process, for considering their entanglement, inter- and intrarelations, their I&#8217;m-soaking-in-it-Madgedness.</p><p>Is there a self without interaction? Is there a writer?</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/the-voice-that-is-great-outside-us">The voice that is great outside us: writer as part of the necessary polycule</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was a latecomer to poetry, curling my nose at it in that confounding and rather embarrassing way we have of discounting what we don&#8217;t understand, dismissing as useless what we don&#8217;t know how to use. And then I met <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2020/02/03/emily-levine-cold-solace-anna-belle-kaufman/">Emily Levine</a>. Across the aisle on a transatlantic flight, across our half century of age difference, we became instant and abiding friends.</p><p>Intellectually dazzling, creatively mischievous, and ecstatically funny, Emily took it upon herself to open my world to poetry, reading me a poem a day, peppering with poems our rapturously roaming conversations about semiotics and the singularity, the physics of flight and the evolution of flowers, Hannah Arendt and The Beatles, until I came to <a href="https://themarginalian.org/tag/poetry">love poetry</a> and, eventually, to <a href="https://themarginalian.org/tag/original-poetry">write it</a>. Emily is the reason <em><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/uiv-book/">The Universe in Verse</a></em> exists.</p><p>When she was dying &#8212; which she did with <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2018/05/24/emily-levine-ted-reality/">such vivifying reverence for reality</a> &#8212; we began taking long weekends by the ocean, reading poetry and talking about the meaning of life. The poems she brought were always a revelation, down to <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2019/02/07/you-cant-have-it-all-barbara-ras-emily-levine/">the very last one</a>, which became a lifelong favorite I revisit whenever I lose perspective.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/05/07/marianne-moore-poetry/">Poetry: I Too, Dislike It</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8212; I recently read the short book, <a href="https://www.penguin.co.uk/discover/articles/georges-perec-arrange-bookshelves-art-manner-essay">brief notes on the art and manner of arranging one&#8217;s books </a>by George Perec. I&#8217;m immersed in reading about the history of classification as it regards books right now for the<a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DVRBC_-kWEm/"> novel I&#8217;m writing</a>. Perec also says interesting things about the daily, the habitual. &#8220;The daily papers talk of everything except the daily,&#8221; he says. And, &#8220;How should we take account of, describe what happens every day and recurs every day: the banal, the quotidian, the obvious, the common, the ordinary, the infraordinary, the back-ground noise, the habitual?&#8221; He goes on: &#8220;To question the habitual. But that&#8217;s just it, we&#8217;re habituated to it. We don&#8217;t question it, it doesn&#8217;t question us, it doesn&#8217;t seem to pose a problem, we live it without thinking, as if it carried within it neither questions nor answers, as it if weren&#8217;t the bearer of any information.&#8221; [&#8230;]</p><p>&#8212; I recently picked up <a href="https://punctumbooks.com/titles/imagining-what-we-dont-know-creative-theory-and-critical-bodies/">Imagining What We Don&#8217;t Know</a> by Lisa Samuels, admittedly because the title refers to something I&#8217;ve been thinking a lot about lately: Imagining, the imagination, our power of imagination, the importance of our imaginations.</p><p>&#8212; From the Lisa Samuels book: &#8220;Beauty is a problem for poetry because we no longer imagine beauty as a serious way of knowing. But it is. Beauty wedges into the artistic space a structure for continuously imagining what we do not know.&#8221; She notes that taking beauty seriously and working on theories of beauty &#8220;is out of fashion.&#8221; But she says, &#8220;Forms of beauty are resistant structures, imaginative structures that present an impenetrable model of the unknown. Beauty is therefore endlessly talk-inspiring, predictive rather than descriptive, dynamic rather than settled, infinitely serious and useful.&#8221;</p><p>&#8212; To reiterate: beauty is a serious way of knowing! Yes.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/beautybooksimagining">Notes on Beauty, Books, Imagining, the Soul&#8217;s Skeleton, and a Smoking Angel</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Since nothing is ever complete, the poetry book I wrote about my mother, <em>Diaspora of Things,</em> seems like a light-sensitive print of where I was a few years ago. The relationship keeps evolving. The deeper I get into motherhood &#8211; all these years now! &#8211; the more I slide alongside her, intuiting her unsaid about joy, loss, &#8220;annoying aspects of inevitable change,&#8221; freedoms gained and realities of our limits. In strange morning dreams, so kitchen-sink and unsentimental, I&#8217;m waking up to the twists that adult children exert on mothers, and how much I got away with! Doris had a taste for the radical, and more patience than I give her credit for. To the complexity and mystery of motherhood, and the sister-soul that walks along with us on our journey!</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3680">Diaspora of Affections</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It has been a time of moments recently. Stillness. Patience. A buzzard on a fence post. Applauding a flyover from a heron. A rainbow in a storm. A 5p found on the ground at a motorway service station. That tyre pressure light. Seizing the moment to drink tea on the settees of family and friends. Asking for a drink in a coffee shop by using its advertising tagline to see if the person taking the order laughs.</p><p>And a new writing desk. Sometimes I spend too long flicking through my phone, but recently it led to a serendipitous moment when I saw that a friend had a writing desk for sale. Mine was old and faithful, and it always surprised me just how much I could get done in such a small space &#8211; so many poems and videos and meetings and essays and coaching sessions. It was originally gifted to me many, many moons ago by a neighbour of my grandparents and has easily fitted into every place I have ever lived. It has been well and truly loved and as it retires I tip my hat to just how well it has served me. And now into service comes a new beauty, with space aplenty. This then reminds me of that time we were asked to bring something to show which was important to us when I first started my coaching training. Being a little nervous at starting something new I had everything ready, but felt the urge to double check before the meeting started. I felt a little bit clumsy and fumbly (and everything was crowded into a small space) and as I reached for the glass paperweight to check that it wasn&#8217;t dusty before I shared it with a group of new people, I knocked my hand on my laptop screen and promptly dropped my show and tell object into my glass of water. I do like to be ready for things before they happen, so my heart beat a little bit faster as I dipped my hand in to retrieve it and hurriedly wiped it on my jeans to dry it off. At least that solved the dust problem, I told myself as I took a deep breath and clicked to join the meeting.</p><p>I am pretty confident that my readiness will be easier where I now sit so here&#8217;s to finding the space we need for the things that bring us joy, and for appreciating the old and the new!</p><p>This past week I was keen to find out what kind of poem would be the first to be written at my new desk (and when it would take shape). Pleasingly it was a love poem that flowed. They are quite rare for me and come with a little fanfare and sparkles when they arrive.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/05/11/thats-not-mine-mines-crispy/">THAT&#8217;S NOT MINE, MINE&#8217;S CRISPY&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now is the time of spring&#8217;s coolness. The breeze and shade detain the heat. The trees look fresh and new. But the flowers are falling. The blossom is over and the rhododendrons and azaleas are nearly over. Far away in north D.C., the tulips at Hillwood House are peaking and about to wilt. Here the tiny blue flowers by the path will soon go to seed. As we walk back to the car, we hear an oven bird, whose loud clear song fills the forest from some hidden spot. So much of what we have seen are tropes from American films, and tropes of real American life. The oven bird is familiar from Robert Frost. &#8220;He says that leaves are old and that for flowers/Mid-summer is to spring as one to ten.&#8221;</p><p>The sun has begun its decline. One of the fishing boats is gone now. The young man in headphones is sloping back. Bikers are strapping their bikes onto car racks. As we leave the forest, we come back to aggressive American driving, the need to get things done before bed. The late sun sinks behind the trees and lights the undersides of the high-raised roads. Dogwood flowers gleam in the evening glow. We pass the filling stations and see the price of gas is rising, rising. A fire truck goes past. The 24-hour diner sign still shines. There were two dozen cars at the shore when we left&#8212;owners and boats were still launched on the Occoquan.</p><p>In Washington, there are secrets, heard and unheard, in Congress, the White House, and the Court&#8212;at Langley, Rosslyn, the Pentagon&#8212; and in all the agencies and institutions and non-profits that fill the grid. Somewhere back in the woods, the oven bird is still singing. &#8220;The question that he frames in all but words / Is what to make of a diminished thing.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/he-says-the-early-petal-fall-is-past">He says the early petal-fall is past</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve read that the turn in a poem is a key to the closing, and ending lines will be stronger depending on how near they are to (or distant from, and evocative of) the turn. This seemed helpful revision advice. Yet does <em>every</em> poem require a turn? The idea of the volta is ancient indeed, but it need not be a prescription for all the poems in the world. Poetry from other than Western cultures often proceeds quite beautifully without a turn, and does that mean that such a poem is static? That&#8217;s often seen as a negative in art: when nothing moves, or moves the viewer. I&#8217;d like to refer my readers to L.A. Johnson on Jericho Brown&#8217;s duplex form, <a href="https://www.poetrynw.org/radical-stasis-jericho-browns-duplex-form/">&#8220;Radical Stasis&#8221; in </a><em><a href="https://www.poetrynw.org/radical-stasis-jericho-browns-duplex-form/">Poetry</a>.</em> What could be more static than repetition? And yet in Brown&#8217;s work, the lack of a turn implies circularity, not necessarily ambivalence and certainly not a lack of movement. Johnson calls it a transformation.</p><p>I want to experiment with how altering a poem&#8217;s closing might lead to changing the poem&#8217;s form or structure for a stronger impact. Another option I&#8217;ve used is moving the last lines to the start or near the start of the poem. Maybe those lines weren&#8217;t really the image or idea that particular poem was aiming for. And then there is docking the tail of a poem. It may be a cruel practice for dogs and horses, but a poem can benefit from a careful removal of the unnecessary closing line(s). Closing lines that summarize a point can wreck my delight in a poem, and alas, I tend that way sometimes&#8230;I spent my childhood Sundays in church, listening to my dad declaim from the pulpit. The oral and rhetorical structure of sermons is routed into my brain, and that can be a real problem when I draft. Poetry can be many things, but I don&#8217;t care for poetry that sermonizes.</p><p>At any rate, I have a LOT of unfinished drafts that might benefit from change-ups. Instead of writing a blog post, I ought to be working on those!</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/05/08/closure/">Closure</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And what about that final quote? It&#8217;s italicised and in speech marks. Did the horn blow the tune to which that ballad was originally set? Is that Childe Roland speaking about himself in third person, suddenly seeing himself from a distance (the distance of death)? Is that the storyteller Browning&#8217;s voice suddenly breaking into the dramatic monologue?</p><p>&#8216;Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came&#8217; is the title of the poem too, so to end with the same words almost suggests something circular. We have returned to the start, in a kind of Groundhog Day. Childe Roland will never get to the tower but be stuck in this perpetual circle of hell forevermore&#8230; And it&#8217;s worth mentioning that time is supposed to work differently in Elfland or Faerie Land. Perhaps it loops.</p><p>It&#8217;s a sinister, unsettling ending, deliberately ambiguous. But perhaps that is why it continues to fascinate and inspire. It creates a desire that it refuses to satisfy. Browning&#8217;s neverending story continue to haunt our literary culture.</p><p><strong>Clare Pollard, <a href="https://clarespoetrycircle.substack.com/p/reading-childe-roland-to-the-dark-32e">Reading &#8216;Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came&#8217; by Robert Browning</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I could translate all this into words like hunger<br>or gift, witness or mercy. But I choose not to. <br>I consider the breath that unraveled so quickly, how <br>the future briefly arrived, without fanfare or song.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/05/life-study/">Life Study</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 18]]></title><description><![CDATA[fists of will-be-blooms, a delicate crepuscular pinky grey, parrots nesting in the rain tree, the creeping-charlie&#8217;s faultless blue, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-18</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-18</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 23:45:54 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/ae57b0b8-9980-44dc-8566-edd856584af9_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: fists of will-be-blooms, a delicate crepuscular pinky grey, parrots nesting in the rain tree, the creeping-charlie&#8217;s faultless blue, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A word drops off my fingers,<br>hits the floor, shatters. Words<br>shatter not into letters<br>and sounds, but into sharp shards<br>of reflection and color,<br>memory and movements, dance,<br>hollows where meaning was home.</p><p><strong>PF Anderson, <a href="https://rosefirerising.wordpress.com/2026/04/29/wordless-napowrimo-29/">Wordless (#NaPoWriMo 29)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have begun to teach myself to draw with my left hand.</p><p>I have started what I hope will be a book. I haven&#8217;t written much prose in a long long time. I learned a lot writing my novel, <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Click-Rivers-Press-Electronic-Book-ebook/dp/B00MF8BKU4">CLICK</a></em>, and by learning a lot I mean a lot of what not to do.</p><p>I haven&#8217;t been hearing poems lately and when that happens I tend not to force myself to write them. I do write them when I&#8217;m in poetry circles where we get to write and share with each other but other than that I really haven&#8217;t felt like writing poetry. It will come back when it comes back. I think I need a lot of quiet space to let my brain run across the pastures and go wild. Then the poems will come.</p><p><strong>Rebecca Cook, <a href="https://rebeccacook13.substack.com/p/life-update">Life Update</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We had a beautiful full moon right on my birthday, too, and we had lovely sunny weather, so we got out and gardened and Glenn power-washed the deck, so we were ready to entertain. The full moon always gives me insomnia, and this one was no different. I was thinking about an interview with Meryl Streep about the first <em>Devil Wear Prada</em> and how she was thinking of retiring from acting when she was offered the job at 56. I am 53, so it made me think about when we retire as artists. I&#8217;m not making the kind of money Meryl is, and I&#8217;m much less in demand. If I retired, there probably wouldn&#8217;t be as much of an outcry as there would be over Meryl (who was not only great in <em>Devil Wears Prada 2</em>, but if you&#8217;ve seen her, she&#8217;s terrific in <em>Only Murderers in the Building</em>). It&#8217;s surprising to me that she was thinking of retiring but then spoke openly that she did the movie that was so beloved because of the large paycheck it afforded.</p><p>I&#8217;m also thinking about retirement because Microsoft is offering early retirement packages next week. Glenn still loves his job and enjoys working, so it&#8217;s not very attractive to him yet. They&#8217;re doing it to invest more in AI and less in humanity, which seems depressing. I guess poets can work until they die or decide to do something else, and we definitely won&#8217;t be offered a nice paycheck to quit, and AI may try to take our jobs anyway.</p><p>This week <em><a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DXu8wnFGga0/">EcoTheo</a></em><a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DXu8wnFGga0/"> re-ran a photo I took for them a while ago</a>, and <em><a href="https://rattle.com/horoscope-by-jeannine-hall-gailey/">Rattle</a></em><a href="https://rattle.com/horoscope-by-jeannine-hall-gailey/"> re-ran an older poem in their newsletter</a>. So it was nice to be remembered in these ways on a week I was feeling discouraged and thinking about quitting.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/birthday-week-full-flower-moon-open-books-seattles-japanese-garden-and-more/">Birthday Week, Full Flower Moon, Open Books, Seattle&#8217;s Japanese Garden, and More</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been observing my mind lately. It&#8217;s been such a gadfly. In five minutes I&#8217;ll have searched five things on the internet, gotten up and splashed some paint on paper, written my little 100-word daily challenge (more on that in another post), sat back down and picked up a book, put it down to look something else up, started one thing only to interrupt myself with another. Is it spring that&#8217;s making me so flighty? Life in these times? Yes and yes? I&#8217;ve been busy in spurts and listless the rest of the time, aspiring to grand ideas but too scattered to think them up, or I think them up and immediately reject them. It&#8217;s spring and not-quite-spring, some trees are dangly with their bright catkins and some are well into their leaves. My lilacs are just showing their fists of will-be-blooms but someone&#8217;s three blocks away are in full purple. On my walk up on the ridge, no jacks in no pulpits, but flocks of marsh marigold in their fancy dress. A tiny speck of eagle high in the sky circling; in a field the very earthly dark mound of a turkey vulture, its terrible red head bent to its meal. I tried to write a poemish thing based on the crazyass mix of headlines in the Guardian, the whiplash of turning to witness democracy&#8217;s demise in one article, the ridiculousness gravity lent to some fashion &#8220;controversy&#8221; in another. But Rilke said poetry was no place for irony. I disagree. Except when I agree entirely. There&#8217;s my mind again, changing, changing. But here is the venerable Don McKay, with a poem from his book Another Gravity. I&#8217;m not sure I entirely follow the line of thought of the poem. But given the state of my mind, I think it&#8217;s okay.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/05/04/there-must-be-a-door-a-door/">there must be a door &#8212; a door</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>nothing <em>grows</em> here, the sanctioned and expatriated seed, scoured from yr latitudes, yr gravel hemispheres. <em>flowers:</em> pacified fixtures, bracketed to buildings. <em>tree:</em> hi-vis bros administer enjambment. i bring with me only <em>this</em> body, idealised and desperate. it is the weed and the worm, dankly questing prole, the writhing of its reach, opaque with strain. fungus. assemble myself inside the open sprawl of it: worklife, yr city. the empire is setting. like aspic.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/the-mushroom-is-not-a-plant">THE MUSHROOM IS NOT A PLANT</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>You may be lucky enough to not feel stress or anxiety before a reading or public performance. In general, I usually get excited nerves, rather than debilitating nerves. Yesterday however felt very different. I spent the whole day in a state of extreme anxiety, worrying about everything. I knew I was being illogical because I was worrying about nobody turning up (even though ninety tickets had been sold). I was also worrying about people turning up and being bored. I spent a full hour thinking about my book and regretting writing any of the poems and publishing it in the first place.</p><p>On Saturday night, we had a power cut at midnight which lasted till midday on Sunday morning. This meant we couldn&#8217;t make lunch so we all went down into town for lunch on Sunday, which now I write it, sounds like a relatively simple thing to do, even a pleasant one! However, by this point, my ADHD symptoms were in overdrive, making simple decisions and even eating something feel completely overwhelming.</p><p>Because I usually don&#8217;t get like this before a reading, it took me a while to identify what I needed which was some time on my own to relax and work out what I was reading. I went and had a very long bath, made a list of the poems I was going to read and then left for the venue with my sister.</p><p>As Jody and I pulled up to the venue, my friends E and S were also getting out of their cars. They&#8217;d come early because E knew I was anxious about nobody turning up! When I got to the green room, my colleague Reuben from work was there with Malika &#8211; he&#8217;d met her at the train station to make sure she got up the hill ok. Carola was already there, Amanda was in mid-flow organising everyone and then Clare strode through the doors with a box full of <em>The Book of Bogs </em>to sell and I felt instantly calmer.</p><p>I silently thanked past Kim for the genius idea of filling this event with my best friends and my sister, of surrounding myself with friendship and laughter.</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/how-to-have-a-magical-book-launch">HOW TO HAVE A MAGICAL BOOK LAUNCH</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My poem <em>Interior with a Table </em>has been awarded equal Fourth Prize in the Kent &amp; Sussex 2026 Open Poetry Competition. I was delighted, especially as the competition was judged by Mimi Khalvati. She describes the poem as a &#8216;sensitive example of ekphrastic poetry&#8217;. You can read her Judge&#8217;s Report <a href="https://kentandsussexpoetry.com/2026/04/22/2026-open-competition-kent-sussex-poetry-competition-judges-report-mimi-khalvati/">here</a>.</p><p>The poem was inspired by the 2021 <a href="https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/bell-interior-with-a-table-n05078">painting of the same title</a> by Vanessa Bell. The date put me in mind of WWI which enters the frame.</p><p>You can read the poem <a href="https://kentandsussexpoetry.com/2026/04/27/interior-with-a-table-by-fokkina-mcdonnell/">here</a>.</p><p><strong>Fokkina McDonnell, <a href="https://fokkinadutch.substack.com/p/interior-with-a-table-poem">Interior with a Table &#8211; poem</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Earlier today, as I made adjustments in the galley for GRAVEYARDS OF CHICAGO, I was thinking about my acquaintance with this particular urban legend and source materials. In particular, Resurrection Mary has been an obsession that took root when I was 12 and checking out stacks of ghost story and paranormal books from the tiny Cherry Valley public storefront library with its rickety floors, precariously leaning stacks, and questionable green shag carpet in the children&#8217;s area. It&#8217;s probably natural that I would become obsessed with ghosts given my love of horror and gothic leanings. This one seems particularly interesting from a regional standpoint (not Rockford necessarily, but suburban Chicago, though another spooky urban legend from my hometown makes an appearance in the play).</p><p>When I was taking a class back in the MFA program way back in 2005 that was devoted to writing Chicago poems, it seemed like a no-brainer, to take my obsession with this urban legend and see what bloomed. There were also great ways to bring in history and class in the city in interesting ways. The result of course was <em>Archer Avenue</em>. Initially, it was a small print edition that I mostly gave away and traded in the year leading up to my first book&#8217;s release. Later, those poems would fit nicely in the context of IN THE BIRD MUSEUM, my second book.</p><p>Certain things informed that project, and by extension, the play i just wrote two decades later. In addition to in-depth research on sightings and lore, I did things like go on ghost tours and wandered around the historic State St. Marshall Fields (which was on the verge of becoming a Macy&#8217;s soon after.) Class and the idea of pauper/unmarked graves was at the forefront of my mind, as was Depression-era economics.</p><p>While the poems wander in their p-o-v and thematic directions, the play places Mary&#8217;s story as I imagine it alongside a cab driver decades later, using music to mark the shifts in time and weaving their stories together, including one scene I really hope works that changes decades mid-scene.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/05/roadside-ghosts-and-writing-your.html">roadside ghosts and writing your obsessions</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Between Marshal P&#233;tain&#8217;s capitulation to the Nazis in 1940, and the Liberation of Paris in 1944, the French wrote over three million letters of denunciation to the authorities. After the war, some denunciations were deemed, retroactively, criminal acts: the crime of &#8220;indignit&#233; nationale.&#8221; Fascinated by their surface and their substance, I set out to write a poem based on those letters. While I admit to an interest in the more standard <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/let-those-flatter-who-fear-american">heroic possibilities</a> of iambic pentameter, here my aims were Frostian. The letters are a fascinating mixture of &#8220;tones.&#8221; Rarely were the writers trying simply to convey information. They were just as keen to signal things about themselves, to the agents of the Vichy state: patriotism; sophistication; alignment with its (sick) values. They wanted to denounce &#8220;traitors,&#8221; but they wanted to sound appropriately bureaucratic in doing so. Bureaucratic tones are underrepresented in metric poetry&#8212;I&#8217;m not aware even of Robert Frost trying&#8212;but poetic they can be, when they contain an undercurrent of terror. Also poetic, in this case, is the fact that these writers&#8217; mixed goals did not mix well: because virtue and vice do not mix well. Nor, and this is no coincidence, could the writers quite carry it all off. Their sophistication is often sour and out of tune.</p><p>That&#8217;s how it struck me, anyway. This may be serendipity, but I have leaned into it. For I should say, the letters were written in French (of course), and discussions of them referred me to a compliation titled <em>La D&#233;lation sous l&#8217;Occupation</em>, of which no English translation has been published. Unable to pay a real live French person to produce one, I have relied on machines to do it, machines which are, despite recent advances you may have read about, not entirely reliable. But their unreliability was, in this case, poetic, in a way worth explaining. It&#8217;s familiar enough that modern English is a mixture of German and French. Because French was, in the centuries after the Norman Conquest, the language of England&#8217;s ruling elite, French words that came to English tend to have a &#8220;fancier&#8221; meaning in English, than their originals have in French. For example, &#8220;travail&#8221; in French means (simply) &#8220;work,&#8221; but in English it means &#8220;painful or laborious effort.&#8221; Computer translations from French tend to &#8220;transliterate&#8221; French words, rather than replace them with simpler non-French words that are closer in meaning: &#8220;travails&#8221; may remain &#8220;travails,&#8221; and not be translated as &#8220;labors.&#8221; The denunciations, therefore, in my eyes, appeared to try quite hard to use the fanciest&#8212;and so, Frenchest&#8212;English words they could, even when those words were not well-suited to their intended meaning. This was, sometimes, quite amusing, as was the contrast between these elevated stylistic aims, and the sometime pettiness of the &#8220;infractions&#8221; being reported. And then, here and there, through this curtain of administrative and euphemistic malaprops, some plain and brutal language would protrude. In a poem, this could be magnified into something grotesque.</p><p>One story about World War II, is that its great evils should not be wholly blamed on a few monstrous men; shares should also be distributed to the masses of collaborators, each of whom perpetrated his or her own microdose of evil. These letters are among them, and they smell of it.</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/the-spirit-of-a-broken-people-french">The Spirit of a Broken People: French Letters of Denunciation</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was absolutely delighted yesterday to receive my contributors copy of a new poetry anthology, <em><a href="https://tupress.org/9781595343031/the-new-sentience/">The New Sentience: Reimagining Animal Poetry</a></em>, which is just released from Trinity University Press with a Foreword by Alexis Pauline Gumbs. It&#8217;s a beautiful book! The editors, Ashley Capps and Allison Titus did a wonderful job putting it together, and I&#8217;m marveling at the Table of Contents, which is full of such greats as Mary Oliver, Linda Gregg, Mary Ruefle, Mary Oliver, Nikole Brown, Wendell Berry, Elizabeth Bishop, Anne Carson, Robert Bly, Lucille Clifton, Camille Dungy, Ross Gay, Jorie Graham, Joy Harjo, Brigit Pegeen Kelly, and Ada Limon, as well as yours truly.</p><p>The poem of mine that they&#8217;ve selected to include is &#8220;Dr. Harry Harlow&#8217;s Primate Laboratory,&#8221; from my book <em><a href="https://upittpress.org/books/9780822965169/">Darwin&#8217;s Mother</a></em>, which takes the perspective of a monkey forced to participate in Harlow&#8217;s famous (and chilling) wire mother and cloth mother experiments from the 1950s. Thinking about those experiments and what it must have been like for the baby rhesus monkeys who were deprived of maternal care and familial connection still makes my heart feel as heavy as stone.</p><p>But the anthology is also rich with hope&#8212;poems of connection and kinship, of observation, odes to interspecies friendships, to entanglement, wildness, and mystery.</p><p><strong>Sarah Rose Nordgren, <a href="https://sarahrosenordgren.substack.com/p/reimagining-animal-poetry">Reimagining Animal Poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Jen Feroze lives by the sea in Essex. She writes about motherhood, shifts in identity, and love in many forms, frequently finding wonder in the seemingly everyday. Her work has appeared in publications including <em>Magma</em>, <em>Poetry Wales</em>, <em>Butcher&#8217;s Dog</em>, and <em>Under the Radar</em> and her debut pamphlet <em>Tiny Bright Thorns</em> was published in 2024. And in news <em>very</em> hot off the press, Jen has just been announced as the winner of the 2026 Charles Causley International Poetry Competition.</p><p><em>A Dress with Deep Pockets</em> is a book that takes us in its confidence, and talks to us candidly over the kitchen table about friendship, motherhood and ageing. Jen writes with a quiet confidence &#8211; the poems are not fussy, preferring to leave a deep imprint through their frankness and vitality.</p><p>Here is a poet who is able to bring us the essence of a character and a stage of life in swift, bright sketches &#8211; like her teenage friend, in <em>Hare Girl</em>, &#8220;tawny and watchful in corners, / boys staring owl-eyed from across the room.&#8221; Or the speaker of the poems, caught mid-realisation in <em>Boxing Day Swimmers</em>, of her own ongoing process of transformation;</p><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s the strangest thing, lately,<br>I open my mouth and my mother falls out &#8211;<br>a mournful clockwork woodpigeon on the kitchen table.</p><p><em><strong>Boxing Day Swimmers</strong></em></p></blockquote><p>What I enjoy about these poems is how lightly they wear their &#8216;poem-ness&#8217;. They are full of craft &#8211; clever little turns, pin-sharp images, genius line breaks &#8211; yet they are carried along with an immense warmth and wit, a voice that feels so natural and completely itself.</p><p><strong>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/fictional-bats-stolen-vodka-and-bobble">Fictional bats, stolen vodka and bobble hats</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There are periods when I&#8217;m reading for work, others when I&#8217;m reading for pleasure. Sometimes, they overlap. At the moment, I can firmly say that my reading life feels expansive and enriching in a way that lands firmly in the realm of pleasure.</p><p>Last week, I reread Philip Larkin&#8217;s <em>The Whitsun Weddings,</em> which is one of my favorite collections. This week, I&#8217;m reading two extraordinary books, &#8217;s forthcoming <em>Middle Slope</em> and Karen Solie&#8217;s T.S. Eliot-prize winning <em>Wellwater</em>. I wake up excited to read, which is a wonderful feeling.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/poems-for-your-weekend-010">Poems for Your Weekend</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The private detective is closing the file, dusting the mirror to move on but the woman at the heart of the case is living rent free in his mind. It suggests how experience shapes us and some memories can never be left behind.</p><p>Polly Clark has a skill for taking apparently ordinary moments, working on a piece of art, attending a funeral, finishing a job, and invests them with layered depths, showing how these micro connections shape individuals. She asks readers to look again, challenge their knowledge of how they might think this scene pans out and asks what if you focus on the less obvious, what if you were less complacent? It&#8217;s a fine balance between a relaxed, colloquial tone and a thoughtful, darker undertone and invites a reader to re-read the poem. If you&#8217;re not familiar with Clark&#8217;s work, &#8220;Afterlife&#8221; is an excellent place to start.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/04/29/afterlife-polly-clark-bloodaxe-book-review/">&#8220;Afterlife&#8221; Polly Clark (Bloodaxe) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A couple of years after I met this poem, I met its author at the Dodge Poetry Festival. He gave a reading and I queued up to have <em>On Love</em> signed, and told him that &#8220;For the Sleepwalkers&#8221; was perhaps the first contemporary poem I had loved, and that I had read it in <em>Fifty Years</em>, and he looked at me very seriously and said yes, he remembered that anthology, and he was very glad to know it, and thanked me for telling him, and then he signed my book &#8220;We have to learn to trust our hearts like that.&#8221;</p><p><em>&#8220;For the Sleepwalkers&#8221; is a<strong> </strong>simple poem</em> is another funny thing I almost wrote in the spirit of earnest classification. Is it simple? It leapt off the page and into a seventeen-year-old, so make of that what you will. I suppose I continue to feel guarded about my beloveds after such a long estrangement from Poetry at large: the sneaking suspicion that I do not like the right things remains hard to shake, especially when I make the mistake of picking up the latest issue of whatever. But, Dear Readers, I&#8217;ve so far only gained more of you here, so perhaps that&#8217;s a kind of empirical argument for not being all that wrong.</p><p>What&#8217;s to like? Tercets! The load-bearing stanza form: I like to imagine Hirsch, inevitably, thinking Dante, maybe even making a stab at terza rima early on&#8212;wonderful / invisible, faith / path&#8212;but that may be autobiography; I can&#8217;t count the number of times I&#8217;ve set out to write terza rima and abandoned it after line five. It&#8217;s handsomely constructed, repeated phrases and constructions weaving a subtle net of sound and sense: &#8220;so much faith . . . so much faith&#8221; in the first stanza, &#8220;stairs instead of the window . . . doorway instead of seamless mirror&#8221;in the second.</p><p>Alongside, and in conjunction with, these syntactic pairings, I love the strangeness of some of the figures, how the poet doesn&#8217;t quite ask us to rethink our assumptions as much as declare them rethought. Sleepwalking is most often employed pejoratively; one who sleepwalks through life misses things, but Hirsch&#8217;s sleepwalker is the one who truly sees. Stairs in the context of somnolence denote danger, yet here they are a preferable path to a window, a safe way down, and also out; the gaping door is not a symbol of vulnerability, but preferable to the mirror&#8217;s endless echo chamber. I love the night-soaked beauty of hearts flying off and returning, the clipped percussive music of &#8220;thick black fists,&#8221; the solid sound and sense of &#8220;glove of our chests.&#8221;</p><p>Most importantly, and I think most like Hirsch&#8212;the poet laureate of insomnia&#8212;is this notion of generative dark, of insight arriving not on a beam of light, but in the wild darkness: in shedding the self and actively seeking the unknown, even though we are so often told, and so often tell ourselves, it&#8217;s dangerous.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/for-the-sleepwalkers-by-edward-hirsch">&#8220;For the Sleepwalkers&#8221; by Edward Hirsch</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://formajournal.substack.com/p/the-odd-immoratlity-of-john-crowe">James Matthew Wilson</a> has noted Ransom&#8217;s prosody in these late poems:</p><blockquote><p>the falling, slant-rhymed, rhythms . . . which Ransom borrows with so much else from Mother Goose, are coupled with the mundane and the parenthetical, rhetorical, Latinate grandeur, and these all conspire to create poems immediately amusing to the ear; grotesquely jerry-rigged so as to compel us to ponder their inner-workings; and finally insistent that life in this world is a long defeat, where what is most precious, beautiful, and humane merits our reverence and study even though it will, in God&#8217;s time, fail us.</p></blockquote><p>In &#8220;Blue Girls,&#8221; a number of pentameter lines, specifically the internal <em>b</em>-rhymed lines of stanzas 1 and 3, do contain these falling rhythms, ending on such multi-unstressed-syllabic words as &#8220;seminary&#8221; and &#8220;contrary,&#8221; which casts the short concluding lines in those quatrains, with their final stressed syllables, in higher relief. The effect, then, is something like rolling down a hill and hitting a fatal wall.</p><p><strong>Sally Thomas, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-blue-girls">Today&#8217;s Poem: Blue Girls</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Fourteen lines long, like many of his pieces at all stages of his career, &#8220;Alternative Anatomy&#8221;, describing a hawk moth, is an ethereally thinned version of a reversed sonnet (one in which the sestet precedes the octave): it&#8217;s written in short, irregular lines, and has only a few highly attenuated rhymes. The irregularity and attenuation both suit the idea of the moth&#8217;s fragility and erratic flight (itself brilliantly captured by the line end pause in &#8216;cleverly / erratic&#8217;). I think they have another important effect. The whole poem is brought delicately to rest by the way the last two lines move to the iambic pulse of the dominant tradition in English metrics and of the traditional sonnet in English. However, the unpredictable rhythms before that point seem to contribute to its lightness of imaginative touch and the consequent extremely open way in which its suggestiveness works. This gives it a vast imaginative reach with many overlapping circles of suggestion. Short lines isolate images and phrases, letting each resonate in the pause or blank space at the line ending. Shimmering between overwhelming extremes of light and darkness, between poles of miniaturist empathy and geographical or even cosmic vastness, and between anthropomorphic and naturalistic imaginings of moth and bat, glancing in its imagery at archaic and modern industrial techniques, at marine, submarine and aerial navigation and at the mechanics of making music, vividly evoking both the cruelty and the marvellous intricacy of the natural order, it doesn&#8217;t push the reader towards a conclusion but opens multiple vistas of reflection that he&#8217;s free to follow or not as he wills. The whole poem gives a beautiful sense of completeness, but this is entirely a matter of artistic shaping, not of the expression of an idea, and it seems to me that the abstention from any kind of intellectual conclusion that would have limited the reader&#8217;s freedom of response is as much a beauty of the poem as its shaping is.</p><p><strong>Edmund Prestwich, <a href="https://edmundprestwich.co.uk/?p=2916">Jamie McKendrick and sonnet form. Comments on &#8220;Alternative Anatomy&#8221;.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>[Edwin] Muir was a Scottish poet who died in 1959. According to my note on the flyleaf, I bought my Faber edition of his <em>Collected Poems </em>as a student in 2000. I&#8217;m not sure how much read Muir is these days but his poems seem to me to have stood the test of time particularly well. He assumes some scriptural and classical knowledge in a way that is less common now, but his poems are never &#8216;learned&#8217;. You always feel that he is putting his gifts at the service of the reader &#8212; that he writes to be understood.</p><p>In this poem, for instance, there&#8217;s an obvious allusion to the story in Genesis, and also to two Gospel parables &#8212; of the wheat and the tares (in Matthew 13) and of the workers in the vineyard (in Matthew 20). &#8216;Tares&#8217; is a now largely obsolete word for vetch, a kind of weed that grows easily in wheatfields. Recent translations of the Bible tend to use &#8216;weeds&#8217;, but &#8216;tares&#8217; is the word in the King James Bible, and I would guess that for most mid-20th century readers &#8212; for whom it was no longer in common currency &#8212; the word itself was strongly associated with this particular parable. But even if you have never read the New Testament, and don&#8217;t know what &#8216;tares&#8217; are, I don&#8217;t think you would have any difficulty following this poem.</p><p>Muir uses scripture (and also some parts of classical mythology) in a natural way, to clarify his meaning rather than hedge it around. This is much harder to do than it looks, and the apparent straightforwardness of Muir&#8217;s style is perhaps his greatest achievement. It is very difficult indeed to write lyric poetry which is both beautiful and straightforward to understand, and which also has something to say &#8212; a clear and specific message or argument. These seem like they ought to be the basic virtues of verse but it is a rare poet who can put all three together as consistently as Muir.</p><p>The clarity and (for want of a better word) &#8216;accessibility&#8217; of Muir&#8217;s style derives to a large extent, I think, from how deeply rooted his poetry is in what we might call roughly &#8216;popular&#8217; verse, including songs and hymns &#8212; the kind of verse that is shaped by use for maximum clarity.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/when-will-all-come-home">When will all come home?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Whitmans-Leaves-Grass-150th-Anniversary/dp/0195183428">Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman</a><br>I&#8217;ve been reading this one for several months. Did you know <em>Leaves of Grass</em> is quite long? The first (self-published) book wasn&#8217;t so bad, but the one I have, one of the later editions after he had added and added to it, is a bulky 400 poems.</p><p>Some parts are great! But some not so much. For example, should anyone, poet or otherwise, use the word &#8220;promulges&#8221; this much?<br><br><em>&#8220;Every condition promulges not only itself, it promulges what grows after and out of itself,<br>And the dark hush promulges as much as any.&#8221;<br>(from Song of Myself, 45)</em><br><br>Not to hate on Whitman &#8211; his work is obviously inspired by the cadences and repetitions of Biblical poetry, notably Ecclesiastes (which I was also reading at the time &#8211; interesting pairing) and the psalms. However, instead of centering around God, he centers around himself, in a universalistic way. What a tiresome subject.</p><p>Often a famous poet will be known for one or two of their very good poems, but there is a treasury of much better poetry that no one ever reads &#8211; but in Whitman&#8217;s case, I think the well-known poems are the poems you should read.</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/will-i-ever-finish-whitman-and-the">Does anyone ever finish Whitman?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Simone Weil was, to all who knew her, intense. Over the course of her shortened life, she gave herself up to an evolving sequence of political, ethical and mystical philosophies, and pushed herself and her body to great physical extremes in order to live them fully. This was her praxis, her public self.</p><p>Tom Pow&#8217;s new collection of poems has grown out of several years of immersion in Simone&#8217;s writing, augmented with visits to places which advanced her thinking in some way, or were the site of revelation, of a sudden clarity. By deepening his concept of her by encountering her in these places, he invests his poems with a directness and intimacy that comes from working with primary source material, including the places in which it was formed &#8211; the sounds of the building, the light on the walls. We <em>encounter </em>her in these places. It is this sense of presence, of <em>being with</em>, that charge these poems with such authenticity, that makes them ring true.</p><p><strong>Lesley Harrison, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/the-vulnerability-of-precious-things">The Vulnerability of Precious Things</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is no single reading of a poem. We cannot be done with it in a single pass as we might with a novel. (I don&#8217;t mean later re-reading, but the initial or single encounter.) Even a joke poem, a limerick, a short form, a couplet, requires more than a single read: it lingers and echoes in memory. Something about itself is always drawing our attention. Most verse is dross because it lacks this quality, not for any merely formal reason. When I first read &#8216;Filling Station&#8217; I did not understand it in a literal sense. Some barrier existed because it is American and the lingo was obscure; some words needed looking up; some of it is simply difficult, not the sense that it is hard but in the sense that you must mull it before you &#8220;get&#8221; it. Not all difficulty makes itself known on the surface.</p><p>Late James is poetry in this sense. There is this sort of poetry in the heart of Austen, too, whose sentences roll in our minds. Not poetry in the way Dickens drops into pentameter, but in the lilt of her prose that becomes almost like the long lines of the Psalms. <em>The family of Dashwood had long been settled in the country of Sussex. Their estate was large, and their residence was at Norland Park, in the centre of their property&#8230;</em> We might hear Cowper behind this as well as Addison. We might have to read the novel several times before we think to ask why it matters that the residence is in the <em>centre</em> of their property.</p><p>Austen can be read as an easy novelist or as a difficult one, not difficult in the way Joyce is difficult, but not easy in the way Wodehouse is easy. Some novels have their difficulty submerged, like <em>Brideshead</em>, which I read three times through on first encounter. Just as the first time we read a great poem and it will require lots of attention, so we might need to read a novel that looks easy. But the &#8220;standard&#8221; way of reading a novel is straight through, maybe going back a little, but mostly linear. If we rate literature according to pleasure, the more linear the better. Zing! So when people discuss difficulty, a lot of their arguments might depend on how &#8220;poetic&#8221; they like their literature.</p><p>For some poets, like A.R. Ammons and Wallace Stevens, keeping you in the state of difficulty is almost the point. To reach a full explanation is almost to miss the point&#8212;these poets are trying to put something into words that cannot, fully, be expressed. The sense of difficulty should be where we understand that. We will only ever be able to get so close to reality through words.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/out-of-all-the-indifferences">Out of all the indifferences</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Whenever people ask, &#8220;Which poets inspired your own work?&#8221; I end up saying that my poetry is largely influenced by prose writers&#8212;maybe even more so than the poets. Clarice Lispector is part of my holy trifecta (others include Ana&#239;s Nin and Marguerite Duras, whose work I also <a href="https://lisamariebasile.substack.com/p/this-weeks-literary-divination-marguerite">practiced bibliomancy with</a>).</p><p>Lispector, a Brazilian writer whose family origins trace back to war-torn Ukraine, lost her mother as a child (I am always interested in writers whose childhoods asked them to raise themselves, in a way&#8212;writers who operate through and within a kind of lack). I&#8217;m also married to a Brazilian person, so there&#8217;s one slightly familiar doorway through which I enter her work.<br><br>Despite genre classifications, her work is a poetics of nonlinearity and interiority. On the line level, it is positively delicious. <em>&#193;gua Viva</em>&#8212;a &#8220;meditation on the nature of life and time&#8221;&#8212;asks you to surrender to a sea of questions, desires, prayers, thoughts, to the very mysteries that make up our world, to the spaces in between. And I fucking love that. If there&#8217;s anything I hate in literature, it&#8217;s being hand-fed.</p><p><em>&#193;gua Viva</em> is an exercise in constructing meaning, but it&#8217;s collaborative between author and writer; it feels as though the author is whispering directly to you. Or that you&#8217;re watching a prayer as it&#8217;s being transmitted to the heavens.</p><p><strong>Lisa Marie Basile, <a href="https://lisamariebasile.substack.com/p/bibliomancy-of-the-week-clarice-lipsector">Bibliomancy of the week: Clarice Lispector</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A poetry prize that we are lucky to have in the UK is the Michael Marks Awards. Founded in 2009, it now has four categories recognising small-press excellence: Poetry Pamphlet; Publisher; Illustrator; Environmental Poetry Pamphlet. This year&#8217;s shortlists have just been published, with the winners to be announced in June.</p><p>The only shortlisted title that I currently have on my shelves is Hugh Foley&#8217;s <em>Recent Poems </em>(The Fair Organ), which is a pamphlet in the tradition of small, simple printed objects that I particularly enjoy as a way of reading poetry: a paper-wrapped, pocket-notebook of 28 pages, stapled and hand-stamped on the back with the publisher&#8217;s logo (I wrote about my own small-press experiment with this format <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/like-visits-to-the-newsagent">here</a>).</p><p>Of course, the downside of reading this way is that wafer-thin publications easily get lost at the bottom of the book-shelf food chain, pressed flat by the paperbacks and hardbacks they can sometimes end up tucked inside. [&#8230;]</p><p>In a statement about &#8220;The Importance of Poetry Pamphlets&#8221;, the Michael Marks Awards observe:</p><blockquote><p>Traditionally, pamphlets have provided a vehicle for new writers to emerge, as well as offering established poets a focused, short structure that is ideal for exploring themes [&#8230;] Historically, and still, often small presses have been labours of love, individually crafting each pamphlet.</p></blockquote><p>This got me thinking about which pamphlets on my shelves I value not only as short and portable early gatherings of poems that later have ended up in &#8220;full&#8221; books, but specifically those which are themselves my preferred (and sometimes only) way of reading a particular work. <em>[Click through for Jeremy&#8217;s selection of a half-dozen memorable pamphlets (AKA chapbooks).]</em></p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/pinks-42-an-outside-to-language">Pinks #42: An Outside to Language</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>8 &#8211; How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to translation to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?</strong></p><p>It has been a natural state for me to move among poetry, translation, critical work, and fiction. I may spend months or years focused on one or two, toggling between them, and then find myself drained. Other genres rush in to fill the space left and reinvigorate me. Translation, especially, recharges the mind for my own poems. There, you are both creating and kneeling at the mercy of existing language, balancing between fidelity and estrangement, mimicry and imagination, domestication and foreignization, to mold a poem in English that does to an English speaker what the original did to readers of that language. Switching modes feels like stepping out of an airport in the tropics and taking off your parka. So I never have writers&#8217; block per se. There&#8217;s always some other kind of writing I could be doing if one type is coming up dry. And the genres necessarily challenge one another. Is this really a narrative poem or a story that hasn&#8217;t been completed? What form best serves this idea? What can this form do that the others cannot?</p><p><strong>9 &#8211; What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?</strong></p><p>With a &#8220;9-5&#8221; job, I write when I can: a snippet in the early morning, something after dinner, a few hours on the weekend. The trick for me has been to keep the mind engaged with the literary, with the way a poet attends to the world, at least for a few dedicated moments every day; that may not be actual writing, but it keeps the writer in my mind alive.</p><p><strong>10 &#8211; When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?</strong></p><p>I turn to international writers to pull me out of the milieu and habits of U.S. literature.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/05/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Daniel Moysaenko</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>like any poet, i am always<br>fighting the moon. i want to have her<br>over for dinner. i want to use<br>my phone flashlight to find her face.<br>in a dream, the house catches fire &amp;<br>i turn into a diamond in the heat.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/05/02/5-2-5/">battery life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>According to </strong><em><strong>#FemkuMag</strong></em><strong>, &#8220;In September 2017 Rowan Beckett Minor coined the term &#8220;femku&#8221; in the subtitle of their first book </strong><em><strong>Radical Women: A Book of Femku</strong></em><strong>. Since then, the term has resonated throughout the Haiku community, thus pioneering a movement and this journal, the safe space Rowan created for women, trans, and gender-expansive Haijin to share their work.&#8221; I&#8217;d like to learn more about your first book, </strong><em><strong>Radical Women: A Book of Femku</strong></em><strong>. What are the main subjects and topics that you focus on in this book and what inspired you to write it?</strong></p><p>I didn&#8217;t yet realize I was non-binary when I wrote <em><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/148169613-radical-women">Radical Women: A Book of Femku</a></em>, so many of the poems are about navigating the expectations of gender roles in society, the sexual pressures women face, and my love-hate relationship with my body. These poems are raw, gritty, and very underdeveloped in traditional technique, so I&#8217;m not sure you can truly call them &#8220;haiku,&#8221; but they certainly have a senryu spirit and laid the groundwork for my entire poetic career.</p><p><strong>I&#8217;m also interested in learning more about </strong><em><strong>#FemkuMag</strong></em><strong>. What do you enjoy the most about serving as the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of </strong><em><strong>#FemkuMag</strong></em><strong>?</strong></p><p>Oh, that&#8217;s easy. I most enjoy the community I&#8217;ve built. There are many poets who tell me their submitted work was written specifically with <em><a href="https://femkumag.wixsite.com/home">#FemkuMag</a></em> in mind, or that they would only trust me with certain topics. Unfortunately, women and transgender folks are often scrutinized for speaking their truth and most people just want someone, anyone, who will listen to their unique stories. I think it&#8217;s important, crucial even, for underrepresented voices to have a platform; all I do is secure the space and hand them a microphone.</p><p><strong>When and how were you introduced to haiku and Japanese-related poetry?</strong></p><p>My haiku journey began shortly after moving to Detroit, Michigan in 2017. I discovered the Evergreen Haiku Study Group at Michigan State University, run by Michele Root-Bernstein, and attended several meetings. Mike Rehling of <em><a href="https://failedhaiku.com/">Failed Haiku</a> </em>regularly attended the meetings and was kind enough to give me a few haiku history lessons over some delicious Japanese cuisine. <em>Failed Haiku</em> was my first haiku publication credit, the H. Gene Murtha contest was my first placement, and I had a haiga featured in the 2017 Michigan State University &#8220;Haiga Around the World Exhibition,&#8221; so I owe a lot to Mike and the Evergreen Haiku Study Group.</p><p><strong>Jacob D. Salzer, <a href="https://haikupoetinterviews.wordpress.com/2026/05/01/rowan-beckett-minor/">Rowan Beckett Minor</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.zoeglossia.org/">Zoeglossia </a>is a literary organization seeking to pioneer a new, inclusive space for poets with disabilities. Launched in 2017, Zoeglossia is the first such organization in the poetry landscape. The idea is to provide an intersectional community open to a wide range of disability poetics, encouraging conversation and support. <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/collections/159065/disability-poetry-and-poetics">This link</a> leads to a wide variety of poems that explore the experiences and consequences of illnesses and disabilities . .. and I offer a the opening portion of a sample from that collection below.</p><blockquote><p><strong>Number Twenty</strong> by <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/jonathan-mack">Jonathan Mack</a></p><p>This, the story that brings me to you, is one story in twenty. In the other nineteen I am dead. In five stories I&#8217;m dead of AIDS, having suffered every possible infection and died at home, in a variety of hospitals, and in the toilet of a theater. There are seven suicides between the ages of twelve and twenty-five. There are two terrible car accidents &#8212; one involving a drunk driver and one that is entirely my fault. In one story I live only three days and . . .</p><p><strong>Jonathan Mack&#8217;s poem is from </strong><em><strong>This New Breed</strong></em><strong>. Copyright &#169; 2002 by Jonathan Mack.</strong></p></blockquote><p><strong>JoAnne Growney, <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2026/05/resisting-disability-with-poetry-and.html">Resisting Disability with Poetry and Math</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Over the past few years, I have interviewed <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/s/interviews">over one hundred journal editors</a>. Some lit mags want work related to specific themes such as war, social justice or the environment. Some focus on showcasing certain writers, such as women over sixty or Canadian poets. And, of course, many have specific genre parameters: creative nonfiction only, or prose poetry only, flash fiction, long fiction, hybrid works&#8230;</p><p>Yet if there is one commonality among what a majority of editors look for in submissions, it is related to <em>voice.</em></p><p>Stephen Beeber of <em>Conduit:</em> His magazine<em> </em>is a &#8220;venue for voices that aren&#8217;t ready to be recognized by the mainstream.&#8221;</p><p>Cherry Lou Sy of <em>Adroit</em>: &#8220;A strong voice gives a story its soul.&#8221;</p><p>Michelle Lyn King of <em>Joyland</em>: Her magazine &#8220;is most interested in a distinctive voice.&#8221;</p><p>Jennifer Acker of <em>The Common:</em> The editors are &#8220;looking for really strong voice.&#8221;</p><p>Courtney Harler of <em>CRAFT</em>: &#8220;Does [the work] express and capture a truly authentic voice?&#8221;</p><p>Anthony Varallo of <em>Swamp Pink</em> (formerly <em>Crazyhorse</em>): He is interested in &#8220;the voice and energy of the piece.&#8221;</p><p>Sheila Squillante of <em>Fourth River</em>: Regardless of the genre, it is &#8220;incredibly important that the voice of the piece is strong and idiosyncratic and fresh.&#8221;</p><p>What exactly does all this mean?</p><p>In fact, the more I think about the concept of &#8220;voice,&#8221; the more fascinated I find it as a literary element. On YouTube, the question &#8220;<a href="https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=what+is+voice+in+writing">What is voice in writing?</a>&#8221; yields many results, ranging from the obvious to the nuanced and enlightening.</p><p>However, these videos and most <a href="https://www.bing.com/search?q=what+is+a+strong+fictional+voice&amp;gs_lcrp=EgRlZGdlKgkIABBFGDsY-QcyCQgAEEUYOxj5BzIGCAEQABhAMgYIAhAAGEAyBggDEAAYQDIGCAQQABhAMgYIBRAAGEAyBggGEAAYQDIGCAcQRRg7MgcICBDrBxhA0gEIMTU3NWowajmoAgiwAgE&amp;FORM=ANAB01&amp;PC=U531">other queries</a> related to voice tend to clump together two strands of the concept. One strand is The Author&#8217;s Voice. This is your unique stamp as a writer, the singular thing that you and you alone do. This is the Hemingway story you can spot immediately; the Anne Sexton poem you recognize in an instant. This may just be another way of referring to an author&#8217;s <em>style</em>. Yet &#8220;voice&#8221; encompasses more. It&#8217;s bigger than style&#8212;it&#8217;s the author&#8217;s worldview, their vision, recurring themes, favored images, vantage point, social position, the very wellspring of ideas that could only come from them.</p><p>The second strand is The Voice of the Work. Many writers are admirably consistent in their works. They write about the same sorts of things in more or less the same way. I, perhaps like many of you, am not one of these writers. Some of my stories lean lyrical and are deeply serious. Others are bright and wacky. Some are violent; some are light-hearted. If there is a unifying quality that connects all these works to one another, a larger Author Voice umbrella under which my stories gather, someone else might recognize it, but I&#8217;m not sure I can.</p><p>So, in talking about voice as a literary element, it would seem important to tease out these two strands. Invariably, writers would want to know whether voice is something that can be learned. Can you strengthen your writing voice? Can you sharpen it? If so, how? What does it take to shape the voice of a particular work? What does it take to shape your own voice, as a writer?</p><p><strong>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/q-what-are-editors-talking-about">Q: What are editors talking about when they talk about &#8220;voice&#8221;?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been moved by the sound of mourning doves, their plaintive call. Plangent, but somehow unsentimental. A kind of straightforward sound of mourning. How does the resonant coo evoke our human sorrow or mourning. Of course, for the bird, that&#8217;s just the sound they make. They are not more mournful, despite the delicate crepuscular pinky grey of their feathers and this hollow and hollowing song.</p><p>We often read the natural world assuming its signs signify our signified, as if these signifiers were human. A pathetic fallacy, but also a deeply felt cultural interconnection. Our human world has evolved in dialogue with these signs. Dark skies, brooding clouds, joyful birdsong, joyous brooks. Here we find voice for our feelings.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/birdflute-eggstone-mourning-and-pathetic">Bird=flute, egg=stone: Mourning and pathetic fallacy</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>He said, writer&#8217;s block is a myth, look around, the city will provide words for your poem</strong></p><p>And the city spoke to me in red.<br>All instructions and warnings.<br><em>Private Property. No Entry.<br>Trespassers will be prosecuted.<br>Do not urinate here.<br>Right Arrow. Left Arrow. Straight and Right.<br>U-Turn. No Free Left.<br>Vote for __ . Or maybe for __.<br>Residents Only. Beware of Dog.<br>No Parking. Tow Zone.<br>Speedbump ahead.</em></p><p>And I imagined these signs instead:<br>Shhh. Parrots Nesting in the Rain Tree.<br>Take Left. Jacaranda tree in bloom.<br>Look up &#8211; full moon tonight. (And Venus!)<br>Free books: Take one. Take two.<br>Pin your poem to this board. (Poets, This Way!)<br>Hang your art here.<br>We are not busking. Sing with us.<br>Feel the grass. Take off your shoes.<br>No swimming from 2 to 4 PM. The fish are napping.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/an-april-full-of-poems-5">An April full of poems -5</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is a poem written by Frank O&#8217;Hara in April 1954 titled after Rilke&#8217;s &#8220;Aus Einem April.&#8221; In <em>Frank O&#8217;Hara: Poet Among Painters</em>, Marjorie Perloff refers to O&#8217;Hara&#8217;s poem as a &#8220;loose adaptation&#8221; of Rilke&#8217;s. David Lehman has called it a &#8220;deliberate mistranslation.&#8221;</p><p>Frankly, I&#8217;m not sure what &#8216;translation&#8217; has to do with O&#8217;Hara&#8217;s poem at all.</p><p>If I had to find words for it, I&#8217;d say O&#8217;Hara borrowed the structure of Rilke&#8217;s poem and cast it into the shape of Rilke&#8217;s &#8220;Aus Einem April.&#8221; The title acknowledges this <em>Aus-Einem-April mode</em>; there is no epigraph pointing to Rilke because the pleasure of an O&#8217;Hara poem (much like the pleasure of an Ashbery) comes from reaching the reader who recognizes the source. Even the way O&#8217;Hara closes this poem &#8212; &#8220;and out there everything is turbulent and green&#8221; &#8212; shares almost no bones with Rilke&#8217;s quiet glistenings and &#8220;still&#8221; details ordered by awe.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/4/26/alfie-honest-mistresses-are-lauded">&#8220;Alfie, honest mistresses are lauded&#8230;&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t think it ever would have occurred to me to translate classical Persian poetry if an Iranian friend hadn&#8217;t asked me in the early 2000s if I&#8217;d be interested in working with a now-defunct organization called the International Society for Iranian Culture (ISIC). ISIC, he said, was looking for someone to write the text for a website that would help counter the axis-of-evil caricature of Iranian culture and history that had been current here in the United States since the Islamic Revolution of 1979. The focus of the website would be classical Persian literature. My job would be to make that literature and its place in Iranian and world culture accessible to an online American audience.</p><p>I was immediately interested. Since my wife is from Iran and my son is therefore Iranian-American, I had a real stake in the cultural awareness about Iran that ISIC wanted to engender; and, as a college professor and a writer, not only did I think the educational value of the project was self-evident; I also saw it as an opportunity to learn about a literature I knew next to nothing about. When I asked my friend if ISIC might see that ignorance as disqualifying, he told me not to worry. They actually wanted someone who would approach the literature from well outside the specialized and scholarly contexts in which those texts were usually read and studied.</p><p>My friend put me in touch with the man who was pre-screening those people who&#8217;d been identified as viable candidates for the project, and then he, after a long conversation of which I remember very little, told me I would hear within the next week or so from ISIC&#8217;s executive director, Mehdi Faridzadeh. When I met with Mr. Faridzadeh, however, the project he described to me was not only radically different from the one my friend had told me about; it was one I knew right away that I was not qualified to take on.</p><p>&#8220;We want you to produce,&#8221; he said, &#8220;book-length literary translations of selections from masterpieces of classical Persian literature. All told there are ten. We&#8217;re asking you to do five at a time.&#8221;</p><p>I did not hesitate. I immediately rejected his offer. While I spoke some Persian, I did not read it. How could I possibly presume to translate from it? Surely, I asked, there were bilingual poets and writers capable of doing this work. Why wasn&#8217;t he talking to them? He&#8217;d reached out to them first, he said, but, with very few exceptions, none were interested in working on classical texts, and the ones who did had either not responded to his query or had told him outright that they had other commitments. Since he wanted work to start on the project as soon as possible, he&#8217;d decided not to wait for them.</p><p>I pushed back. Given my lack of the obvious minimum qualifications, I said, I did not see how I could accept his commission or do the work with any integrity. Mr. Faridzadeh responded by pointing out to me something that I already knew, the long history of poets translating works from languages in which they were not literate by relying on informants and what are known in the field of translation as &#8220;trots&#8221; or &#8220;ponies.&#8221; These are literal or near-literal versions done by native speakers that the poets then use as a basis for the literary translations they produce. ISIC would provide me, he said, with English-language versions of the original texts that were widely recognized as valid, as well as access to scholars who could answer my questions and help me with any difficulties. Moreover, he went on, since he wanted the translations to stand on their own as contemporary American literature, as something a general readership might actually enjoy reading, he preferred the idea of working with someone like me, a native English-speaking poet, to working with someone who was bilingual but had neither a poet&#8217;s ear nor a poet&#8217;s way with words.</p><p>I&#8217;d be lying if I said that the prospect of earning myself a footnote in American literary history by producing these translations did not appeal to me. What ultimately persuaded me to accept ISIC&#8217;s commission, however, was a point Mr. Faridzadeh made about the generations of Iranian Americans who did not read Persian and for whom translations like the ones ISIC wanted to publish would be their only access to the classical literature that was part of their heritage. I thought about my son and others like him. They deserved, I thought, access to a version of that heritage that would &#8220;sing&#8221; in their dominant tongue the way the original &#8220;sang&#8221; in Persian. So, I agreed to produce a sample couple of pages from Saadi&#8217;s <em>Gulistan,</em> and when Mr. Faridzadeh called me a week or so later to tell me the project was mine if I wanted it, I accepted, though I was not at all prepared for the politics of the terrain I was entering.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/on-the-trail-of-a-tale-part-four-how-i-came-to-play-a-very-small-role-in-saadis-travels-through-the-world/">On The Trail of a Tale &#8211; Part Four: How I Came to Play a Very Small Role in Saadi&#8217;s Travels Through the World</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There were times I wished<br>I&#8217;d apprenticed to a sushi chef and learned<br>to wield a sharp, clean blade, and times I wanted<br>only to walk the marbled length of museum galleries,<br>opening window after window on the centuries.<br>What I know now came mostly from learning<br>to sit still, opening books and letting language<br>take me out of myself and back again until I<br>could find my way to some shore resembling<br>knowledge, and there at last make my own fire.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/05/some-labor/">Some Labor</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Bezos, Musk and Branson strapping the rich to rockets and shooting them at the moon is, in theory, quite appealing. They won&#8217;t send poets up there even though poets and astronauts are the same &#8211; it&#8217;s just the pay-grade that differs. Both reach out into the vast nothingness, return from the overwhelming emptiness with similar sentiment: the world is fragile. And beautiful. And insignificant.</p><p>Most poets prefer to stay grounded, don&#8217;t stretch to such perilous missions, play it safe, take what earthly succor they can. It seems the further out you are prepared to go the harder it is to attach value to your assignment. I could put on a vest, jog a few laps around the local park, say that I was doing it to save the barn owl or a rare breed of newt and I&#8217;d easily raise a few quid. If I told you I was taking a journey, a voyage into the great unknown of a poem, that this odyssey was taking place inside my head, a venture into the unmeasured depths of the imagination but for a similar cause you&#8217;d be far less inclined to part with your hard earned.</p><p>The first few times I got paid for my writing taught me a lot about how we calculate the value of such work. It was a lesson that came in three stages. I understand it&#8217;s a common experience. On the first occasion I didn&#8217;t feel worthy of the fee, I felt a little shame and embarrassment. The second time the money felt about right, I was comfortable, confident, assured but by the third time I realised that no matter what you paid me it would never be enough. This is not to say that I thought that my work was astonishingly brilliant just that there was a spectacular randomness about putting a price on it. There was an absurdity to it. It couldn&#8217;t be done with any sensible measure. I mean what do you pay for a poem?</p><p>Footballers earn more in a week than nurses do in a year and there aren&#8217;t riots in the streets. A diamond is just a see-through stone and poets go to places astronauts wouldn&#8217;t think to visit. In a parallel universe, somewhere beyond the moon, kids are tossing jewels into mill ponds as wealthy wives string common rocks around their necks.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n62-diamonds-are-not-forever">N&#186;62 Diamonds are (not) forever</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s been a week of bits and pieces in terms of poetry. Let me record some of them here:</p><p>&#8211;In my end of the semester cleaning up of the paperwork piles, I discovered lots of rough drafts of poems. A few of them had some potential. A few I couldn&#8217;t remember where I thought the draft might be going. A few I didn&#8217;t remember writing at all.</p><p>It was good to remember that I did more than my computer files might indicate.</p><p>&#8211;I was making some poetry submissions to literary journals before the bulk of submitting season winds down. There are moments when I wonder why I bother. But the occasional acceptance still makes me happy, so I persist.</p><p>&#8211;As I was looking through my file of finished poems, I realized that I had reviewed a rough draft twice, once back in January when I first finished the rough draft and then again in April, when I had no memory of revising it back in January. I haven&#8217;t circled back to see which draft I like better. It does bother me a bit that I had no memory of doing the original revision.</p><p>&#8211;On Monday, I was thinking about the trinity of nuclear war movies of the 80&#8217;s, and I listened to<a href="https://www.thebulwark.com/p/what-a-house-of-dynamite-gets-right"> this podcast </a>about them and other nuclear war movies, including <em>House of Dynamite</em>. As I drove down to Spartanburg, a line floated through my head: The apocalypse will not be televised. Once my students started writing, I put poem ideas on paper and ended up with a fairly good draft, just two hours after the line flitted through my head.</p><p>It&#8217;s not the way I usually create poems, so I was happy to have that experience, especially in a very busy week.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/04/poetry-creating-notes-at-end-of-term.html">Poetry Creating Notes at the End of a Term</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I know the unseen work behind my writing, my learning, my community building&#8212;but I also know that my &#8220;score&#8221; does not necessarily matter in a subjective field. I might have the same &#8220;stats&#8221; on paper as an award-winning, widely-published writer, yet feel invisible. And someone else might be looking the same way at me, though that&#8217;s harder for me to imagine, of course.</p><p>But I also know for a FACT that I do not do a fraction of what other writers do to seek those opportunities and awards. I spent 36 years of my life working as a public school educator, often putting the needs of others before my own. As a retiree, I get to decide how I spend my time. And though that freedom has indeed given me the gift of ample time to focus on my writing and literary endeavors, it has also given me other freedoms.</p><p>Most importantly, I have the freedom to spend more time with people I love&#8212;my family, my friends&#8212;for laughs and meals and concerts and movies and general ridiculousness. To move my body and spend time in nature. To explore new creative outlets with visual art. To travel outside the timeframe of a school year&#8217;s constraints. (TL/DR: The way I choose the spend my time is not always devoted to my writing life, but to my LIFE life.)</p><p>I may not get the accolades I see my peers receiving, and maybe I have a little pity party every now &amp; then. It feels good to be acknowledged, after all, but that isn&#8217;t why I write. So I&#8217;m good. I will celebrate my writing wins. And I will celebrate yours.</p><p>But I will also celebrate the heron returning to the local lake. The little boy racing his mom down the hill at the forest preserve. I will sing with my husband at a concert or yell at the contestants who annoy us on Top Chef or Survivor. I will talk on the phone with my son to discuss movies, or his upcoming wedding and new home. I will celebrate a friend finishing chemo, a sunny March day after a week of gray and snow. I will celebrate the beauties of the wider world through traveling while I am still able. I will celebrate each small kindness shown to me and try to show the same in return.</p><p>This is kind of keeping score that matters.</p><p><strong>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/keeping-score">Keeping Score</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Frankly, it&#8217;s all too easy to find metaphors for life in the garden. Nurturing seeds with a sense of hope, even expectation, sure. Endeavoring to control outcomes though one cannot control the weather? Yep, that too. Culling, thinning, weeding in an effort to produce abundance, clarity, or beauty? Yes; and waiting and working under hot sun or in the pouring rain and being surprised by hail or hurricane or drought. (You can pop any of those words into the &#8220;search&#8221; bar on this blog page and find times I have written about said weather events.) In the thousands of poems I&#8217;ve drafted during the past 45 years, garden topics and metaphors abound. Lately, though, I&#8217;ve been dwelling on how change&#8211;inevitable in the garden&#8211;presents problems to solve but also lovely surprises. And yeah, there&#8217;s metaphor in that as well. Though people tend to avoid change, change brings a wealth of education in its wake.</p><p>It&#8217;s true that education is often humbling. We work our butts off only to discover we&#8217;ve been doing things wrong, or ineffectively, all along. That&#8217;s one of the things I learned when I began trying to grow things in earnest, and it is also true of my experience writing poems. You have to be willing to make mistakes and accept that you made them if you are going to improve; it <em>doesn&#8217;t </em>mean you have to solve each difficulty in a prescribed way. You can invent! As long as you know that invention sometimes fails, you can learn from it. Create a nonce form for a poem, for example. Or an improvised trellis for a squash vine that got a<em> lot </em>larger than you&#8217;d planned.</p><p>Every year in late winter, I devise a garden plan and order seeds. Every year in early spring, I revise the plan in some way. Every year in mid- to late-spring, the garden looks very different from those designs&#8230;it helps to have a flexible nature, since nature hates rigidity and thrives in its own way. Often unexpected. Sometimes frustrating. Sometimes quite a charming surprise to which I&#8217;m more than happy to adapt&#8211;I welcome the variation! It&#8217;s a process that reminds me of writing. No wonder my gardening and my poems are so connected: the processes are so similar.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/04/28/process-metaphor/">Process &amp; metaphor</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Above the creeping-charlie&#8217;s faultless blue,<br>a chalk-white smudge of contrail arcs<br>across a sky by Watteau. Everything stills.<br>For now,</p><p>driver-attention holds, and brakes are firm and good.<br>Ducks cross in danger and care, those ancient, storied laws.<br>Early light spangles the cottonwood.<br>A flowering crab confettis its applause.</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/mayday">Mayday</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I just roughed out an early draft of my next poetry manuscript (and finally figured out how to automate the Table of Contents in Word&#8212;ha!). It&#8217;s a long way from done: a little short, so I have more writing underway; there&#8217;s a section that might be relatively weak, we&#8217;ll see what I think later; and I will just generally need to revise individual poems and think about the flow within sections. I&#8217;ll take my time with all of it. But the basic structure makes sense, hitting the beats and ideas I have in mind. Plus I&#8217;ve been drafting new poems toward the gaps and, at least for the moment, feel good about most of them. The working title is <em>Spiral Hum.</em></p><p>It&#8217;s Friday here and I fly out on Tuesday, so I&#8217;m in the home stretch on the Storyknife residency. I&#8217;ve had a couple of down days for a variety of reasons, all of which seem inevitable. It rains a lot here in April and gray skies wear on me. Social anxiety in the company of people I&#8217;m just getting to know: for sure. The ms contains tough material and spending time with it can be hard emotionally as well as in craft terms. Sometimes drafting a poem is a total joy, an episode of absorption that leaves me exhilarated. Other days it&#8217;s a grind to haul the stanzas up the hill. It&#8217;s certainly demanding intellectual work to analyze a sheaf of poems and figure out how they could be better versions of themselves. A stretch of two or three hours can burn me out. On a larger scale, I periodically question poetry&#8217;s whole enterprise. A question from Adrienne Rich&#8217;s &#8220;Twenty-One Love Poems&#8221; always haunts me: &#8220;What kind of beast would turn its life into words?&#8221; I&#8217;m still tracking world news as well as the struggles of my loved ones. What gave me the notion that writing is a good idea, in the face of all that?</p><p>Well, the fellowship itself suggests that I should be writing&#8211;that at least a few people in the universe want me to. This interval is a rare gift, so gratitude picks me up and set me on my poetic feet again.</p><p>I&#8217;ve also been reflecting on what about my residency has nourished my desire to write, because in general, it has. For the first time in ages, I have utter privacy to calm down and focus. I know for sure that no one will disturb me all day, though I can wander out and talk to whoever&#8217;s around, if I feel like it. Mostly I don&#8217;t, until five, when we gather for dinner. We do the dishes after and almost always go out for a walk. Then I&#8217;m back to my cabin to write and read. It&#8217;s a nice rhythm. And I would like an excellent lunch delivered to my doorstep every day for the rest of my life, please. (I have eaten very well generally, both here and in town&#8212;special shout-out to Maura&#8217;s salmon, chicken soup, and bison meatloaf; Katie&#8217;s baked goods; and the oyster restaurant on the spit.)</p><p>An equally important factor is Alaska itself. Awe is some of my most powerful poetry fuel. I crack my door and hear owls and eagles. Scary moose are marching around (don&#8217;t even talk to me about bears, who are waking up all over the state and feeling hungry). Yesterday I jumped on one of the staff&#8217;s twice-weekly errands to town so I could walk along Beluga Slough and Bishop Beach. I was hoping to find a hag stone, which I did. I filled my pockets with a variety of other pretty rocks and shells, too. I watched sandhill cranes, newly arrived. I found a mysterious feather, now on my windowsill, although I&#8217;ll leave it here, especially after learning it could be from a juvenile eagle (illegal to transport). The long stretch of sand and tide pools, distant rollers, and the Aleutian mountains beyond were gorgeous, even on a cold, cloudy day. Once, when my head was down, a raptor&#8217;s cry caught my attention. I looked up to see a bald eagle&#8212;they&#8217;re huge&#8212;perched on a carcass only several yards away. It was a dead otter and the eagle was plucking out his eye. Jesus, this is a stark, fierce, awe-inspiring place.</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/05/03/ephemerals-pt-4-awe-and-otters/">Ephemerals pt. 4 (awe and otters)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Grief has chiseled its name in me<br>like a bored kid with a penknife.</p><p>Then again so has love, and<br>I yield willingly to that inscription.</p><p>My heart is a lacework of runnels<br>etched by a million attempts</p><p>at gratitude, even when<br>I am a canyon flooded with tears.</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p>I haven&#8217;t posted a Torah poem here in a while, so here&#8217;s one that I&#8217;m working on this week, arising out of the second part of this week&#8217;s double Torah portion, <a href="https://www.sefaria.org/Leviticus.25.1-27.34?lang=bi&amp;aliyot=1">Behar-Behukkotai.</a></p><p>The Hebrew word &#1495;&#1464;&#1511;&#1463;&#1511; means engraved. <em>Hukkim</em> are the mitzvot that don&#8217;t make intellectual sense (as opposed to <em>mishpatim</em>, justice-commandments.) Sometimes these mitzvot are literally &#8220;inscribed&#8221; on or in us, as in <em>brit milah</em>.</p><p>I started thinking about inscriptions, carving, the ways in which we do or don&#8217;t yield to being changed. The grooves we carve on ourselves through habit, and the grooves life carves on and in us. That&#8217;s what sparked this poem.</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/05/04/carved/">Carved</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Have you ever done something genuinely kind and beautiful and then chose to deliberately keep it to yourself?</p><p>Is there anything soft, gentle that is kept inside &#8212; not necessarily hidden, nor embarrassingly put aside, but rather something to be proud of, and yet untold?</p><p>And what about a day when we do not reach for the phone, for the camera, not even for the pen. A day when we see, feel, touch, taste and do not have the need to tell, when the experience and its briefness (however long it may last) shall be enough.</p><p><strong>Luciana Francis, <a href="https://lucianafrancis.substack.com/p/the-anonymous-life">The Anonymous Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On the first day, the woman making my reading pass had warned me, &#8220;the days will start blending into each other&#8221; and so they have, to the point that I am only half sure that I am writing this from my bed, with Rastafarian music and weed smoke from the pavement below wafting into my room through the window, and not the reading room of the British Library because how can I be really certain that, like Alice, I hadn&#8217;t fallen into a rabbit hole, <em>in another moment down went Alice after it, never once considering how in the world she was to get out again the rabbit-hole went straight on like a tunnel for some way, and then dipped suddenly down, so suddenly that Alice had not a moment to think about stopping herself before she found herself falling down a very deep well either the well was very deep, or she fell very slowly, for she had plenty of time as she went down to look about her and to wonder what was going to happen next,</em></p><p>What happened next was that as I was reading the manuscript, the almost endless repetition of the cursive letters made me wonder if I was not hallucinating all of it, the letters, the writer of those letters, myself, my life, the people around me, the building, the garden house of 19th century Calcutta, or the screeching ambulances of 21st century London, and if I did not exist at all, then who was it that I sometimes saw in mirrors or windows, and who was the I seeing it? Was I really in London in 2026 because if I were, how could I simultaneously be in the suburbs of Calcutta in 1873, and if I were somehow here and there, could I walk out into the garden in Chitpore with cobras, mangoes, litchies, and cats named Baguette, <em>how she longed to get out of that dark hall, and wander about among those beds of bright flowers and those cool fountains, but she could not even get her head through the doorway; &#8220;and even if my head would go through,&#8221; thought poor Alice, &#8220;it would be of very little use without my shoulders. Oh, how I wish I could shut up like a telescope! I think I could, if I only knew how to begin.&#8221; For, you see, so many out-of-the-way things had happened lately, that Alice had begun to think that very few things indeed were really impossible.<br></em><br>At exactly 5 pm, the reading rooms of the library close. Outside the archives, the world seems strange, less and less itself. The bitter pint of Guinness in the Irish pub outside the archives taste like mangoes of a long gone Indian summer.</p><p><strong>Saudamini Deo, <a href="https://beyondsixrivers.fr/2026/04/29/mal-darchives/">Mal d&#8217;archives</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>my heart is broken<br>it is worn out at the knees</em><br>~ Suzanne Vega</p><p>I have forgotten how <br>to do this.</p><p>How to sit with myself<br>on a Wednesday morning <br>and pay attention.</p><p>How to resist<br>the <em>Breaking News</em>.</p><p>How to resist.</p><p><strong>Sharon Brogan, <a href="https://sbpoet.com/2026/04/29/snapshot-poem-29-april-2026/">Snapshot poem 29 April 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 17]]></title><description><![CDATA[the clay-dusted air of the workshop, the rambling treasure hunt for a poem, writing nothing but sonnets for a year, the poets on the farthest end of the table, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-17</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-17</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 00:03:32 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/f676c1db-853e-4005-82c0-9399f4af9e00_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: the clay-dusted air of the workshop, the rambling treasure hunt for a poem, writing nothing but sonnets for a year, the poets on the farthest end of the table, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s a bright morning in Yorkshire. The trees are in full blossom and there&#8217;s a fierce little breeze which scatters their petals like confetti. Today is Earth Day. It&#8217;s also the twenty second day of National Poetry Writing Month; a writing phenomenon which began in the States and now extends around the globe. According to the NaPoWriMo model, a prompt is issued and poets are invited to write (and share) a poem in response .</p><p>Yes, that&#8217;s right &#8211; a poem a day, every day, for 31 days. I can&#8217;t remember when Kim and I began following this crazy instruction &#8211; seven years ago? Nine? Ten? My blurriness is partially the result of late-night-writing-sessions and sleep deprivation by the end of the month; partly the sense of almost-total immersion in the world of the poem.</p><p>For all of those years I&#8217;ve been doing NaPoWriMo, April has functioned as a sort of creative reservoir &#8211; a time when I know I will produce a stack of drafts which will go some way to sustaining me through the rest of the year. It&#8217;s not just about quantity either: the daily discipline; the heady exposure of knowing that I&#8217;ll publish my early drafts on social media no matter how imperfect or incomplete; the delicious combination of mutual support, appreciation and competition I always feel when I&#8217;m writing with Kim &#8211; there&#8217;s no doubt that I produce some of my best writing in April.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/running-with-the-pack-napowrimo">Running with the Pack: NaPoWriMo</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Early in my social media times I began adding a link to a piece of music to each of my poems. I&#8217;ve been doing this for maybe &#8230; eight years?? My <a href="https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4VaWtmnbV9eG00P63Jf2H7?si=52cxujeNRSuwjNJIY3Q75w&amp;pi=hTMr2MUcS9yR8">playlist</a> of these songs exceeds 30 hours now. Why am I doing this? The thing is &#8230;</p><p>A poem takes us into a waiting room.</p><p>We open a magazine on a random page and read. The person next to us changes their position on a plastic chair. The wall clock ticks on. The air is stale, infused with the deodorant of the man who has left before we entered. These lines. We reread them, not having quite got it. A fly that has landed on the table is shuffling its legs.</p><p>Then we look up.</p><p>Outside, mute, the branches of a tree. Traffic. A person hurries down the street and a piece of paper falls from their trouser pocket, but they walk on, not noticing.</p><p>We look back at what we&#8217;ve just read and <em>it has changed.</em></p><p><strong>Kati Mohr, <a href="https://pi-and-anne.com/2026/04/27/linking-and-shifting-between-poetry-and-music/">Linking and shifting between poetry and music</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Like many people, I am intrigued by bird calls. Where we live in the foothills of the Mount Lofty Ranges, just out of Adelaide, South Australia, we are graced by many types of native birds. However in the forty years we have lived here, the number of species found in the area had dropped dramatically. This decline has been well documented and is due to a combination of habitat destruction, mostly for human housing, and climate change. Nevertheless, most of the time, the air is filled with the calls of birds, some regular residents, others infrequent passers-by. But what are they saying to each other? what are they trying to tell us?</p><p>Here are a couple of videos I have made, in which I give voices to the birds in different ways. Both these videos have had many screenings in Australia and around the world.</p><p><strong>Ian Gibbins, <a href="https://www.iangibbins.com.au/2026/04/24/the-voices-of-birds/">The voices of birds&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>With Birds and Duduk</em></p><p>In this piece, I&#8217;m playing a duduk, an Armenian double reed instrument made out of apricot wood. I&#8217;m also using live digital processing and recordings of birds.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/this-instrument-is-made-of-trees">This instrument is made of trees and birds</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And there is this beautiful thing Ted Berrigan said, as quoted by Ron Padgett:</p><blockquote><p>The gods demand of the system that a certain number of people sing, like the birds do, and it somehow was given to me to be one of those people&#8212;and I mean I did have a choice&#8212;I could have decided not to, to be a truck driver or a filmmaker. But I like doing that, and I feel that probably the major reason I write is because the gods might destroy&#8230; the whole thing could fall apart. I lift my voice in song. I lift my voice in song.</p></blockquote><p>Valium numbs every part of the song that seeks to keep things whole in me.</p><p>The administrative precision of the hospital emphasizes the humiliation of being embodied. I will always dread it. But I won&#8217;t spend this week consumed by the worry of waiting for results.</p><p>I lift my voice in song instead, to quote Ted.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/4/21/wax">What started with wax.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>I say to the tree growing inside me</strong></p><p>It is one thing to taste your bitter<br>leaves but now I hear your barbets<br>all day, their song is crawling out<br>of my ear, do you know they are<br>planning to escape?</p><p>I think they saw a cloudless sky<br>dancing in my dreams.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/an-april-full-of-poems-4">An April full of poems -4</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>During bouts of outdoor work, when I&#8217;m mindlessly weeding, pruning, or doing soil prep, I&#8217;ve been mulling over whether&#8211;and if so, how&#8211;I&#8217;ve changed as to writing poetry (<a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/04/16/nopomonth-but/">see closing paragraph of last week&#8217;s post</a>). There are vague recollections of getting really on a roll and drafting new work into late hours of the night when I was 20 or 21 years old. But <em>how</em> I went about it, what approach I took to writing back then? I barely recall. It&#8217;d require research into my old journals to figure that out; <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2025/09/21/points-of-view/">there, I dare not go!</a> And what happened to all the poems I typed up on my heavy, electric typewriter (an early 1970s Adler, if I recall aright)? They&#8217;ve mostly vanished, though a few reside in my attic in several boxes of old literary magazines which chose to publish my efforts. [&#8230;]</p><p>I&#8217;ve just finished reading poems by the 16th c. Korean poet H&#335; Nans&#335;rh&#335;n, a brilliant person who started writing before age 8 and died at 27. A young person all her life, by our standards, and a prodigy. A frequent theme of hers is yearning for a husband or lover who is far away, a trope as common in Asian poetry as in European poetry. The lover has gone to war, or been exiled, or is in another region on work for the king/emperor/church, or is at sea. Nans&#335;rh&#335;n frequently wrote in the style of the Chinese poets who penned this sort of yearning poem; in fact, her husband was often distant, trying to work his way into a higher-status position, while she was left at his home with her in-laws. Her desire may not even have been so much sexual longing as just plain loneliness. Her work, even when it is not more romantic in subject, is suffused with an overall sorrowful yearning.</p><p>I recall having that feeling when I was in my teens and early twenties. Often, I wasn&#8217;t even sure what it was I yearned for or desired specifically. I just felt the sense that something was missing in my life, and I suspect that many of my earliest poems aimed to describe vague heartbreak about a kind of emptiness. (I assure you, my work was terrible&#8211;no comparison to Nans&#335;rh&#335;n can be made here.) However, when I read her poems, that&#8217;s what resonates with me. [&#8230;]</p><p>[W]hile I recognize and appreciate the sentiment that accompanies yearning, my work has not been animated or inspired by <em>that particular kind</em> of longing for awhile now. It&#8217;s not that I lack desires, but the tenor of the feeling is different. Romantic love or an unrealized self? Not so much. The longing is for new places, further questions, better solutions, comfortable nearness, safe space, peace. I find much to learn every day, much to love, to admire. In spite of everything.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/04/20/learning-yearning/">Learning &amp; yearning</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Kelli Russell Agodon came out to be our featured reader at the J. Bookwalter Poetry Series (just rebooted!) on Thursday night and she did a great job, as did the open mic-ers, and a wonderful audience. It&#8217;s always a pleasure to hang out with poets here in Woodinville, and the weather obliged, not being too cold or too hot, and the evening ending in golden light as the last reader read.</p><p>We also got to introduce Catherine Broadwall&#8217;s upcoming book, Afterlife, which will debut on May 5, and she&#8217;ll be our featured reader on June 18. I feel very lucky to have so many talented friends and writers around for inspiration.</p><p>Kelli read from her upcoming book with Copper Canyon, <em><a href="https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/books/accidental-devotions-by-kelli-russell-agodon-2/">Accidental Devotions</a></em>, which if you haven&#8217;t thought about preordering, think about it! It&#8217;s got Alexa solving existential crises, mermaid dreams, Emily Dickinson&#8217;s phone messages, and a whimsical take on a world in chaos. Kelli and I have been friends since before our first books were taken, so we were reminiscing a bit, how we&#8217;ve changed as people and writers, how we haven&#8217;t changed. I think both of us have become better writers, and part of that is a function of having supportive writer friends, and part of it is not giving up, and another part is becoming more comfortable with who we are as people, which somehow translates into poetry.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/kellis-reading-in-woodinville-goldfinches-returns-with-cherry-and-crabapple-birthdays-approaching-and-the-state-of-publishing-and-fear-of-failure/">Kelli&#8217;s Reading in Woodinville, Goldfinches Returns with Cherry and Crabapple, Birthdays Approaching and the State of Publishing (And Fear of Failure)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;In Geologic Time, It Happened Just Seconds Ago&#8221; is a poem that came together over many years. In 2005 I first jotted down notes about the canyon, the view from Airport Mesa, and the Milky Way while on my honeymoon in Sedona, Arizona. Over the next twenty years or so, I returned to that material now and then, but never had <em>the poem</em> in my grasp<em>,</em> just images. After my divorce, I went back to those old, failed drafts to see what I could find. That excavation led me to a poem that is, in its own way, about excavation, and about seeing things later through a different lens.</p><p>What helped me find and shape the poem was seeing an opportunity to play with repetition and variation. Like jazz musicians, we writers can improvise and riff! I&#8217;ve noted some of that riffing in the handwritten annotation below.</p><p>As I note here, I saw the opening&#8212;&#8220;Our honeymoon was a strand of scenic overlooks&#8221;&#8212;as an opportunity to play with variations on that sentence. Mid poem it becomes &#8220;Our honeymoon was a stranded scene I overlooked,&#8221; and in the end it becomes &#8220;Our honeymoon was a strand, a strangeness, a look ahead.&#8221; Riffing on the words in those sentences inspired me to play with other words and to find possible variations. Ultimately I built the form of the poem around those variations and revisions/distortions, with the end words in lines 1-3 (stand, wrote, scenic) corresponding to the end words in lines 4-6 (strange, penned, scene), and so on.</p><p><strong>Maggie Smith, <a href="https://maggiesmith.substack.com/p/behind-the-scenes-look-in-geologic">Behind-the-Scenes Look: &#8220;In Geologic Time, It Happened Just Seconds Ago&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the summer of 2023, the poet and translator Aaron Poochigian posted on social media a link to an article about an unusual archaeological find: On a fragment of an amphora from Spain at some time in the first four centuries CE, some words were scratched into the wet clay that are quite different from the usual commercial information. The article&#8217;s authors identified the words as coming from Vergil&#8217;s <em>Georgics.</em> Theorizing about the sort of person who might have inscribed poetry on a pot, they note that children and youths were commonly employed in pottery manufacture of the time, and that the <em>Georgics</em> might well have been used in pedagogy in the agricultural area where the fragment was found. Whether or not their scenario is likely, it struck a chord with me, recalling my teenage encounters with Vergil&#8217;s hexameters, a rhythm I&#8217;ve tried to echo with the stresses of modern English, and used in several poems. The poem I based on this article has finally, <em>finally,</em> appeared in the little magazine Vergilius, so I can show it to you.</p><p><strong>On some words of the </strong><em><strong>Georgics</strong></em><strong>,<br>inscribed on a fragment of Roman amphora unearthed in Spain</strong></p><p><em>Journal of Roman Archaeology, June 5, 2023</em></p><p>Picture him, down on one knee in the clay-dusted air of the workshop,<br>bent to the wet terra cotta. He&#8217;s mouthing the sounds of a poem,<br>working the spelling out roughly; misplacing the start of the sentence&#8212;<br>wrong, but we see what he&#8217;s after. Underside up, the amphora,<br>waiting, still soft, is a near-irresistible draw to his stylus.</p><p>Everyone writes on amphorae&#8212;the contents, the names of the sellers&#8212;<br>what&#8217;s to deter him? His memory&#8217;s zephyred away to the schoolroom<br>now, and he&#8217;s singing it&#8212;quietly, quietly&#8212;wheat fields and grapevines,<br>oxen and beehives; he&#8217;s singing the gyre of the year in the heavens,<br>Bacchus and Ceres. He&#8217;s etching his love of it into the softness [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Maryann Corbett, <a href="https://maryanncorbett.substack.com/p/vergil-dac-hex-and-me">Vergil, dac-hex, and me</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Much is written about how to be a good listener. Far less is written about how to be a poetic one, or rather, how to listen for the poetic.</p><p>When I write poems for strangers as I do on my podcast, <a href="http://poeminthat.com/">There&#8217;s a Poem in That</a>, I I don&#8217;t write affirming poems that reflect the client back to themselves, merely. Instead, I take a more assertive stance. It&#8217;s not about listening and repeating, it&#8217;s a poetic processing I&#8217;m still learning how to think about.</p><p>Nomenclature for this practice can still only be borrowed. The stranger asking me to write a poem for them&#8212;do I call them a <em>client</em> (medicine)? A <em>subject</em> (visual arts)? A <em>querent</em> (Tarot)? Do I talk about this work as <em>clinical</em>? <em>Service-oriented</em>? <em>Socially engaged</em>? <em>A healing art</em>? Isn&#8217;t it all those things?</p><p>Listening, too isn&#8217;t enough of a word for what constitutes the rambling treasure hunt for a poem in someone else&#8217;s story. The process is more journalistic than therapy-based, but art&#8217;s the goal. I get in there, and I tangle. It&#8217;s almost physical. I tangle with what people try to tell me.</p><p>My standard three hours of interview provide ample opportunity to learn whether, and how, to challenge my querents&#8217; narratives, test assumptions, and clarify loose language. I begin to make demands. If someone is bold enough to require a poem from me; I&#8217;m emboldened to require they take the project seriously. I do them the favor of holding them to task.</p><p>Active listening is one thing; <em>proactive</em> listening is a more recently advocated set of advanced techniques in which the listener pushes back a little harder in a more deliberate effort to understand not just the words a person is saying but what, in fact, they mean by them. It&#8217;s a kind of parsing in which a subject&#8217;s words need not be taken at face value if their meaning is obscure. It&#8217;s worthwhile work for poets, who are trained to interrogate the language.</p><p>I listen for images, metaphors, motifs, patterns, and archetypal hero&#8217;s journey stuff. But I also listen for those narrative gaps in querents&#8217; stories into which a poetic conversation can fit where nothing else seems likely to. I hasten to those clearings in a client&#8217;s imagination where only a poem might spark new fire.</p><p><strong>Todd Boss, <a href="https://toddbosspoet.substack.com/p/call-it-anthrophrasis">Call it &#8220;Anthrophrasis&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My Jesus in the World poems can demand a willing suspension of disbelief, since Jesus is doing activities that he didn&#8217;t do in the Gospels: bowling, going to a holiday cookie swap, helping with hurricane clean up, and so on. But I worried that mention of a midlife crisis would disrupt that suspension of disbelief.</p><p>This morning, the solution came to me, and it&#8217;s so obvious I hesitate to admit that it didn&#8217;t come to me sooner. I can take out the reference to a mid-life crisis. Let the reader decide why Jesus is buying a run-down house to renovate.</p><p>There are so many wonderful ways this poem could go&#8211;it&#8217;s so wonderful to have a glimmer of an idea that&#8217;s closer to fully recognized than just a whisp and to have poem creation to look forward to in the week to come.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/04/jesus-remodels-fixer-upper.html">Jesus Remodels a Fixer Upper</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve noticed that more of us are questioning the platform. Like me, these other users &#8212; most of whom, in my case, are artists or writers &#8212; don&#8217;t want to leave a place where they&#8217;ve staked out a long-time presence and do have a sense of community, but they are also putting more energy into their own websites, blogs, and other online forms that are not corporate, not part of the big system, and remain under one&#8217;s own control. They are also hungry for other forms of activity and community that require &#8212; and acknowledge &#8212; genuine connection and greater attention. I&#8217;m not going to leave the site, but I&#8217;m now much more aware of what it is, how it affects me, and how I want to use it.</p><p>None of what I&#8217;ve based my life upon is disposable. When we take the time to create a work of art, to play or listen to music, grow a garden, learn a language, write a set of poems, or build a relationship, we do so because our effort feels worthwhile and we hope the result will last. Our lives themselves are short; time is precious. I want to make intentional choices and to spend most of my time in the real world, as positively as possible. So I think the right thing for me is to limit my intake of news to what&#8217;s necessary for knowing what is going on, and not get drawn into the maelstrom of debates and opinions; to limit my time on social media; to write as thoughtfully as possible, to keep learning, to devote myself to music and art and the people I care about &#8212; many of whom are online friends, some of whom I met through Instagram itself &#8212; but in a thoughtful way that honors the best aspects of who we are and what we respect in each other.</p><p><strong>Beth Adams, <a href="https://cassandrapages.substack.com/p/instagram-revisited">Instagram, Revisited</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>So where are we now with the gift economy as artists/writers/creatives? I remember when I started blogging 2000 years ago and it was very much an exchange of ideas, freely given. I remember when I saw blogs like <em>Brain Pickings</em> (now <em><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/">The Marginalian</a></em>) monetize. It was the first blog I can remember doing that and it blew my mind. Like, jealous! A bit. But also, it seemed odd? And now I think, how my life would have been so much better if I&#8217;d figured all that out way back when. These days I still struggle <a href="https://ko-fi.com/Z8Z112DALH">with the whole Ko-fi thing </a>:) And I&#8217;ve whined about how maybe I should move to Substack all the time and then never do.</p><p>And now the question, the problem of AI, stealing our gifts but also messing up the gift economy. And then the feeling that it&#8217;s foolish to be putting almost anything on the internet at all. I honestly don&#8217;t know what to do with all these thoughts currently. Because just the pure giving online has brought me a lot of goodness in this world. So anyway, I&#8217;m sitting with the Wittgenstein quotation, the gift as a problem to solve.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/thegift">Live Like an Artist &#8211; Thinking about The Gift</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This week, on a tiny writing retreat, I&#8217;ve been thinking about the idea of running without fuel in the tank. And sometimes, not just fuel: no oil, no coolant, and the car needs some work as well. I&#8217;ve been thinking about what makes it possible to move forward when your resources are depleted. To be your best self, whatever that self is.</p><p>I used to find that whenever I traveled, I ran on empty. I was eating badly, not exercising, I lost connection with my game, and when I got back, I grasped at reconnecting with my life. But I like to think that being able to be my best&#8212;my most creative self, my most wild and fun self, my most dedicated self to Red Hen self, my most focused self&#8212;all requires some care, attention.</p><p>Some people need a lot of time with other people to feel good. I need a certain amount of alone time, and I need to spend that alone time reading, writing, or exercising, not doomscrolling. The apps raise my anxiety, and they convince me that everyone else&#8217;s life is much better than my life. They give me a fidgety unhappy edgy mash of dark to mess.</p><p>Alternatively, reading centers me, exercise brings my brain into focus, and writing reminds me of who I am. During my alone time, I rein in my urge to deep-dive, and I return to my focus. [&#8230;]</p><p>On this, my birthday week, I think of Molly Fisk&#8217;s poem &#8220;<a href="https://oneartpoetry.com/2025/03/08/three-poems-by-molly-fisk/">Cedar Waxwings</a>.&#8221; It is a good example of finding yourself through silence. It&#8217;s a poem that makes me think about healing and finding grace and getting back to equilibrium, and all of those things that I hope are possible while I am breathing, writing, finding my pulse.</p><p>So much depends on my finding my breath again. On refilling my tank. On resisting mournful isolation and embracing good solitude. I look to Molly, now, who is such a centered, soulful person. When I talk with her, when I hear her, her voice is large and surrounds me, and I feel like she is someone who climbed a mountain and saw the surrounding fields and all the trees, who saw devastation, too, and managed to stay sane and lived to tell the tale. She&#8217;s at the center of her own stillness, writing and seeing. Let us all aspire to such grace.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/solitude-stillness-and-sanity-on">Solitude, Stillness &amp; Sanity: On Remembering Yourself Through the Empty</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m back from the New Orleans Poetry Festival, where I taught a surrealist poetry class with poet and librettist Melissa Studdard. We were the last class, which made me a little worried because I thought everyone might be tired and thinking about midday snacks &amp; drinks&#8212;however, I was so wrong! What a joy to be overfilled with people&#8212;two rooms, all chairs taken, and people on the floor&#8212;all writing surreal poems. It made me realize that even with everything in the world, people still want to create something, to write poems, to be in community. I needed that reminder.</p><p>Melissa and I also did a little photoshoot for our poetry series, <em><a href="https://www.youtube.com/@PoemsYouNeed">Poems You Need</a></em>, and I, of course, wore the wrong shoes and sliced my foot (this should be no surprise to anyone who knows me&#8212;I always wear the wrong shoes).</p><p>The problem was&#8212;we had no tissues to stop the blood; it was just me, bleeding onto my <a href="https://www.dsw.com/product/italian-shoemakers-mattea-sandal/609727?activeColor=001">discount Italian flip-flops</a> and the sidewalk like a very low-budget horror film. Our photographer, who turned out to be a quick-thinking hero, pulled out a tiny white baby sock (clean! her son&#8217;s!) she&#8217;d been using as a lens cover and saved the day. (And yes, I was fine, no stitches, just alcohol, Neosporin, and a very tight bandaid!)</p><p><strong>Kelli Russell Agodon, <a href="https://kelliagodon.substack.com/p/the-world-is-too-much-and-also-beautiful">The World Is Too Much and Also Beautiful</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Being at a yarn show with hundreds of people is a complete contrast to my one-to-one coaching or the times when it&#8217;s just me writing poetry, but there is also a lovely cross over with my values of being helpful, listening to people and taking time for reflection. And this week while simply being in a show ground I have felt the lovely tingle of tears of happiness in my eyes when recounting moments that have brought me pure joy in my life and listening to other people tell me theirs. I have laughed a lot and remembered to stay in the moment because after all it is the moment that counts. Oh, and I remembered to still myself and say thank you when complimented by a stranger so that I actually got to feel the complete glow of how that feels.</p><p>Here&#8217;s to finding the ways we laugh with others, supporting those we love and being ourselves in the moment.</p><p><em>Graphene</em>, from my first collection <em>Magnifying Glass</em>, is shining in my mind as a great poem with which to end this blog&#8230;for the wonder of celebrating the shine and the marvel of being human.</p><p><strong>Graphene</strong></p><p>Perhaps, before their pencil, in that building</p><p>it was in me &#8211; that flat form carbon atom;</p><p>hexagonally honeycombed<br>undiscovered and waiting.</p><p>And before that, did it come from a star?</p><p>Maybe it was once inside you.<br>You are a study in graphene:<br>cleaved graphite, harder than diamond,</p><p>stronger than steel.</p><p>Exceptional.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/04/27/three-times-a-yarn-show/">THREE TIMES A YARN SHOW</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>over the last couple of years, by far my richest and most rewarding poetry experiences have been the launches of work by long-time friends. these gatherings mean an immense amount to me, and i wouldn&#8217;t trade my participation for anything in the world. but &#8211; there is always a but &#8211; the very things that make these these celebrations so joyful, so moving, and so special &#8211; their warmth and intimacy &#8211; are also the things that make them tricky. and by &#8220;tricky&#8221; i mean&#8230; what, precisely? i suppose i<em> must</em> mean the sensation of emptiness that assails me in the midst of the social. [&#8230;]</p><p>people are very mysterious to me: how they think, feel, fit together, move through the world. i can &#8211; and do &#8211; enjoy and admire many of them &#8211; but i do not understand them even slightly. it&#8217;s like&#8230; it&#8217;s like life is a fundamentally different force for most humans than it is for me. they have all of these experiences, achievements, ideas, relationships, and these things fill them up, or they enlarge them, give them a shape and a substance, a weight in the world; they anchor them to reality and to each other. for myself, life isn&#8217;t like that, it&#8217;s momentum without mass, just restless moving energy; it forces me forward, and it thrusts itself through me, but there&#8217;s nothing to hold on to, nothing to build on or around. i feel <em>flimsy</em>, i guess. i feel.</p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/morning-pages-f79">MORNING PAGES</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I look up and away from the screen, there is a community I adore. Throughout multiple visits to a local wetland, I watched a discarded iced donut in the grass slowly get eaten away. Simply because I went for a walk to escape nonsense, I once observed ants protect aphids on a plant called Fireweed because the ants love the honeydew that the aphids produce. Community is everywhere. Symbiosis is necessary. Communication is necessary. Ten years now I have bent down to a plant or pointed to a bird and said their name to my husband. And now he says them back to me, his finger pointing up at the sky.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/rich-rich">Rich Rich</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve drafted three poems now, one each morning. I&#8217;m also accumulating a windowsill full of spruce and alder cones, bits of moss and quartz, and other stray items: a rose hip, a mollusk shell, dried stalks of some kind of aster.</p><p>I hear owls at night: the deep hoots of a great horned owl, the faster, higher calls of a northern saw-whet owl. I missed some aurora activity last night, though. I gave up and went to bed at a quarter after midnight, thinking it was too cloudy, and others saw the flickering just fifteen minutes later.</p><p>Heading toward summer, Alaska, or this part of it anyway, is gaining five minutes of light a day. The sun currently sets at 9:30 but the glow lingers longer, hovering at the horizon until 10:30 or later.</p><p>Today, Saturday, is brilliantly bright, at least for now. The snow-blanketed volcanoes across Cook Inlet are perfectly clear. Directly across from my desk rises the cone of Augustine (Chu Nula, translation in progress). Visible at the edge of my view is Iliamna (Ch&#8217;nagat&#8217;in, One that stands above). I have to walk outside to see Redoubt (Bentuggezh K&#8217;enulgheli, One that has a notched forehead).</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/04/22/ephemera-pt-3-the-wild-life/">Ephemera pt. 3 (the wild life)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today, my birthday started the day off with French toast made for me by J and sitting down to write some poems to catch up on NaPoWriMo hi-jinks I have fallen behind on. We don&#8217;t really have plans for the day since J has three gigs today stretching from early afternoon til 2 or 3 am. So I am on my own, and will probably work on editing things, tidy up the bedroom, and watch something trashy later. [&#8230;]</p><p>In the end 51 was a wild year. Depressing on a global scene, and dysfunctional even on a level that my previous half-century had not seen. Yet, on a personal level, things feel good, though ever precarious financially (but then again, while things are more expensive, I have never quite been flush there even when they were cheaper.) I probably wrote over a hundred poems, edited dozens of chapbooks, made many collages and cover designs. I published three physical books (one a regular full-length collection, one a text/visual hybrid, and another special-edition hardcover w/ fauxtographs for Patreon. ) There were also a handful of e-zine editions. A smattering of video poems. Meanwhile there have been countless movies, many plays and musicals, occasional weekends away, and of course, the wedding last summer, which was a lot of work, but also a lot of fun.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/04/52.html">52</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Once upon a time, around the time I first moved to London, I wrote nothing but sonnets for a year. They weren&#8217;t strictly sonnets, because they mostly didn&#8217;t rhyme and when they did rhyme they didn&#8217;t follow the right patterns; the metre, to the extent there was one, was rough and ready even by my standards. Never mind. I&#8217;d been reading a lot of Robert Lowell (possibly too much). The not-quite-sonnet tradition goes further back still.</p><p>More interesting, looking back, was how addicted to the form I was. I couldn&#8217;t stop writing and whatever I wrote came out in fourteen lines. Here is Ken Gordon, writing about his own sonnetification in <a href="https://thesonneteer.substack.com/p/sonnet-by-other-means">Sonnet by Other Means</a>: &#8220;It was like a fever. I began writing sonnets continuously. Daily. Sometimes two or three (or even four) in a day. I was like a chain-smoker: One sonnet lit another.&#8221; I don&#8217;t think I ever wrote four in a day, but yes&#8212;it was like that.</p><p>Are people drawn to certain forms? <a href="https://thesonneteer.substack.com/p/sonnet-by-other-means">It&#8217;s a good question</a>. I am still a sonnet reader, but I haven&#8217;t started a new one in years. Maybe it is also a question of timing: to everything its season and perhaps particularly to sonnets, that form which is so contained, so combustible, and apparently inexhaustible.</p><p>You can read <a href="https://thesonneteer.substack.com/p/these-days">one of those London sonnets</a> in the <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/15609483-the-sonneteer?utm_source=mentions">The Sonneteer</a>. I am grateful to Ken not only for taking it, but for providing the title&#8212;the only title possible, but I didn&#8217;t know that. The poem riffs on Jackson Browne&#8217;s <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9bcztN7NmA&amp;list=RDX9bcztN7NmA&amp;start_radio=1">song of the same name</a> (written when he was a teenager, made famous by Nico).</p><p><strong>Jem Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/poetry-notebook-240426">Poetry Notebook, 24/04/26</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Several years ago, rummaging through the archives of the Academy of American Poets, I came upon a box labeled &#8220;Ballots 1950&#8221; &#8212; the record of the secret vote by the chancellors the year the Academy&#8217;s prestigious fellowship was awarded to E.E. Cummings, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2016/07/18/e-e-cummings-academy-of-american-poets/">catapulting him into renown</a>. The voting process is a black box &#8212; no one outside the Academy ever finds out who else is in the running and by how much the winner wins.</p><p>Leafing through the ballots, one other name appeared over and over, so much so that I was impelled to count.</p><p><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2017/03/10/elizabeth-bishop-efforts-of-affection-a-memoir-of-marianne-moore/">Marianne Moore</a> had lost by one vote, never knowing how close she had come. It would be many more years until, at 77, she was finally awarded the fellowship.</p><p>Long before that, before she won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award (<a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2022/11/30/rachel-carson-national-book-award-speech/">sharing a table</a> with Rachel Carson at the ceremony), Moore had set down her views on writing in a series of essays later collected in the out-of-print gem <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Predilections-Marianne-Moore/dp/0670572764/?tag=braipick-20">Predilections</a></em> (<em><a href="https://search.worldcat.org/title/185490">public library</a></em>). Pulsating through them is a reckoning with the impossible task of the writer &#8212; to weave tapestries of truth and meaning from the tenuous thread of words on the ramshackle loom of language.</p><p>In an essay titled &#8220;Feeling and Precision,&#8221; Moore writes:</p><blockquote><p>Feeling at its deepest &#8212; as we all have reason to know &#8212; tends to be inarticulable. If it does manage to be articulate, it is likely to seem overcondensed, so that the author is resisted as being enigmatic or disobliging or arrogant.</p></blockquote><p>How we name what we feel is not so much a matter of our writing style as of our style of being, because in order to articulate something we must first apprehend it and we apprehend every smallest thing with the whole person &#8212; with the frame of reference that is our entire life, the sum of our experience and memory. When &#8220;one of New York&#8217;s more painstaking magazines&#8221; asked Moore to distill her poetic style into a formula, she fought back the &#8220;dictatorial&#8221; reflex to quip:</p><blockquote><p>You don&#8217;t devise a rhythm, the rhythm is the person, and the sentence but a radiograph of the personality.</p></blockquote><p>And yet a personality can write with more or less persuasion &#8212; that is, write more or less well &#8212; depending on what the person brings to the writing.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/04/23/marianne-moore-predilections-writing/">Marianne Moore on the Three Elements of Persuasive Writing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This week, I attended a phenomenal reading at the Poetry Foundation featuring Ashley M. Jones, <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/2797746-aimee-nezhukumatathil?utm_source=mentions">Aimee Nezhukumatathil</a>, Donika Kelly, and Patricia Smith. The poems asked a great deal of us&#8212;our attention, our emotional depth, our fullest humanity. They were not always easy&#8212;that is, they did not always say the easy or obvious thing. They did not lead with something &#8220;everyone can relate to&#8221; to win us over. They often centered on confronting and difficult subjects.</p><p>And <em>that&#8217;s</em> one of the things I love about poetry, the way it can immediately deliver identity and experience grounded in the complex and ongoing web of history. In other words, these poems were <em>ambitious</em>. They seemed to hope to outlast their moment in the grit, music, and scope of what they offered and asked of the listener. I felt challenged. I felt <em>moved</em>.</p><p>It made me reflect on how I&#8217;ve been teaching writing for 14 years, and my list of similes for what the process is like has grown stranger by the year.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/poems-for-your-weekend-c18">Poems for Your Weekend</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the opening poem in this collection, &#8220;Dear Life,&#8221; Popa writes, &#8220;I can&#8217;t undo all I have done to myself / what I have let an appetite for love to do me.&#8221; These lines set the tone for a book that again and again catches us on its barbed hook. Language hooks us. Ghost crabs are a &#8220;speculation on shape,&#8221; water, &#8220;an artifact of loneliness.&#8221; Can I capture the essence of this book after only one reading? Probably not.</p><p>Toward the end of the book, toward the end of a long poem, &#8220;Pestilence,&#8221; Popa writes: &#8220;Each day I remember / Each day I strategically forgot,&#8221; and &#8220;how human is the future / will it let us let / I am listening through my terror for yours&#8230;&#8221;</p><p>Olawaseum Olayiwola in <em>The Guardian </em>described <em>Wound Is the Origin of Wonder </em>as &#8220;purposefully heart-decelerating.&#8221; It balances contemplation with a sense of walking through the natural world, balances woundedness with a deep, profound healing. I&#8217;m wholly intrigued.</p><p><strong>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/maya-c-popa-wound-is-the-origin-of-wonder/">Maya C. Popa, WOUND IS THE ORIGIN OF WONDER</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I can&#8217;t let Poetry Month go by without sharing a few notes about books I&#8217;ve spent time with this month. So, here are a few brief recommendations:</p><p><em><a href="https://circumferencebooks.com/book/evolutionary-poems">#evolutionarypoems</a></em></p><p>by Mihret Kebede and translated from Amharic by Anna Moschovakis</p><p>When&#8217;s the last time you read an Ethiopian poet? Or poetry translated from Amharic? Well, it was a first for me, and I continue to be impressed by the incredible work that the good people at Circumference Books are doing. So many of their books are from regions and languages that are so rarely represented in English translation, and thus, feel so very new and surprising in all the right ways. And if you, like me, are looking for an activist poetics for our times, these are politically engaged poems that provide a very personal model for literary resistance.</p><p>Yes &amp; Now</p><p>by Yvette Nepper</p><p>Yvette may be one of my earliest friends in poetry land&#8212;we met our freshman year, when we were both at Ohio University for a time. I greatly admire Yvette&#8217;s work within the poetry community in Cincinnati, and we share a Gen X love of DIY and zine culture that continues in many of Yvette&#8217;s chapbooks and projects. <em>Yes &amp; Now </em>is one such limited edition chapbook (in this case produced by FTP), &#8220;printed on a mimeograph machine in Mike Cowgill&#8217;s mom&#8217;s basement.&#8221; I love Yvette&#8217;s ability to balance profound thought with humor and play that makes one feel like it&#8217;s totally okay and maybe even preferable sometimes to have a dance party within what feels like an apocalypse. Come hear Yvette read at my house this September, and while you can&#8217;t buy <em>Yes &amp; No</em> online anymore, check out her other <a href="https://bottlecap.press/products/everyn">chapbooks</a>.</p><p><strong>Carrie Olivia Adams, <a href="https://poetryandbiscuits.substack.com/p/april-sunbeams-and-books">April Sunbeams &amp; Books</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This, Ian <em>Storr&#8217;s</em> second, beautifully-titled collection of haiku (and haibun), has been a long time coming, 16 years in fact, since <em>Seeds from a Larch Cone</em>. Ian is my friend, and was my long-time colleague at <em>Presence</em> haiku journal &#8211; he was the managing editor from 2014, following the tragic death of Martin Lucas, until last year, a stint in which he undertook much more than the lion&#8217;s share of the work involved in cementing its reputation as one of English-language haiku&#8217;s best journals, if not <em>the</em> best.</p><p>I know I&#8217;m biased but I have no hesitation in saying that <em>Late Light</em>, published by Alba Publishing and available <a href="http://www.albapublishing.com/">here</a> (scroll down) is the most important collection of haiku by a British poet since (at least) Thomas Powell&#8217;s <em>Clay Moon</em> (Snapshot Press, 2020) and the two collections by our late <em>Presence</em> colleague Stuart Quine (Alba Publishing, 2018 and 2019).</p><p>Ian hails from Sheffield and still lives there. He spent his working life as a children&#8217;s social worker, an immensely important and difficult job. The compassion, objectivity, resilience and intelligence needed for that profession shines through in Ian&#8217;s haiku.</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/04/26/on-ian-storrs-late-light/">On Ian Storr&#8217;s Late Light</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Marriage is one of the most marked gaps in classical literature. I can&#8217;t, off-hand, think of a single good classical poem about being married, and barely any even about a wife (as opposed to a lover or would-be lover). Marriage is of course depicted quite often in Greek tragedy, though generally not very positively. But that&#8217;s not to say there&#8217;s no good Latin poetry about marriage &#8212; around 1500 the Renaissance Latin poets Pontano and Sannazaro, in particular, pioneered the Latin poetry of marriage and this sub-genre remained fashionable for a good century or so. [&#8230;]</p><p>I&#8217;ve been thinking about marriage in literature, and especially in poetry, partly because I have been rereading <em>Women in Love </em>for the first time in decades, and partly because<em> </em>this week I finally received the copy of Matthew Buckley Smith&#8217;s <em>Midlife</em>, which I&#8217;ve been waiting for &#8212; I ordered it a while ago but it took a good few weeks to make it across the Atlantic and through French customs. Smith is the host of the popular, if oddly named, <em><a href="https://www.matthewbuckleysmith.com/sleerickets">Sleerickets</a></em> poetry podcast, which I&#8217;ve been on a couple of times &#8212; once a year or so ago and then just last week. I&#8217;m not a big podcast-listener myself but I enjoyed talking to Matthew, who&#8217;s a gifted interviewer, both times. <em>Sleerickets&#8217;</em> trademark is plain-speaking so in that spirit I hope Matthew won&#8217;t mind that this week I&#8217;m writing about his own poetry.</p><p><em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Midlife-Matthew-Buckley-Smith/dp/1939574382/ref=sr_1_1?crid=FWQD44HV4RGZ&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9-AOk0B9ko9OT1TZVUTIEQ.IaoXNKVTeBdPNcl7KOlTA8CzxOv--1754GnRznX92R0&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=midlife+buckley+smith&amp;qid=1776933873&amp;sprefix=midlife+buckley+smit%2Caps%2C183&amp;sr=8-1">Midlife</a></em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Midlife-Matthew-Buckley-Smith/dp/1939574382/ref=sr_1_1?crid=FWQD44HV4RGZ&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9-AOk0B9ko9OT1TZVUTIEQ.IaoXNKVTeBdPNcl7KOlTA8CzxOv--1754GnRznX92R0&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=midlife+buckley+smith&amp;qid=1776933873&amp;sprefix=midlife+buckley+smit%2Caps%2C183&amp;sr=8-1">,</a> published in 2024 by Measure Press, was Smith&#8217;s second collection and the winner of the Richard Wilbur Poetry Award in 2021. (This is an American poetry prize that recognises excellence in formal poetry, with a particular interest &#8212; in recognition of Wilbur&#8217;s legacy as a translator &#8212; in poets who also translate; previous winners have included A. M. Juster, A. E. Stallings, Rhina P. Espaillat and Maryann Corbett.) Last year he was also one of the Rattle Chapbook Prize winners, which means that his pamphlet <em>The Soft Black Stars </em>was circulated to all Rattle subscribers (including me) a few weeks ago (if you&#8217;re not a Rattle subscriber, you can order it <a href="https://www.matthewbuckleysmith.com/sleerickets">here</a>).</p><p>The first thing to say is that Smith is a very good poet in various ways: he is technically accomplished, he has some range in both form and style, and &#8212; a feature that readers of <em>Horace &amp; friends </em>will I think particularly appreciate &#8212; he conveys an enjoyable impression of literary depth. <em>Midlife</em> contains one excellent (and one less good) version of Horace, one fairly good version of Catullus 51/Sappho 31, one version of/response to Rilke, as well as versions, responses and allusions to Homer, Tennyson and (especially) the dramatic monologues of Browning. <em>The Soft Black Stars</em>, though on the whole a bit less &#8216;literary&#8217;, contains poems responding to the Anglo-Saxon poem &#8216;The Seafarer&#8217; and to Ezra Pound. (The title of the pamphlet is taken from a short story by the American horror writer, Thomas Ligotti, but I haven&#8217;t read these stories so won&#8217;t comment on that.) Smith is writing in that American formalist tradition that sometimes sounds to my British ear just a bit too clickety-clack, and at times I find him a little boxed-in by his forms. But this is a pretty minor niggle: if you enjoy collections written entirely in &#8220;traditional&#8221; verse, he is obviously one of the very best US poets writing in this way today.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/on-marriage">On marriage</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Rhina P. Espaillat published this sonnet, titled &#8220;Here,&#8221; after the passing of her husband, Alfred. And it is as precise a description of what remains after losing a spouse as anything English literature has to offer. It is a poem, in my own lingering grief, I can hardly bear to read and yet cannot bear to set aside.</p><p>After the death of Dylan Thomas, Caitlin Thomas published a 1957 memoir of her time married to the poet, with the unbearable title <em>Leftover Life to Kill</em>. Espaillat catalogues instead the actual leftover objects.</p><p>Born on January 20, 1932, Rhina P. Espaillat had her 90th birthday in 2022 celebrated by several of the better poetry publications. Back in its heyday, <em>Prairie Home Companion</em> featured her work. The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Formalism">godmother of the New Formalism</a> &#8212; the counter-current that emerged in the late 1980s to offer alternatives to the endless free verse of modern college writing-program poetry &#8212; she occupies a section in every contemporary anthology of rhymed and metered verse.</p><p>The authorized translator of Robert Frost into Spanish, and the translator of such works as the poetry of St. John of the Cross into English, Espaillat is a major poet working in our lifetimes. Which is why we&#8217;ve featured her work several times here in <em>Poems Ancient and Modern</em>: the comic &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-undelivered-mail">Undelivered Mail</a>,&#8221; the dimeter of &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-things-that-go">Things That Go</a>,&#8221; her translation of &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-songs-of-the-soul">Songs of the Soul in Intimate Amorous Communion with God</a>.&#8221;</p><p>And in &#8220;Here,&#8221; the reader will find several of the features that recur in her verse. The sonnet form she often uses. The simple rhymes, for example, that do not strain for effect. The list-making. The precise observation of &#8220;his red Swiss Army knife / hiding its tiny arsenal of blades&#8221; and the near personification of those knife blades: &#8220;like legs tucked under.&#8221; A refusal of hyperbole: &#8220;I almost hear him say . . . &#8221; And a powerful emotion never named but completely expressed, with the unbearable ending [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-here-2a8">Today&#8217;s Poem: Here</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The latest from <a href="https://camilledungy.com/">Colorado poet and critic Camille T. Dungy</a> is <em><a href="https://www.weslpress.org/9780819502261/america-a-love-story/">America, A Love Story</a></em> (Middletown CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2026), a powerful collection of poems that provides a table of contents listing single poems and poem-clusters, arranged in untitled sections counterpointing with occasional stand-alone pieces. The book-length suite of <em>America, A Love Story</em> is exactly that: a heartfelt declaration and examination of a complicated country and culture, and a history of aggression, devastation and racism that still ripples across the landscape of generations. &#8220;America,&#8221; she writes, as part of the brilliantly-devastating opening poem, &#8220;This&#8217;ll hurt me more,&#8221; &#8220;there is not a place I can wander inside you / and not feel a little afraid.&#8221; Writing of childhood, her father and grandmother, the use of the switch and of her father being pulled over by the police, the second page of the same poem offers: &#8220;Of course my father fit the description. The imagination / can accommodate whoever might happen along. / America, if you&#8217;ve seen a hillside quickly catch fire, / you have also seen a river freeze over, the surface / looking placid though you know the water deep down, / dark as my father, is pushing and pulling, still trying / to go ahead. We were driving home, my father said. / My wife and my daughters, we were just on our way / home.&#8221; This is a book of consequence and heart, and the cruel nature of love itself, articulating a detail of people and movement, history and storytelling with an attention to intimate detail. Amid the story of the neighbourhood women amid a shared stray cat in the poem &#8220;True Story,&#8221; a piece that tells far more than I&#8217;ll offer here, she writes: &#8220;One woman believed, as Issa believed, / that in all things, even the small and patient / snail, there are perceptible strings that tie / each life to all others.&#8221;</p><p>There is such a delicate way that Dungy articulates her narrative collage around the idea of love, of America, including an America that will impact her children, and all that might lie ahead; of the ties, and even the traumas, that bind people together, offering poems from a variety of sides and perspectives, coming together to form a coherent shape around how she understands and approaches her love, her America, from the best elements to the worst, and what all that requires and declares, demands and articulates.</p><p><strong>rob mclennnan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/04/camille-t-dungy-america-love-story.html">Camille T. Dungy, America, A Love Story</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>If [Liam] Guilar&#8217;s approach to translation is to reimagine, then the way Kit Fryatt and Harry Gilonis work in <em>Book of Inversions</em> is to take things apart and then put them back together in carefully random disorder. As the author/translators note in their introduction, it&#8217;s &#8216;a book of inversions, turning the world upside down&#8217;.</p><p>The introduction also mentions some antecedents to their approach, including Pound&#8217;s Homage to Sextus Propertius, Celia and Louis Zukofsky&#8217;s homophonic Catullus, Anne Carson&#8217;s versions of the same Latin poet, Richard Caddell&#8217;s transmogrification of I Gododdin in his elegiac For the Fallen, and Geoffrey Squires&#8217;s My News for You: Irish Poetry 600-1200, not so much an antecedent as it was published while Fryatt and Gilonis were hard at it, but certainly a kind of gold standard for anyone tackling the field. There are also notes that indicate textual sources, other translations (full disclosure, three of them are mine), and further interesting titbits about each poem inverted. The notes also indicate if the version is by one or other of the authors or a joint effort.</p><p>Their title plays on the Lebor Gab&#225;la &#201;renn, englished as The Book of the Takings of Ireland, or The Book of Invasions. As such, it is fitting that, after a couple of dedicatory snippets, they open with a version of Amergin&#8217;s Song from that text. Not the famous, or infamous, &#8216;I am the wind on the sea&#8217; one, but Amergin&#8217;s third song. Amergin Gl&#250;ngheal is Ireland&#8217;s mythical first poet, and the songs represent a moment of claiming Ireland, which, maybe, makes this a doubly appropriate opener. Here it is in the Irish Text Society version by Macalister, the official version, if you like:</p><blockquote><p>A fishful sea!<br>A fruitful land!<br>An outburst of fish<br>Fish under wave,<br>In streams (as) of<br>A rough sea!<br>birds,<br>A white hail<br>With hundreds of salmon,<br>Of broad whales!<br>A harbour-song&#8212;<br>An outburst of fish,<br>A fishful sea!</p></blockquote><p>And here&#8217;s the Gilonis take:</p><blockquote><p>Fishfilled sea!<br>Fertile land!<br>Fish erupt!<br>Fish in waves<br>bird-flock-like!<br>Ocean&#8217;s wild!</p><p>White sea hail,<br>salmon hordes,<br>widespread wales!<br>Harbour song:<br>&#8216;Fish erupt,<br>fishfilled sea!&#8217;</p></blockquote><p>And the Irish text as best as I can manage to reconstruct it from what&#8217;s to hand:</p><blockquote><p>iascach muir<br>mothach t&#238;r<br>tomaidm n-eisc<br>iasca fothuind<br>rethaib &#234;n<br>fairge chruaid<br>cassar finn<br>crethaib &#233;n<br>lethan m&#238;l<br>portach l&#225;g<br>mniportach lugh<br>tomaidm n-eisc<br>iascach muir</p></blockquote><p>What&#8217;s immediately apparent, even to readers with no Irish, is that the new version adheres much more closely to the chant-like terseness of the original, short lines and an emphatic rhythm and an echo of the Irish tendency to composite word formation.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/04/27/celtic-matters/">Celtic Matters</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poet J.H. Prynne died this week, at the age of 89. I&#8217;ve been reading his work since I was a student. My first experience of it was very like the one described in this tribute by Ian Patterson for <a href="https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2026/april/gospel-furbelow-dastard">the </a><em><a href="https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2026/april/gospel-furbelow-dastard">London Review of Books</a></em><a href="https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2026/april/gospel-furbelow-dastard"> blog</a>:</p><blockquote><p>[the] poems were like essays in their apparent substance, but they had a manner, a rhythm and a music, as well as a density of thought that shifted my idea of what poetry was and what it could be and do</p></blockquote><p>So this week I thought I would try to give some account of that experience: the reading of words that sound explanatory but resist explanation, and which resonate with a musical air of meaning that repeats itself as a kind of thought.</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p><strong>wresting the screen before the eyelet lost / to speech tune you blame the victim: </strong>I&#8217;ve quoted these unpunctuated lines together because I don&#8217;t know how to split them apart. Following the clear but abstract statement of the distinction between knowing and doing, we are suddenly plunged into a confusion of violent action. To &#8220;wrest&#8221; is usually to &#8220;wrest control&#8221; of something: here, &#8220;the screen before the eyelet lost&#8221;. This is &#8212; to use a synonym for darkness &#8212; &#8220;obscure&#8221; (Latin <em>obscurus</em>, dark, hidden, secret). But obscurity is also what is being (obscurely) described: to put a &#8220;screen&#8221; before an &#8220;eyelet&#8221; is to block a small hole for light. So clarity of knowledge has been followed by a cover-up. &#8220;Lost&#8221;, at the line-break, is the hinge word here, the moment of maximum confusion before an immoral argument emerges which inverts the dynamics of power: &#8220;you blame the victim&#8221;. How / why do &#8220;you&#8221; do this? Because you are &#8220;lost / to speech tune&#8221;, like a good poet. But here it sounds as though your eloquence is a bad habit.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/in-darkness-by-day">In Darkness by Day</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We&#8217;ve been thinking a lot about the poetry of Douglas Dunn recently, especially Douglas&#8217;s superb and undervalued pre-<em>Elegies</em> poems. This seemed a good excuse to give this little essay a second airing; it appeared in a recent-ish issue of <em>The Dark Horse</em> devoted to Dunn and his work. It&#8217;s about my own debt to Douglas, and to one poem of his in particular. Since that poem is unavailable online, I&#8217;ll risk reprinting it at the end of the piece until I&#8217;m told off. You can, however, still read it in Dunn&#8217;s essential <em><a href="https://www.faber.co.uk/product/9780571215270-new-selected-poems-douglas-dunn/?srsltid=AfmBOorqcVyObDeKv5ItlM5sz9QtZ7rnPXu4g9q82KvZtXcPDihCA-kc">New Selected Poems</a>.</em> [&#8230;]</p><p>I remember reading &#8216;Remembering Lunch&#8217; in an appropriately wine-stained paperback copy of <em>St Kilda&#8217;s Parliament,</em> bought in the Charing Cross Road in the late eighties. I&#8217;ll have picked it up it from one of the second-hand bookstores where, twelve or fifteen years earlier, Douglas would have flogged his review copies to pay for his long Soho lunch and its longer bar tab. I had just read and fallen in love with <em>Elegies</em>, as we all had; but with the young male poet&#8217;s atrocious impatience to have everyone sprawling on a pin, I decided I had Dunn&#8217;s measure. I opened at &#8217;Remembering Lunch&#8217;. So much for that theory. For one thing, even the measure was new to me. What&#8217;s with the long line? Isn&#8217;t it prose when you keep bopping your head on the right margin? Clearly not; but are poets permitted such long sentences? At the time, one knew just enough to reach for the word &#8216;Jamesian&#8217; whenever one encountered such fluent hypotaxis, but little else. I was, at least, used to poems ending with the sea. The sea is literally a great place to stop. But it was clearly going to take me years to catch up with the rest of it, and I had best make a start.</p><p><strong>Don Paterson, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/learning-from-dunn">Learning from Dunn</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>At age 76, [Robert] Cording has been writing a long time; he started before he was out of college, and he published his first book of poems in 1987, almost 40 years ago. To look back over that lengthy career is to begin to understand something about the meaning of his new book&#8217;s title: what he&#8217;s been able to achieve through decades of devotion to his craft, which produces both an accounting and an appraisal of all that he has written and published, and what is possible to ascertain from what the poems tell us about the life Cording has experienced and lived and shared, not only with those he loves but also with his readers.</p><p>About the latter, Cording&#8217;s poems make quietly clear his life&#8217;s through-lines:</p><blockquote><p>[. . .] family and friends, [. . .]<br><br>our blessings&#8212;the disarming joy of being<br>loved, the bounty of the natural world<br>that still takes our sight beyond ourselves. [. . .]</p><p><strong>~ from &#8220;Talking Through a Storm&#8221; (p. 114 )</strong></p></blockquote><p>As that excerpt implies, Cording is an observer of the interior life, one from which he draws energy and consolation, as much as he is a poet who looks out into the world of both the ordinary &#8212; &#8220;all that is / too humdrum for our notice,&#8221; the &#8220;nothing much&#8221; that characterizes daily goings-on (&#8220;Ode to Ordinariness, pp. 130-131) &#8212; and the inexplicable and divine, whether it is &#8220;the perfection of birdness&#8221; (&#8220;Lord God Bird,&#8221; pp. 132-133) or &#8220;some accidental loveliness / we put our hopes in&#8221; (&#8220;Massachusetts Audubon Chart No. 1, 1898,&#8221; p. 185).</p><p>As attentive as Cording is to these constants, as much as he can praise the recurrence of &#8220;the sun returning like a second chance / after this evening&#8217;s shower&#8221; or &#8220;the moon rising like a clockface&#8221; (&#8220;Ode to Ordinariness,&#8221; p. 131), the world, he writes, &#8220;keeps moving to its tasks, random with pain, / rich with surprise&#8221; (&#8220;All Souls&#8217; Morning,&#8221; p. 54), landing him in an &#8220;in-between&#8221; space where grief and lament reside alongside praise and &#8220;a source of awe&#8221;: &#8220;the colors // of dawn on the earth&#8217;s other side. Everything&#8212; / the tamaracks and maples, the spruces and their / smoke- winged / sparrows, the painterly sky darkening toward infinity&#8221; (&#8220;For Rex Brasher, Painter of Birds,&#8221; pp. 75-76). The lesson to be drawn, then, is that both suffering and cause to celebrate can and do coexist, that a day can be &#8220;perfectly made for delight&#8221; while &#8220;grief is endless&#8221; (&#8220;Four Prayers,&#8221; p. 151).</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/robert-cordings-whats-possible-new">Robert Cording&#8217;s &#8216;What&#8217;s Possible: New &amp; Selected Poems&#8217;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>May 2026, next month, marks the 20th anniversary of the publication of my first book of poems, <em><a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/books/the-silence-of-men/">The Silence of Men</a>, </em>which I think is worth celebrating because it is&#8212;and this is a testament to <a href="https://cavankerrypress.org/?ref=richardjnewman.com">CavanKerry Press</a>&#8217; commitment to its authors&#8212;still in print and, somewhat remarkably (to me at least), still selling. I just received my 2025 royalty check for $4.83. It&#8217;s easy to laugh at that amount, and we&#8217;ve all heard the jokes about how poets are only in it for the money (right?), but I have always believed that poetry does its work in the world very slowly. I don&#8217;t know how many copies of the book that check represents, or how many people will ultimately read those copies, but it makes me happy and not a little bit humbled to think that poems I wrote more than two decades ago are still doing their work somewhere.</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p><a href="https://solsticelitmag.org/content/how-to-write-a-political-poem-during-these-unprecedented-times/?ref=richardjnewman.com">How To Write A Political Poem During These Unprecedented Times</a>, by Adrian S. Potter:</p><blockquote><p>Perhaps we sink too much energy into pretending to be unoffended when we really should feel insulted. As part of his unapologetic reign of bluster, one of our so-called leaders keeps teaching a master class on how to parlay hot takes and brash rhetoric into votes and profit. Meanwhile, I&#8217;m busy trying to write a poem that will finally put an end to bigotry, and yes, even within the false mythology of a post-racial society, bigotry still exists.</p></blockquote><p>The tension in this piece is between the self-important navel-gazing that characterizes the way some writers live &#8220;the literary life&#8221; and the implicit call to action with which Potter ends the piece: &#8220;But when I try to write about [these unprecedented times]&#8230;my hand instinctively tightens into a fist hoisted high above my head.&#8221; The essay was published in 2004, and I imagine that, in light of what&#8217;s been happening in the United States and the Middle East, it lands with even more urgency than it did back then. I found myself thinking of Louise Gl&#252;ck&#8217;s essay &#8220;The Idea of Courage,&#8221; in which she critiqued the use of the term courage to described what it took for a poet to write poems that revealed aspects of their life they might not otherwise have revealed. Specifically, I found myself remembering Gl&#252;ck&#8217;s point that this usage of courage &#8220;concentrates attention on the poet&#8217;s relation to his materials and to his audience, rather than on the political result of speech.&#8221; We all know the stories of the poets in totalitarian nations throughout history who risked that political result and paid with their lives. Iran, of course, is one of them. How far are we, I asked myself when I finished reading Potter&#8217;s essay, from a time when the difference between writing a political poem and raising one&#8217;s tightened fist into the air will not be as different as he suggests.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/four-by-four-54/">Four by Four #54</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>in the front yard, the ferns<br>are unfurling their fists. i wonder what it is<br>that they reach for. i should probably open<br>my hands too. catch something. not a star,<br>maybe just a petal from the peach tree who might,<br>if the world is real enough this year, bear fruit.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/04/26/4-26-5/">poem in which i am an activist</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.loa.org/books/705-the-heart-of-american-poetry/">The Heart of American Poetry</a></p><p>Based on <em>A Poet&#8217;s Glossary</em>, a book I always enjoyed opening, I impulse-purchased this new critical work by Edward Hirsch. But it is not a book I will finish, though I will keep dipping. The attempt to link poetry to the state of America is far too blunt, the readings are often too anecdotal, and thus the page count is far beyond the actual interest, though the book is not without interest and if some compressed version of this was available in online essays, I would read it. In general, this might be a worthwhile book for someone new to the topic, but it feels old-fashioned to me. If the topic at hand is so important (as I agree with Hirsch that it is) some other way of discussing it must be found. No easy task, and perhaps an unfair criticism, but that is where we are.</p><p>*</p><p><a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=the+modern+element+adam+kirsch&amp;sca_esv=5bebb06507df2196&amp;rlz=1C5CHFA_enGB998GB998&amp;sxsrf=ANbL-n4ESaCyjVVuCb1M83acH2srTmiAxw%3A1777328175708&amp;ei=L-Dvafj0KrOj5NoPvvG9mQo&amp;oq=The+Modern+Element+Adam+&amp;gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiGFRoZSBNb2Rlcm4gRWxlbWVudCBBZGFtICoCCAAyBhAAGBYYHjILEAAYgAQYigUYhgMyCxAAGIAEGIoFGIYDMgUQABjvBTIFEAAY7wUyCBAAGIkFGKIESKoWUFtYkwpwAXgAkAEAmAFfoAHeBKoBATe4AQPIAQD4AQGYAgegAtIEwgIJEAAYBxgeGLADwgIHEAAYHhiwA8ICCRAAGAgYHhiwA8ICCBAAGBYYHhgKmAMAiAYBkAYKkgcDNS4yoAfuJbIHAzQuMrgHwwTCBwUyLTUuMsgHNYAIAQ&amp;sclient=gws-wiz-serp">The Modern Element</a></p><p>Adam Kirsch&#8217;s 2008 book about modern poetry is much more lively, gets to the point, and has Kirsch&#8217;s own strongly-held views to sustain it. It is less about &#8220;who we are now&#8221; or whatever, but has a lot more to say about the poets and the nature of poetry. Kirsch is against &#8220;poetry&#8217;s neurotic obsession with the modern&#8221;. He thinks the &#8220;poetics of authenticity&#8221; which prevailed after the war, and which finished the job Romanticism started and led to the removal of formal qualities, &#8220;has thoroughly failed&#8221; and has prevented poets from writing major works. He wishes us to return to the pragmatic tradition of Johnson, Aristotle, Horace, and Arnold. A very worthwhile book.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/palms-poems-moderns">Palms, poems, moderns</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It was late May, and I had a day off, or was killing time between my day and evening jobs, and I missed campus, with its grassy quad and emerald oaks and bobbing tulips, its redbuds and dogwood, magnolia and cherry, and so I went to the park in search of something like it. There was nothing there that one would call manicured, and what I missed most of all, I&#8217;m sure, was the people who&#8217;d sit in the grass and read poems with me. I remember I wrote a letter to a friend&#8212;we had email, but nobody had a computer; word processors hulked on our desks like suitcase bombs&#8212;and then I read <em>Sweet Machine</em> for the first time, and &#8220;Door to the River&#8221; is the poem that left me breathless in the grass.</p><p>What&#8217;s to like? I&#8217;ve been asking another version of that question a lot lately: <em>Why</em> do I like what I like? It&#8217;s a simple poem, so far as the literal circumstances: it begins in ekphrasis, more specifically interpretive ekphrasis&#8212;the speaker doesn&#8217;t tell us what the painting looks like, but attempts to interpret de Kooning&#8217;s intention or meaning&#8212;then progresses to narrative description, recalling yesterday&#8217;s meadow, then proceeds through a series of questions that feel by turns existential and self-directed, arriving at something like certainty, then a turn to exhortation and another narrative that leads to a moment of lyric epiphany&#8212;of transcendence. Why do I like it? Because it is transcendent, and it brings us along on its path towards insight.</p><p>Maybe <em>simple</em> isn&#8217;t the word.</p><p>&#8220;Door to the River&#8221; is sort of the antonym, conceptually and formally, of another field poem, Mark Strand&#8217;s compact little &#8220;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47541/keeping-things-whole">Keeping Things Whole</a>.&#8221; I&#8217;m tempted to call it an antidote as well. There&#8217;s paradox at the heart of Strand&#8217;s poem: If his speaker is what is missing, he is also the missing piece; in that sense, he belongs wherever he is&#8212;and yet the division seems to be absolute. There is &#8220;the air,&#8221; and there is &#8220;my body,&#8221; and though the two meet, they remain separate. There is such a thing as lack: the air can lack the body; the body can lack the air. Together they &#8220;keep things whole,&#8221; but this wholeness is only accomplished by continuous motion, is comprised always of its individual components.</p><p>In &#8220;Door to the River,&#8221; we have another mind contemplating another field, but the insight that arrives is entirely opposite: in this field, there is both stillness and fullness: &#8220;some / balance . . . no lack, nothing / missing from the world.&#8221; It&#8217;s an experience of completion, wholeness, abundance. And so the final revelation at the end of the breathless penultimate sentence&#8212;this is a sentence that began thirty-one lines earlier, with &#8220;It was her voice&#8221;&#8212;arrives as an utter surprise: that this experience of wholeness must be the same as the experience of death. Having tumbled through to the end of this astounding claim, we end with the simple finality of a one-word sentence: Fine.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/door-to-the-river-by-mark-doty">&#8220;Door to the River&#8221; by Mark Doty</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Spring of course is the season of possibilities. April has been a busy month but now the big weighty tasks are behind me &#8212; giving workshops, which is not a task I do with ease, memorializing a friend &#8212; and I feel lighter and the mornings have been so sweet with a perfect mix of chill and warmth from the heating sun. Trees are crazy with buds and blossoms and the azaleas across the street are laden. A squirrel ate my one lone tulip, as it does every goddamn year. And it&#8217;s been very dry and my least favorite season, summer, is on its way, and it could be a scorcher. So it goes. I try to give participants in my workshops a sense of possibilities, but memorials for friends signal an end to possibilities. One possible outcome of possibilities is nothing. I think of this often. And so. The old eat-drink-and-be-merry, the old eat-dessert first, the old be-here-now. I can only shrug or laugh or be wry. I like the word wry &#8212; it&#8217;s a tricky little devil: that sometimes-y vowel, that silent w. You can speak it without opening the jaw, the maw of possibility. I like this wry poem by Aidan Chafe for that very thing, its wry embrace of what is possible.</p><p><strong>Marilyn Mccabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/04/27/with-snot-and-ice-cream/">with snot and ice cream</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Listening to Kathy Acker, dead twenty-five years, read her translations of the poet Sextus Propertius from <em>Blood and Guts in High School</em> &#8230; <em>let there be no double winter dead winds</em> &#8230; I understand my missteps are all colossal flaps for the wind to carry me, whether I want to be carried or no. The landing isn&#8217;t up to me. The wind decides. All my successes or perfections don&#8217;t need the head of a pin to stand&#8212;that would be too vast&#8212;so I never keep one around. My journey needs no island. I&#8217;ve given up maps. Since having is believing, I don&#8217;t believe. Call me useless, call me criminal, call me undigested pizza with hallucinatory moments of despair&#8212;but <em>nothing </em>has always been greater than <em>something</em>.<br><br>If one assumes Antoine de Saint-Exup&#233;ry is correct <em>&#8230; Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away</em> &#8230; then perfection is the blank page before the poem gives words to lyric, the imagined story before its told, before the idea of Venus de Milo Apollo gives shape to stone, before strokes of paint find a fence or sky or face on canvas, before the note is played. The saying, the doing can only muck the truth.<br><br>How to have one and not the other is the real task at hand, the work behind the work&#8212;the bottom of the glass reached as the meal is finished&#8212;plates carried to the kitchen&#8212;the chair returned to its place.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/monday-works-14-on-perfection-and">Monday Works&#8230; #14: &#8220;On Perfection and Flaws&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poets on the farthest end of the table are laughing<br>and the visiting scholar on the other end is trading<br>jokes with the futures trader, and no one quite notices<br>when the waiters come to fill and replenish cups of water<br>and tea. Your colleague is rhapsodizing over the thick<br>clouds of chicken and corn in the soup, and you give<br>your whole mind to all of this, for here as in the world<br>attention is a practice that asks nothing from you except<br>to be here. Though when all of you walk back into the night<br>and the air is cooler and all are hugging and waving goodbye<br>or someone is suggesting you find somewhere else to go and<br>have margaritas, you know the world is waiting to slip into<br>your mouth again&#8212; another kind of communion, the kind<br>you have every day, the kind that stains your fingers<br>and leaves a slight film of oil, even now in this kitchen<br>where, standing barefoot on cold tile, already you are<br>chewing on the future.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/04/poem-at-3-am-with-leftovers-and-rilke/">Poem at 3 AM with Leftovers and Rilke</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 16]]></title><description><![CDATA[the beast we were given, frothed verses of salt&#8209;song, a man in a suit with pink bunny ears, a million mirror neurons, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-16</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-16</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 21:51:57 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/a663e782-3f90-43ce-8809-eca3b1003a92_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: the beast we were given, frothed verses of salt&#8209;song, a man in a suit with pink bunny ears, a million mirror neurons, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>Grass: The vitality pushing through us<br>is stupendous. The green appears<br>from monochrome, from the shade<br>into a shadeless shameless glow.<br>Every blade is singing from the force<br>of its lit universe. Psychedelic! <br>No trade-offs, no slippery motives. <br>Today, now, pick herbs from our <br>healing garden. Leave the narrow places, <br>(suffer the stabs of pain in leaving),<br>let the grass, even in the cruelest month, heal.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3671">Healing according to our Sages, the Grass</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And the message from the universe came when said carrots were getting peeled. And I was rushing because I just wanted it done because then I could&#8230;uh oh! I temporarily mistook my left index finger for a carrot and managed to potato peel its tip. The fact it was THAT finger made me feel a bit wobbly so after I had rinsed it and hidden it under some firmly gripped kitchen roll, I chopped the carrots nice and small so they would be done in the same time as the peas, and then got Kath to pop a plaster on it to seal it back down so I wouldn&#8217;t see it. (THAT finger being the finger I once had an &#8216;axecident&#8217; with.)</p><p>In the morning it looked a little sad when I removed the plaster, but I showered and nothing much happened except it was a little sore. Magic healing, I thought until I hit it on the basin when cleaning my teeth. And then the world went a little narrower than usual and much blacker.</p><p>Thank goodness for a wife who bounces out of bed on her only lie-in day, a local minor injuries unit and the kind and gentle nurse who helped me clean it up, applied steri-strips, popped a bandage over it, and told me I wasn&#8217;t making a fuss.</p><p>So this week I will be re-establishing the joy of focusing on one thing at a time. I will also be remembering to pause for stillness when I can hear that I am carrying a whole conversation of thoughts around in my head. I will be taking time to think about what needs setting down, and what it is that I need to pay attention to. And for an easy and quick reminder, I will be binning all the <em>shoulds. </em>They are definitely not helpful with their not good enough, critical tone. I will instead be thinking about my <em>coulds</em> and exploring their potential benefits and how they match with my <em>wants </em>rather than giving myself a hard time.</p><p>And if you see me peeling carrots in the future you will probably notice that I am intentionally quite mindful about it. Here&#8217;s to the art of zen peeling and listening to what we need.</p><p>I do of course have times when I truly revel in the way my mind can ask lots of questions and go off at different tangents in response to each one. So for this week&#8217;s poem I am choosing to share again a one that I wrote after tidying my desk one evening. During the day I had been coaching and had also reviewed a list of coaching questions. I wanted to organise my workspace and spend some time with my own creative writing to unwind. One of the questions on the papers I was filing away was: &#8216;What would you like to achieve?&#8217; This question continued to echo in my head after my desk was clear so I used it as the title and set to writing&#8230;</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/04/20/slow-down/">SLOW DOWN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was asking myself, what have you done of worth yet today, and my answer, well you did dogear two new pages in your Tomas Transtr&#246;mer book. (Bright Scythe).</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/notesonphotographypoetryandthelike">Notes on Photography, Poetry, a Better Good Life, and the Eternity of the Instant</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Shajareh Tayyebeh<br>&#8212; <em>Elementary girls&#8217; school in Minab, Iran<br>bombed during &#8220;Operation Epic Fury&#8221; February 28, 2026<br></em><br>Panic painted gentian arrows on our feet<br>between the carpal and the sour toe<br>a molecular transfer of energy the red<br>thread pulled us all the lure<br>and the reel pickled our sorrows<br>count on happiness as revolutionary<br>because the beast is at the door<br>carnivorous two headed<br>the secrets we were promised as dangerous<br>girls lying low in the tall grass<br>imagine the animal&#8217;s astonishment<br>finding us swimming there<br>arms finally let loose from their silks<br>it was a measure of time<br>we were not inevitable<br>violence or salvation<br>it&#8217;s all the same a constant ache<br>trade these stories like currency<br>in the land of indulgence<br>we were too small for fatigue<br>we craved the beast we were given<br>we will not be targets<br>of this horror</p><p><strong>Rebecca Loudon, <a href="https://thebeginningofsummersend.blogspot.com/2026/04/april-17-2026.html">April 17, 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sixteen years ago on a day much brighter than it is this morning, my husband picked me up from the hospital where at seven months pregnant I had been admitted, days before, due to my baby&#8217;s movement&#8217;s lessening. I&#8217;d been given steroid shots to prepare for an emergency birth, and then a strange set of events; a domino fall of miscommunication, led to us suddenly not being treated as an emergency. I&#8217;m not going to go into the ins and outs of the story. This is not what I&#8217;m here to tell you about today. The story is exhausting. After sixteen years I find myself wanting on this day, the day of her birth and her death, to remember her as the joy that came into my life and changed me. Not the trauma that almost killed me. [&#8230;]</p><p>Her grave in the tree shadowed cemetery, her headstone are the focus of my loss, in many ways, they are unchanging, but not still. It is a slow life, in the cemetery, her grave sees a seasonal life of slow changes and animals and insects, and I like that.This is a kind of life for her too. I find it difficult to explain, this concept that she is a part of the nature and the life in the cemetery, of which there is much and often it is this life that finds its way into the birthday poems.</p><p>The birthday poems are a way of immortalising her, and of marking the passage of time, of capturing the moments of loss as we grow around it. Unusually, perhaps because it feels like a significant birthday, I have written several poems for today, but most of them are for me, not for you.</p><p>This year, after sixteen years, I need to get her white headstone cleaned. It has become darkened, has absorbed the weather and the lettering is becoming unreadable. Tomorrow the stonemason will come and assess her grave. This is where the poem led me today.</p><p>The experience of this loss has changed me as a person, but I have a good life, and much of that goodness came from the experience of her loss and being forced to look at life in a very different way.</p><p>For this I am grateful..</p><p><strong>The Stonemason&#8217;s Visit</strong><br><br>The year has rolled over us, again.<br><br>Another day of cherry blossom,<br>of crow-call beneath the beech leaves,<br>of wind-blown roses; offerings<br>to the small god of your grave.<br><br>The white marble is foxed<br>with sixteen years of your loss.<br><br>I imagine the mason&#8217;s thumb<br>touched to the sharp edge<br><br>of your <em>M</em>, of our <em>loved</em><br>and <em>missed</em> and <em>wanted,</em><br><br>the way your poem is hushed<br>to him on the breeze:<br><br><em>you are still the first sigh of spring.</em></p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/poem-for-my-daughter-on-what-would-b4d">Poem for my daughter on what would have been her sixteenth birthday.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I recently received my contributor copies of <em><a href="https://chbooks.com/Books/O/On-Occasion">On Occasion: Poems for the People</a></em> (Coach House Books, 2026), edited by <a href="https://sinaqueyras.ca/">Montreal poet and critic Sina Queyras</a>, an impressive volume of more than one hundred poems by contemporaries, friends, mentors and fresh voices. I have three pieces in the collection&#8212;a poem composed in response to Kingston poet Steven Heighton&#8217;s death, another composed upon the death of Ottawa poet Stephen Brockwell&#8217;s beloved dog, Niko, and a third, responding to my own Covid-era birthdays, holding off on my fifties (&#8220;Forty-twelfth birthday&#8221;) until the whole crisis passed. Honestly, this is exactly the kind of anthology I&#8217;ve always wanted to be a part of, offering a rich overview of some of the best contemporary writing across Canada and beyond. Queyras has done a remarkable job assembling this work and I thank Queyras, as well as everyone at Coach House, for allowing me space within these pages.</p><p>The volume offers itself as &#8220;A twenty-first-century reconsideration of the occasional poem by contemporary writers.&#8221; Poems for &#8220;occasions,&#8221; as Queyras offers, whether births or deaths or any other kind of event worth noting. &#8220;I start this introduction with bookstores and books because these are essential components in the life of a poem. Poetry happens like this all over the world. Poems are written at caf&#233; tables and library desks,&#8221; they write, early in the introduction, &#8220;on buses and subways, in fields and forests. They come out of bodies, comprised of synaptic flares, offering glimpses of the divine, tapping into deep-rooted feelings that are cross-hatched all through the poem, threads of worry and observation. Poems are best shared on paper too, and in person: hand to hand, mouth to ear. I have spent the last fourteen years of my life making such occasions happen at my university in Montreal.&#8221; I like this notion of the &#8220;occasion,&#8221; and was reminded a couple of years back, while judging a poetry contest, how elements of the public view the purposes of poetry: poems elegizing the loss of a spouse, a parent, a pet. A poem for a birthday. Although Queyras also offers the idea of the &#8220;occasion&#8221; one of the public reading itself.</p><p>There is value in witness, the occasion. Value in acknowledging a birthday, an anniversary; or as atrocities occur, armies move and the bombs drop, whether close by or in another country. Ordinary moments are worth noting, as are the extraordinary. There is value as well in acknowledging resistance, survival and trauma, and how portraits remain incomplete if only the positive moments are offered their due. The world is filled with such moments, out of which the stories of our very lives are built. There are moments that require themselves to be seen, otherwise we become lessened through the absence, the dismissal. And thus, the space for writing, whether poems or stories or memoir or essay.</p><p>Somewhere around the turn of the millennium, jwcurry prodded at me that not every occasion deserves a poem, and that might be true, I suppose, although I slipped his complaint into a poem as well, noting that particular occasion. Throughout that particular period, I was more consciously following American poet Robert Creeley&#8217;s lead, as many of his poems did appear to be prompted by occasions, whatever that might mean. A drive in the car, or the dishes put away. Poems that were set in what also be called the &#8220;domestic,&#8221; another term used as complaint, usually against writing by women, on those subjects dismissed as merely theirs (children, household, family, etcetera). What, then, the occasion? This particular element of &#8220;occasion&#8221; is where my three more recent poems, composed across those first few months of 2022, in <em>On Occasion</em> firmly sit, I&#8217;d think. All three of these poems are from the as-yet-unpublished manuscript &#8220;Autobiography,&#8221; a collection that sits as the third in a trilogy begun with <em><a href="https://press.ucalgary.ca/books/9781773852614/">the book of smaller</a></em> (University of Alberta Press, 2022) [<a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2022/12/rob-mclennan-process-note-5-book-of.html">see my write-up on such here</a>] and continues with <em><a href="https://press.ucalgary.ca/books/9781773856483/">the book of sentences</a> </em>(University of Alberta Press, 2025) [<a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/the-book-of-sentences">see my write-up on such here</a>]. The current work-in-progress, &#8220;Museum of Practical Things&#8221; [<a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/the-museum-of-practical-things">see my note on such here</a>] emerged a bit later, after a break of a couple of years, during which I purposely worked on other projects, including non-fiction.</p><p>The notion of the &#8220;occasional poem,&#8221; as I have long understood it, is different than poems on the &#8220;occasion.&#8221; These are poems that don&#8217;t fit with anything else a poet might be working on. One might say this is all about approach: those of us working large projects might have poems that sit outside that project, thus are unable to be incorporated. The poems, as Michael Ondaatje once paraphrased Jack Spicer, can live on their own no better than can we. Not everyone writes this way, but for those that do, these outliers, at least for me, are few and far between. My outliers continue, cluster, and eventually form books.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/poems-on-occasion">Poems, on occasion</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>If memory serves, I saw the call for submissions right here on Substack, maybe a year ago, and now &#8220;Pandora Addresses the Court&#8221; appears in the section titled &#8220;Occasions of Public, Protest, &amp; Address.&#8221; A whole host of personal faves, among them Karen Solie, A.E. Stallings, and Luke Hathaway, also contribute, and I&#8217;m grateful to Sina and the whole team at Coach House for giving this poem another home, and for all of their good work on behalf of poetry.</p><p>Because I am recalcitrant and weird, I opted not to provide a comment in the contributor notes regarding the occasion for this poem. The actual reason is that I find poetry far more interesting as a reader when it&#8217;s just me and the words working it out alone and don&#8217;t care to know what the poet thought she was doing. If you feel the same way, stop reading . . . now.</p><p>If you are well-adjusted and cooperative: The occasion that prompted this poem was Christine Blasey Ford&#8217;s testimony during Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh&#8217;s confirmation hearing, which I found excruciating in every direction, and so it was either launch myself directly into the sun or write a poem.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/pandora-addresses-the-court-poem">&#8220;Pandora Addresses the Court&#8221; (poem)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em><a href="https://uk.bookshop.org/a/3378/9780571391318">That Broke Into Shining Crystals </a></em><a href="https://uk.bookshop.org/a/3378/9780571391318">(Faber, 2025)</a><em><a href="https://uk.bookshop.org/a/3378/9780571391318"><br></a></em><a href="https://uk.bookshop.org/a/3378/9780571391318">Richard Scott</a></p><p>I am late to the party with this one. I have Richard&#8217;s first collection <em>Soho</em> (Faber, 2018) which I really enjoyed, and this one has been on my radar for a while but just haven&#8217;t had a chance to buy it.</p><p>However, one of our stops in Ireland was Galway, so I took Ally for a rainy walk to <a href="https://charliebyrne.ie/">Charlie Byrne&#8217;s Bookshop.</a> It has the most amazing poetry section, and I picked up this and a book by Richard Siken as well at the same time (more on that later!)</p><p>This collection has entered into my top ten contemporary poetry collections (alongside such brilliance as <em>Stags Leap </em>by Sharon Olds). The subject matter is male-on-male sexual assault, rape and the trauma associated with it. Perhaps this explains why it hasn&#8217;t been on as many prize lists as it should have &#8211; not because of the subject matter, but because of the original and unique approach to language and formal craft that Richard deploys throughout the book.</p><p>The book is made up of three sections, and my favourite was probably the first, called &#8220;Still Lifes&#8221;. Each poem is a Still Life with something i.e Still Life with Rose, Still Life with Lobster, Fruit and Timepiece. In the notes at the back of the book are the painting, or paintings that the poem is in conversation with. It took me a long time to read through these poems because I was reading the poem, then looking up the painting and then going back to re-read the poem again. I&#8217;ve never really appreciated the particular genre of 17th and 18th century still life paintings that the poet is engaged with before, but now I&#8217;ve read these poems, I feel like I will never look at them in the same way again &#8211; which is an amazing thing for a poem to do &#8211; to change the way we look at the world, the way we encounter art. Of course I believe the best poetry can do this, but it&#8217;s always a shock when it happens.</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/march-reading-diary">March Reading Diary</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Readers of the April edition of <em>The Candyman&#8217;s Trumpet</em>, edited by the remarkable Sanjeev Sethi, will have been reminded of the rich seam of poetry and abundance of talent to be found on the Indian subcontinent. To that distinguished company can be added Saraswati Nagpal, a Forward Prize, Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominee, whose debut collection, <em>Drench Me in Silver</em> (Black Bough Poetry, 2025), explores cultural heritage and personal identity through vivid imagery and reflective insight. These are uplifting yet economical poems that linger long after the final line. [&#8230;]</p><p>For many readers, the cultural specificity of these poems &#8212; infused with references to Hindu deities and traditions &#8212; may feel unfamiliar. Yet Nagpal consistently grounds her work in experiences that resonate universally, particularly in poems addressing love and loss. My personal highlight of the collection, <em>Love&#8217;s Absurdity</em>, captures the paradoxical nature of love through striking and original imagery: &#8220;My heart must tumble like breakers / off a reef, beating their foam&#8209;flecked / braids, moaning frothed verses of / salt&#8209;song loss unforeseen<em>.&#8221; </em>The poem conveys both the exhilaration and vulnerability of passion, the uncertainty of a world in flux where &#8220;each moment is dusk, light leaving the sky / in purple splendour.&#8221; Yet it also offers moments of luminous contentment, when one &#8220;wakes wondrous / in warm hands, shadows dispelled / in the balm of his sun&#8209;gaze.&#8221; Few poems, Shakespeare&#8217;s sonnets included, convey the emotional range of love with such intensity and lyric grace.</p><p>Loss, too, is treated with impressive delicacy. A daughter&#8217;s grief for her mother permeates the collection, nowhere more movingly than in <em>Libation for Mother</em>. Cooking becomes an everyday ritual that summons the mother&#8217;s presence, rekindling memories of being guided through the recipe at the age of eleven. There is solace in the realisation that the mother survives in both the dish and the internalised voice offering instruction, culminating in the image of the daughter &#8220;bathed in your sun&#8209;laugh ringing in my kitchen.&#8221; Here, loss is tempered by warmth and continuity, affirming that our predecessors endure through the selves they have shaped.</p><p><em>Drench Me in Silver</em> is an engaging and beautifully crafted debut that immersed this reader in an unfamiliar world, rendered vividly through sensory imagery and multilingual textures, while simultaneously exploring universal themes of identity, belonging, love and loss. It marks Saraswati Nagpal as a poet of considerable assurance and emotional intelligence.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/04/18/review-of-drench-me-in-silver-by-saraswati-nagpal/">Review of &#8216;Drench Me in Silver&#8217; by Saraswati Nagpal</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This is a collection in four parts &#8211; <em>Unravelling</em>, <em>I have never met Joseph Gilgun</em>, <em>Breadcrumbs</em>, and <em>Wendy</em>. Each sequence has its own microclimate, but the weathers of each also influence the others. It is darkly funny, smart and knowing in its self-sabotage. Helen Mort calls it &#8220;a brilliantly controlled unravelling&#8221;.</p><p><em>Unravelling</em>, the first part, is an intriguing mix of a highly innovative choice of format with a condensed, elliptical style of writing. At first, I thought it was a poetic maze, but on a few re-reads I think it&#8217;s more like a circle. Whichever direction we follow the logic, we end up passing back through the same spots. This feeling of stuckness fits with what the reader might glean as potentially a difficult subject matter. At the same time, she shows us the nuances of looking back at the before, during and aftermath of situations we may have found ourselves in &#8211; how there is no easy closure to be had. There is, nonetheless, a compulsion to pulling at the same threads and hoping for different results;</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;You keep trying to edit yourself, like a poem. It won&#8217;t work.&#8221;</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>&#8220;Your path is littered with half-formed thoughts. You whisper to yourself, <em>That one. No, not that one, maybe that one.</em> You&#8217;re searching for something &#8211; what, exactly, you&#8217;re not sure.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>It&#8217;s hard to quote from the individual poems because, more than anything I&#8217;ve read recently, the effect of Galia [Admoni]&#8217;s work is in the accumulation, the 3am logics that spiral from one piece to the next. Her control stops it from being stream-of-consciousness &#8211; this is more like the obsessive cataloguing of the artist or the collector.</p><p><strong>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/sad-boys-are-not-my-kink">Sad boys are not my kink</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>3 &#8211; How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?</strong><br>Most sentences come to me fully formed while I&#8217;m going about my day. The only thing I have to do is make sure I write them down before I forget them. I collect these sentences in my Notes app until I have enough of them to see a narrative or image unfold. I then start shaping the sentences into poems. I trim away as many lines as I can until only the essence of the poem remains. This process can take 10 minutes or 18 months, depending on how capricious the poem&#8217;s central sentence is. It usually only takes one sentence for a poem to work as a poem.</p><p><strong>4 &#8211; Where does a poem or work of prose usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a &#8220;book&#8221; from the very beginning?</strong><br>Everything I write begins in the Notes app. I usually start getting really passionate about a project once I&#8217;ve thought of a title for it. There are titles that have lived with me for many years. But it takes the right amount of experience and thought to write a book that fits the title I&#8217;ve envisioned for it. I try to be patient so I don&#8217;t ruin my ideas before they&#8217;re ripe.</p><p><strong>5 &#8211; Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?</strong><br>Yes! I love performing and reading my poems to people. It gives me a lot of confidence.<br><br><strong>6 &#8211; Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?</strong><br>The main question that runs through all in my work is: How vulnerable can a person be without getting ostracized? I often wonder what it takes for a person to be rejected by society. So far I&#8217;ve learned that people are willing to forgive sentimentality, but not cruelty.</p><p><strong>7 &#8211; What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?</strong><br>The writer creates a private space for working people. Most people have to keep their emotions hidden to survive at work, or in daily life in general. These people need stories to decompress. This is why, as a writer, you cannot afford to be vain, insecure, or easily ashamed. You have to put it all out there so that people without the privilege of emotional visibility have a place to go.</p><p><strong><a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/04/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_01041780409.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Nadia de Vries</a> (rob mclennan)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It begins with scratching out<br>the night sky, thread by thread, one<br>at a time, layering thin<br>line over other thin lines,<br>until only the full moon&#8217;s<br>light slices through. Next, days go<br>gray, glimpsed through lids or lashes &#8230;</p><p><strong>PF Anderson, <a href="https://rosefirerising.wordpress.com/2026/04/19/darkness-napowrimo-19/">Darkness (#NaPoWriMo 19)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Taken as a whole, my work writing poems for strangers addresses what I call PMM&#8212;Pervasive Modern Meaninglessness&#8212;a disorder I believe affects all of us in various proportion.</p><p>PMM didn&#8217;t surface suddenly. The agricultural age became the industrial age, which became the digital age, transforming work from something you did tangibly to something you did intangibly. The information age became the disinformation age, and now, on the precipice of an even more Artificial (AI/AGI) age, <em>authenticity</em> is poised to become something of an anachronism.</p><p>&#8220;Authenticity&#8221; was the topic of my master&#8217;s thesis in 1993, so it&#8217;s been something of a lifelong obsession for me, as it turns out. Growing up on a Midwestern farm had something to do with this. Child of back-to-the-land hippies, I had a tangible relationship with the food I ate (because I&#8217;d gardened it) and the heat our wood furnace produced all winter (because I&#8217;d chopped and stacked and hauled it). Even the soap I washed with was handmade. (Did you know lye is made from wood ash? I knew it viscerally, at fifteen.)</p><p>My parents made the mistake of buying a farm in winter, only to find that, when the snow melted, they&#8217;d purchased an 80-acre junkyard. I was enlisted in the cleanup effort from age seven onwards. It was tough, but we eventually made a heaven of that mess. I didn&#8217;t love the farm. I often resented the limitations inherent in a rural lifestyle. But I also had a real connection to that land, the animals on it, and the life we built there. When I talk of &#8220;authenticity,&#8221; that homestead&#8217;s where I&#8217;m coming from.</p><blockquote><p>There is no telling what will happen to humanity when the majority can no longer grasp after authenticity with any success. When nothing we encounter over the course of a day is of any substance. Or a week, or a month, or a year. How long is too long for a person to play at being human?</p></blockquote><p>The world is watching an American presidential administration unravel under the pressures created by artifice. There is only so much fakery a democracy can bear. False narratives add up. Misdirection and distraction entangle. Conspiratorial relationships are volatile. Leadership that lacks integrity bloats and sags under its own structural problems.</p><p>This administration is a disaster, but I believe the underlying disaster that gave rise to it is PMM. Too many people are too far removed from the things that matter most. FOX News exploits this, big brands use it to sell products, and social media thrives on the dramas that result from it. The world economy is increasingly chugging along on these false fumes. &#8220;Data centers&#8221;&#8212;factories for the data mines that are already carting their loads of information from our bodies, our minds, and our hearts, into the dark machinery of industry, and its banks&#8212;are being built on what should be our nurturing farms. These artificiality factories are guzzling our real-life water, overheating our real-life air, sucking our real-life power from us, literally and figuratively. It is not a model of humanity to build a future on.</p><p>My prediction is that, as this crisis deepens, poets will have unique leverage on a lot of good rope. Poets are trained to question the language, not repeat it like AI&#8217;s &#8220;Large Language Models&#8221; do. AI is looking for patterns; poets are looking to disrupt pattern in order to mint fresh meanings. There is real currency in this.</p><p><strong>Todd Boss, <a href="https://toddbosspoet.substack.com/p/pmm-pervasive-modern-meaninglessness">PMM: Pervasive Modern Meaninglessness</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And this is the era of dementia, of the post-liberal order,<br>and all the celebrated maniacs have decided to build for us<br>a brain big enough to hallucinate the future of all<br>eight billion people waking and sleeping and driving<br>and walking through rows of parked cars in an age<br>of lifestyle-brand packaged-meat influencer-burnout bait.<br>These are the costs of love among executable files.<br>And this is my most complete answer, my most sincere<br>and faithful attempt to keep to the confines of the prompt.<br>Each world arrives like a glare from the police station.<br>Each evening is an exit from the pickle ball court. Nowhere<br>will you find a way to avoid the turn lane, the trash compactor,<br>the sound of plumbing, the trillion trillions of transistors<br>that bind our psyche like a musculoskeletal system<br>or a vast armature of steel and plexiglass and insulated wires.</p><p><strong>RM Haines, <a href="https://woodenbrain.substack.com/p/dayton-ohio-20-something-and-6">DAYTON, OHIO / 20 SOMETHING &amp; 6</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am posting these translations&#8212;revised versions of those included in my <em>Selections from Saadi&#8217;s Bustan&#8212;</em>as a way of making Iran&#8217;s culture and literary history visible at a time when that visibility seems more important than ever.</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p>If the king sleeps content upon his throne,<br>I doubt the poor will sleep undisturbed,<br>but if he lights the night with watchful eyes,<br>sleep will bring his subjects a soothing calm.<br>Thank God the Atabeg, Abu Bakr ibn Saad,<br>has made the proper way to rule his own!<br>The only signs of trouble plaguing Pars<br>are the women whose lunar beauty turns our heads.</p><p>A verse from last night&#8217;s party caught my ear:<br>&#8220;I held my moon-faced lover while she slept<br>and wanted nothing more from life than that,<br>but the sight of her so fully lost in sleep<br>moved me. &#8216;Your slender grace shames the cypress.<br>Wash this sweet slumber from your narcissus-eyes;<br>smile, show us your lips like rose-petals;<br>sing for us with your nightingale voice.<br>Why let sleep hide the mischief your charms can do?<br>Come! Bring the ruby wine you poured last night.&#8217;<br>She opened one indignant eye, &#8216;You say<br>I&#8217;m mischievous, but rouse me nonetheless?&#8217;&#8221;</p><p>Under the rule of our enlightened king,<br>no other mischief dares to stir.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/from-saadis-bustan-umar-ibn-abd-al-aziz-sacrifices-a-jewel-to-help-the-starving/">From Saadi&#8217;s Bustan: Umar Ibn Abd al-Aziz Sacrifices A Jewel To Help the Starving</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sitting in the packed playhouse of the Bowery Theater on Manhattan&#8217;s Lower East Side one balmy evening in the summer of 1833 is a teenage boy who can barely afford the theater &#8212; he can barely afford his bread &#8212; but there he is, rosy-cheeked &#8212; an almost baby-like rosiness that would remain with him into old age &#8212; exhilarated by the spectacle on the stage, by having made the ferry crossing from Brooklyn in the warm salty breeze, by the triumph of having bought a ticket with his own money. He has just turned fourteen. Three years earlier, he left school to begin earning his living &#8212; partly to allay his family&#8217;s perpetual financial struggle, partly to allay the numbing of his soul. &#8220;Re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul,&#8221; he will later write. At eleven, he entered the labor force as an office boy for two lawyers, one of whom took the boy&#8217;s intellectual development under his wing and introduced him to the splendors of literature with a gift of a circulating library subscription. Within a year, he was apprenticing with the Quaker editor of a Democratic newspaper.</p><p>His parents &#8212; a twenty-one-year-old woman descended from a lineage of Dutch Quakers and a twenty-seven-year-old man whose ancestors arrived from England in 1640 on a ship named <em>True Love</em> &#8212; married the summer of <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/03/07/traversal-tambora-bicycle/">the Year Without a Summer</a>. The rosy-cheeked boy was the second of their eight children. Conceived the year <em><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/06/wollstonecraft-godwin-semmelweis/">Frankenstein</a></em><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/06/wollstonecraft-godwin-semmelweis/"> was born</a>, born months after the landmark legislation that proposed the abolition of slavery in Missouri and sparked the tensions that would eventually erupt into the Civil War, this Brooklyn boy would soon be shaking his young country awake from the slumber of complacency &#8212; not with preachings, not with politics, but with poems: poems that would effect more spiritual elevation, kindle more moral courage, seed more ideas of the basic humanity we call social justice, and thumb them deeper into the soil of culture than all the preachings and politics of his era combined.</p><p>&#8220;I would compose a wonderful and ponderous book,&#8221; he would resolve, not yet out of adolescence, his gray-blue eyes already drooping with a weary wisdom. &#8220;Yes: I would write a book!&#8221; And so he would &#8212; his life would become this book, then the book would become his life. He would revise it obsessively until his dying hour, expanding and republishing this swelling book, hoping it would beckon to &#8220;others who look back on me, because I looked forward to them.&#8221; [&#8230;]</p><p>&#8220;A leaf of grass is no less than the journey work of the stars,&#8221; he writes. This overarching belief in the unity of everything, the interconnectedness and interbelonging of everything, colors his entire cosmogony. It would also render him wildly controversial, for he channeled this belief by writing about science and sex and the equality of the sexes and the races and the classes &#8212; ideas thoroughly countercultural in his day, in the most literal sense, for they are drawn not from culture but from nature. Verse after verse, detail after detail patiently recorded in his notebook, absorbed and distilled into some essential truth, he writes of the natural way of things, before society and civilization have disfigured them into biases and borders, into the hubrises and hierarchies of which the rickety scaffolding we call society is built.</p><p>At the same time, he recognizes that these hubrises and biases spring from the selfsame source as our noblest and most generous impulses, and in this recognition, he gives room for our own multitudes to unfold in his vast heart &#8212; the beautiful and the terrible equally welcome as particles of our humanity, for he knows that they are particles of his. &#8220;Every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you,&#8221; he writes in an era when atoms were still an exotic notion to the common citizen, an incomprehensible abstraction. Only by being porous to the whole of the universe, to every expression of existence, can he harmonize those particles &#8212; the cosmic and the earthly, the temporal and the timeless, the scientific and the spiritual, the human and the nonhuman &#8212; particles charged, always, by the reality of the present.</p><p>Because of his time and place and particular predilections, perhaps more so than any other poet&#8217;s in the history of our civilization, Whitman&#8217;s poetic development took place in the fragile, fertile ground between the personal and the political. Another titanic poet, Audre Lorde, would <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2017/02/16/audre-lorde-academy-of-american-poets-nea/">capture</a> this fertility a century later: &#8220;The shortest statement of philosophy I have is my living, or the word I.&#8221; Walt Whitman was the great absorptive and adhesive I of his era. &#8220;The book arose out of my life in Brooklyn and New York from 1838 to 1853,&#8221; he would later recall of <em>Leaves of Grass</em>, &#8220;absorbing a million people, for fifteen years, with an intimacy, an eagerness, an abandon, probably never equalled.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/04/18/whitman-traversal/">Walt Whitman&#8217;s Field Guide to Being Yourself: The Trial and Triumph of Leaves of Grass</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Will it be saag paneer, warmly<br>green with spice, or pork belly<br>glossy under bar lights; that pupu<br>platter at Alkaline where cocktails<br>are cute and the sake is tinged<br>with the smile of tropical fruit?<br>It&#8217;s noon and we&#8217;ve changed<br>our minds at least half a dozen times<br>but there&#8217;s no need to apologize<br>or forgive the wild swings of desire.<br>After all, isn&#8217;t this our practice?<br>Tasting, arranging, revising,<br>paring away then calling out Wait,<br>bring back the menu? We want it all [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/04/come-as-you-are/">Come as You Are</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As I stood in the queue to get into the gallery last night I felt old demons rise. The avant garde doesn&#8217;t like waiting in line. And as I looked around at others shuffling up or slouching out for a vape I heard myself say, &#8220;Well, at least the art crowd still looks the same.&#8221;</p><p>There were some familiar faces, people I vaguely recognised from past lives and I made sure my mask was on tight as I moved up the line. And between the elbows and the puffed out chests I began to think about my Sunday walks, my weekly saunter through history where, a mile at a time, I visit old ghosts, make connections with poets across the city. And how glad I am that they&#8217;re all dead, how they no longer have to put on show, how I can know them without wearing a mask.</p><p>Last week I walked briefly with Marlowe down Hog Lane where he&#8217;d gotten into a fight over an unpaid bar tab that ended with an inn keeper&#8217;s son being stabbed to death. I was rather glad I didn&#8217;t meet Marlowe while he was still alive but I took a vicarious pleasure getting to know him on a brisk Sunday walk. I wondered if I might manifest him here, summon him up, have him rush the gallery doors. Me and Kit, the bad boys of art, back on the PV circuit. I decided against it, politely gave my name to the girl checking the guest list and quietly I made my way inside. Everyone was on show.</p><p>A man in a suit with pink bunny ears. Another with eyeliner and heroin skin. A girl in a cape and a Pillbox Hat. They were all here in pleated beards and thigh high boots, with tattoos and tiaras and tantrums and traumas and tears. It was glorious and exhausting, I wanted stay and I couldn&#8217;t wait to escape, for what nourishes me destroys me. I needed the silence of my own solitude and this bold brightness to drown my disquiet. I had to go out for a walk in order that I might return. I needed a change in order to find more of the same.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n60-what-nourishes-me-destroys-me">N&#186;60 What nourishes me destroys me</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.parthianbooks.com/products/the-literary-business-hardback">The Literary Business</a>, Peter Finch, Parthian Books, 2025, ISBN: 978-1917140522, &#163;20.00</p><blockquote><p>How do you sell books? Get the customer to pick up a copy and then give you the money. Why is this so bloody hard?</p></blockquote><p>This quote from quite early on in Peter Finch&#8217;s The Literary Business lays down one of the key themes of the book. Right through his life, from early days as editor and publisher of Second Aeon, through his time running Oriel Books and then the Welsh Academi, and on to the pages of this very book, Finch has sought to get the book into the reader&#8217;s hands. However, he&#8217;s also fully aware that the one valid counterpoint to his theme is the sad fact that there really is no market for poetry, and no end of poets in search of that non-existent readership.</p><blockquote><p>&#8230;pretty much anything in the business of poetry could be made to generate an income, other than the poetry itself. Teach it, discuss it, review it, write about it, edit it, publish it, go on TV and talk about it. These were all activities that resulted in the transfer of money from one hand to another. But be the author of the actual poem in question and money would rarely head in your direction. The best the poet could expect was applause, now and then, if they played their cards right.</p></blockquote><p>As editor of Second Aeon, Finch had first-hand experience of all the wrong ways of going about getting your work into print, among the results being his excellent, and still relevant, How To Publish Your Poetry, a kind of guidebook for the obsessed and his contributions to The Writers Handbook.</p><p>Even after Oriel, whose death by a thousand administrative cuts is related in the book, the bookselling impulse continues, so that, for example, in a much later chapter on Chris Torrance, Finch tells the interested reader how to find out about a forthcoming title, Path: the later work of Chris Torrance, that will bring Torrance&#8217;s Magic Door sequence to a posthumous close. (As you asked so nicely, the answer is <a href="https://christorranceestate.co.uk/estate/">here</a>.)</p><p>But there&#8217;s a lot more to this book than that. Part memoir, part pen-pictures of other poets and literary figures, part history of Welsh poetry since the 1960s, it&#8217;s an invigorating, often humorous read. And there are heroes: Torrance, John Tripp, Bob Cobbing, numerous booksellers and, more than anyone, Meic Stephens, the arts administrator, publisher, singer, Welsh nationalist (to understate his role wildly) whose activities made so much of what Finch charts here possible. As Finch puts it, Stephens didn&#8217;t enter the mainstream, his strategy lay in &#8216;creating that mainstream and wrapping it around himself&#8217;. A worthy hero indeed.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/04/15/the-literary-business-by-peter-finch-a-review/">The Literary Business by Peter Finch: A Review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>not, in fact, <em>the newest member of our team</em>, but a bobble-headed novelty: a mascot.</p><p>not, in fact, a <em>friend</em> to the up-and-coming poet, but a rung on his ladder, a photo-op.</p><p>never <em>a contender</em>, the <em>shortlist of two</em> was the other candidate&#8217;s name. twice.</p><p>not, in fact, <em>valued</em>, or <em>wanted</em>, or<em> loved</em>. but so fucking <em>useful</em>, and so fucking <em>nice.</em></p><p><strong>Fran Lock, <a href="https://franlock.substack.com/p/realisation-ditty">REALISATION DITTY</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today, April 17, is Haiku Poetry Day! To celebrate, I&#8217;m sharing a piece on a classic haiku theme: cherry blossoms.</p><p>Last spring, on a visit to my sister Yoshi&#8217;s house, I noticed that her flowering cherry tree was absolutely humming with hundreds of honeybees.</p><p>That inspired a haiku:</p><p>spring fever<br>the whole tree<br>buzzing</p><p>At home later, I mixed acrylic paints in the colors I wanted. I then used a gel press to apply the paint to an old typewritten letter, an insurance statement, rice paper embedded with mango leaves, and other specialty papers from Asia.</p><p>Using reference photos, I carefully tore the pieces into the desired shapes, then laid them in place on the cradled wood panel.</p><p>Next I took a second panel, placed it on top of the first one, and flipped both together. Now the whole collage lay upside down on the spare panel, so that the background pieces&#8212;the first ones I needed to glue down&#8212;were on top. I then worked my way up to the foreground pieces.</p><p>Inspired by the Japanese tradition of haiga (art combined with haiku), I added the haiku to the collage digitally. It is the April art for my 2026 calendar, and I also made a birthday card version, above.</p><p>Every spring, I spend some time with a Yoshino cherry tree on our country road, soaking in the delicate beauty of the pale pink blossoms. The experience is joyful with a tinge of heartbreak, knowing how briefly this stage will last.</p><p>blossom season<br>earlier each year<br>this fleeting world</p><p>It&#8217;s the impermanence itself that makes these days of peak blossom so precious. The bees certainly seem to know they need to make the most of the moment! Happy spring and happy Haiku Poetry Day.</p><p><strong>Annette Makino, <a href="https://www.makinostudios.com/blog/2026/4/17/cherry-blossoms-for-haiku-poetry-day">Cherry blossoms for Haiku Poetry Day</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This newsletter has swung between the two poles of my writing life for the past two years: The leadership writing for tech companies and executives that is the foundation of my <a href="https://tweneymedia.com/">leadership communications consultancy</a>, and the creative work that is the heart of my writing practice.</p><p>Perhaps this seems a bit mixed-up. But the two are actually deeply connected. Yes, the business writing is more focused, the creative work more expressive. The business writing is more about tech and AI; the creative writing is about presence and not at all AI.</p><p>These two types of writing inform and enhance each other.</p><p>If you are writing for business, a creative writing practice can help lift your copy out of the <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/03/magazine/chatbot-writing-style.html">bland, soulless, fake-upbeat style</a> that is increasingly ubiquitous online.</p><p>If you are a creative writer, learning to <a href="https://dylan.tweney.com/writing-tips/">write more clearly and effectively</a> can help keep your writing from becoming too divorced from its audience. (If that&#8217;s what you want!)</p><p>For example, when I am stuck in my work writing or looking for inspiration, I turn to poetry. I read poems, and I write drafts of poems, to rejuvenate my sense of the possibilities language contains.</p><p>I read and write poetry to rekindle my sense of myself as a human being, speaking and writing, not a mere creator or consumer of content. Poetry <em>recharges</em> me.</p><p>But, as I admitted in my last newsletter on <a href="https://dylan.tweney.com/finding-your-flow-as-a-writer/">finding your flow as a writer</a>, it has not always been easy for me to write this way.</p><p>Haiku, as it turned out, were the wedge that reopened my mind&#8217;s door to the poetic world. And they also opened the door to a deeper appreciation of the world. They&#8217;ve made my life richer.</p><p>Deeply infused in Zen, but with a <a href="https://www.ahapoetry.com/Bare%20Bones/bbtoc%20intro.html">humble, unassuming form</a> that tends to undercut any pretensions of enlightenment or specialness, haiku cut straight to the chase. They are all about appreciating the mundane world in its ordinary, miraculous, beautiful, ugly, tiny, grand details. Merely noticing and pointing out, like a friend saying: Look, over there. Isn&#8217;t that cool?</p><p>Over and over, haiku have been the sleeper agents that snuck past my prosaic, practical mental censors, only to activate themselves within my (sub) consciousness as representatives of another world: The one outside my head. The world of stars, autumn leaves, dog fur, green tea, and grasses. The world of rounded rocks and tumbling water, of echoing urban canyons and deserted suburban intersections.</p><p>The best haiku are like that. Like stones, they drop into your consciousness with a little splash, making a few ripples and then leaving nothing behind as the surface returns to glassy calm. (Or whatever your consciousness is doing, which is probably not calm at all, come to think of it.) But meanwhile, the stone sinks to the bottom of the pond, solid as anything, bringing news of the world out there to the submarine life forms that populate the bottom strata of our minds.</p><p><strong>Dylan Tweney, <a href="https://dylan.tweney.com/haiku-as-portal-and-tool/">How haiku can help you be a better writer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Perhaps<br>When he leafs through that book</p><p>It might feel like skin<br>As if parting the warmest part of her</p><p>He might bring<br>Forefinger to tongue</p><p><strong>Luciana Francis, <a href="https://lucianafrancis.substack.com/p/clandestine-love-poem">Interlude</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As planned, I am spending my April reading poetry, though some mornings a blogpost feels out of reach. This book, not new, but a fairly recent addition to my book hoard, is one I definitely want to share.</p><p><em>Necessity of Flight </em>is a showcase for its author&#8217;s craft. Jane Alynn is also a photographer (see her website for a sampling), and these poems are filled with images and light. To quote the back cover blurb from Lana Hechtman Ayers, at the heart of this book is &#8220;a profound reverence for and kinship with the natural world.&#8221;</p><p>I heard Jane read at Edmonds Bookshop about a year ago, and I can still hear her reading this poem: [click through to read &#8220;In Want of Wings&#8221;]</p><p><em>Necessity of Flight </em>is alive with wings, &#8220;cloudburst / of starlings&#8221;; hummingbirds &#8220;keen on honeysuckle&#8221;; &#8220;feathered beggars&#8221;; a gull, &#8220;dull and brassy and fat / as a wallet on payday, / swelled with longing.&#8221; Dreams and memories are longing, too, and almost fly, long-deceased loved ones passing through, and everywhere the rising of the poet&#8217;s words from line to line and page to page.</p><p><strong>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/jane-alynn-necessity-of-flight/">Jane Alynn, NECESSITY OF FLIGHT</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Honestly, I had not read Etheridge Knight in years until I came across <a href="https://terrancehayes.com/">Terrance Hayes&#8217; </a>gorgeous masked memoir, <a href="https://bookshop.org/p/books/to-float-in-the-space-between-a-life-and-work-in-conversation-with-the-life-and-work-of-etheridge-knight-terrance-hayes/abf1f1b66798ac9b?ean=9781940696614&amp;next=t&amp;srsltid=AfmBOorIRK3Gw3oZC0UNxtgzkHddJBXGEu9cJ6sZeJWwDBGKuPd2IlRD1AA">To Float in the Space Between</a>. A masked memoir (or braided memoir) is a term I believe I might have invented. A masked memoir (you heard it here first, dear reader) is when a writer (a poet) begins writing a book about an influential poet (or writer) in their lives, but along the way subconsciously or maybe consciously, begins to focus gently on the poet&#8217;s own world. Another masked memoir that begins in biography but then turns to personal history is Mark Doty&#8217;s, <a href="https://www.amazon.com/What-Grass-Walt-Whitman-Life/dp/0393070220">What is the Grass: Walt Whitman in My Life.</a> This is also true of <a href="https://meganmarshallauthor.com/books_elizabethbishop.shtml">Elizabeth Bishop: A Miracle for Breakfast</a> by Megan Marshall.</p><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Float-Space-Between-Conversation-Etheridge/dp/1940696615/ref=sr_1_1?crid=146QT0MDGZA41&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.fo8eOdlktLOhgwT69qh_A-LBGPMtRpku43E0yk__W4-1zXAr9RUhsf5ZMFHhwnAPoXOme8sULn5dxunTgzam7PwZONgkFm4XbNoRBFiM9dNfiZDNpMLBpQt1xYaGEh-ACvKDLZNT_4LVi7AvR_KsAqX5B8e7IHqZQ2s9fOMqrICvG2jutOcfVzx3kDKRlJi8GeG5PoPwtywC82jISs-FmJ_4KNRcGSNzyEJS9EOYxcg.7kM49sg9wizaUeILvBvWs1xA_D551Ze3-SUVC32_sLg&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=to+float+in+the+space+between&amp;qid=1776132890&amp;sprefix=to+float+in+the+space%2Caps%2C215&amp;sr=8-1">To Float in the Spaces Between: A Life and Work in Conversation with the Life and Work of Etheridge Knight,</a> (for my first read, I must have skipped the subtitle) begins with a poem of Knight&#8217;s, <a href="https://poets.org/poem/idea-ancestry">&#8220;The Idea of Ancestry,&#8221;</a> which functions as a frontpiece and philosophical treatise for the book. &#8220;I am all of them, they are all of me; they are farmers, I am a thief&#8230;&#8221; This satisfying juxtaposition of identities continues throughout the book and<em> float(s) in the spaces between, </em>which is also the last line of Knight&#8217;s poem.</p><p>More of this masala mix happens again on page 4. Hayes writes, &#8220;When I began collecting interviews and stories about Etheridge Knight more than a decade ago, I said mostly to the few people I cornered for interviews, that I&#8217;d never write a biography because it would take more than a decade to do it. This is not a biography&#8230;Consider this a collection of essays as speculative, motley, and adrift as Knight himself.&#8221; There&#8217;s so much to love here, isn&#8217;t there? First Hayes tells us that he&#8217;s been working on this project for more than a decade. He follows that up with how he can&#8217;t write a biography because it would take &#8220;more than a decade to do so.&#8221; And then the definitive, &#8220;This is not a biography.&#8221;</p><p>I have read <a href="https://www.wavepoetry.com/products/to-float-in-the-space-between">To Float in the Space Between</a> three times now and I&#8217;m getting ready for a fourth visit. Where does the narrative move from Knight&#8217;s life to Hayes&#8217;? I expect it happens somewhere in Pittsburgh where both poets lived in different times. For me the emotional core of the book is towards the end, it happens between Hayes and his parents at a baseball game&#8230;I guess you will need to grab a copy!</p><p><strong>Susan Rich, <a href="https://susanrichpoet.substack.com/p/ethridge-knight-on-the-outskirts">Ethridge Knight on the Outskirts of My Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now there&#8217;s another word I think and that thought smiles into the light of the next platform. Not my stop. Don&#8217;t want to stop this merry go around of abstracted creativity. Even as the cables outside undulate into the next tunnel my smile is personalised to me alone. Not one snake knows me or my thoughts I think, neither I theirs. This black and white journey colours my thinking. We all sway in unison our separation lost in the timelessness of our thoughts. Schuum ~ the doors open ~ I get off on it again.</p><p><strong>Jim Young, <a href="http://baitthelines.blogspot.com/2026/04/a-ride-on-tube-prose-poem.html">A ride on the tube ~ a prose poem</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>April is National Poetry Month; but this year, I am in hibernation mode.</p><p>I&#8217;m not going to readings or w<a href="https://annemichael.blog/2019/04/01/april-experiment/">riting a poem a day for 30 days</a>, not posting much of my or other people&#8217;s poems or poetry books on social media, and not doing much poetry writing or any submitting. What&#8217;s gotten into me? Some kind of malaise? Or just a sense of being overwhelmed by, you know, life and aging and perhaps too much reflection. Plus there&#8217;s garden catch-up to tend to, since I was away for the early part of the season opener. And we&#8217;ve had a heat wave with a dry spell and lots of wind, so I&#8217;ve had to pace myself with the heavy stuff. Thankfully, Best Beloved can pitch in with much of that. Yet I am<em> reading</em> poetry, and if that ever stops I&#8217;ll know I&#8217;m in trouble.</p><p>So&#8211;back from traveling westward-ho. While in Fort Collins, Colorado, some dear friends introduced me to <a href="https://www.wolverinefarm.org/about/">Wolverine Publick House, Cafe, and Bookshop, </a>where there&#8217;s a lovely poetry book room in which I found my colleague Ian Haight&#8217;s book,<a href="https://www.whitepine.org/catalog/spring-mountain%3A-the-complete-poems-of-h%C5%8F-nans%C5%8Frh%C5%8Fn"> </a><em><a href="https://www.whitepine.org/catalog/spring-mountain%3A-the-complete-poems-of-h%C5%8F-nans%C5%8Frh%C5%8Fn">Spring Mountain:</a> The Complete Poems of Nans&#335;rh&#335;n</em>. Also lots of other fabulous poetry that I had to restrain myself from purchasing, lest I overload my carry-on luggage weight. I read many of the Nans&#335;rh&#335;n translations in earlier versions that Ian emailed to me, and it is wonderful to find the book in print (from White Pine).</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/04/16/nopomonth-but/">NoPoMonth, but&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In my first term reading English Literature at university, we studied the Victorians. Busy as I was making friends, falling in love and learning how to do my own laundry, I struggled to keep up with the reading list of weighty novels, but I did manage to write an essay on Robert Browning&#8217;s poem &#8216;Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came&#8217; (1852), and it is one of those pieces of writing that &#8211; looking back now &#8211; I realise has haunted my work ever since. For example, it was through Robert Browning I discovered the power of the dramatic monologue, or persona poem &#8211; he is considered an expert at the form (if you haven&#8217;t read <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43768/my-last-duchess">&#8216;My Last Duchess&#8217;</a> do yourself a favour and read it now).</p><p>I have always been a frustrated actress, and there is something about the intimacy and urgency of the first-person poetry that I&#8217;m very attracted to. I love the slipperiness of persona poems, the potential of that &#8216;I&#8217;, and have since translated <em>Ovid&#8217;s Heroines</em>, the first book of dramatic monologues.</p><p>And then it&#8217;s set in a courtly, Arthurian world, and I love myth. And there are faeries and fairytales buried in there somewhere too, and ballads. The poem&#8217;s dark depiction of a supernatural waste-land is evident both in my own ballad &#8216;<a href="https://www.poetryinternational.com/en/poets-poems/poems/poem/103-10929_THE-LURE">The Lure</a>&#8217; and in the scenes set in in the kingdom of Carbonek in my novel <em><a href="https://theemmapress.com/shop/childrens/chapter-books/the-untameables/">The Untameables</a></em>&#8230;</p><p><strong>Clare Pollard, <a href="https://clarespoetrycircle.substack.com/p/reading-childe-roland-to-the-dark">Reading &#8216;Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came&#8217; by Robert Browning</a> (Part 1)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today&#8217;s Poem marks the April 17 anniversary of the death of its subject, Benjamin Franklin (1706&#8211;1790). The poem&#8217;s author, Philip Freneau (1752&#8211;1832), is known to us today as the &#8220;Poet of the American Revolution,&#8221; though it&#8217;s hard to say who first settled that mantle upon him, or when. It&#8217;s far less difficult, however, to say <em>why</em> Freneau became famous as the poetic voice of the Revolution. Freneau became that voice because there really wasn&#8217;t anybody else.</p><p>In late-18th-century America, poets were relatively thin on the ground. The Puritan poets <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-to-my-dear-and-loving?utm_source=publication-search">Anne Bradstreet</a> and <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-i-am-the-living-bread?utm_source=publication-search">Edward Taylor</a> had belonged to the previous century. Although Taylor had died only in 1729, 23 years before Freneau was born, still he had been a Metaphysical poet, a successor to George Herbert and far more of a piece with Herbert&#8217;s age than with his own. <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-march-6e2">William Cullen Bryant</a>, meanwhile, would become, in the early years of the 19th century, the new voice of American Romanticism. Bryant&#8217;s lifetime and poetic career would overlap with Freneau&#8217;s&#8212;but in the 1770s, again, for various plausible reasons, relatively few people in America were writing poetry to any appreciable degree.</p><p>This is not to say that <em>nobody</em> in Freneau&#8217;s day was writing poetry. Any educated person, in America as in England, possessed in his stable of basic competencies the ability to turn a few verses. Thomas Paine, for example, far more famous as a prose polemicist than as a poet, <a href="https://thomaspaine.org/essays/poetry/liberty-tree/">also wrote verse</a>. But it&#8217;s worth noting that almost the only person writing poetry seriously, the only person of any real literary fame in the American colonies in the mid-to-late 18th century, was Philip Freneau&#8217;s close contemporary in Boston, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45465/on-being-brought-from-africa-to-america">Phillis Wheatley</a> (1753&#8211;1784). Wheatley, however, was writing in enslavement, a circumstance perhaps not quite congruous with the idea of a laureate of freedom, and her subject matter, as her 1773 <em><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/409/pg409-images.html">Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral</a></em>, demonstrates, was more interior and personal than political. At any rate, it&#8217;s Freneau who was recognized, and whom we remember, as that laureate of American independence.</p><p>It&#8217;s good that we remember him, if for no other reason than because he was an interesting figure: born in New York City, the son of Huguenot French parents; James Madison&#8217;s roommate at Princeton; writer of anti-British pamphlets in the early 1770s; business agent on the Caribbean island of St. Croix, where he developed a loathing for the practice of slavery and a consequent commitment to abolitionism, a conviction expressed in his poem &#8220;<a href="https://poets.org/poem/sir-toby">To Sir Toby</a>;&#8221; and during the Revolutionary War, crew member on an American privateer. Captured at sea, he spent six weeks on a British prison ship, a traumatic and nearly fatal experience chronicled in his long poem, straightforwardly entitled &#8220;<a href="https://poets.org/poem/british-prison-ship">The British Prison Ship</a>.&#8221;</p><p>After the war, he married and began a career in political journalism, positioned by his friends Madison and Thomas Jefferson to be a polemical thorn in the side of the Federalist Party. Jefferson, then Secretary of State, also hired Freneau as a State Department translator, a post that served as more or less a sinecure for Freneau, whose only language besides English was French. Until the end of his life &#8212; he froze to death at the age of 80, on his way home in a snowstorm after visiting friends near his estate at Matawan, New Jersey &#8212; Freneau continued to write poetry in a vein that anticipated his Fireside successors.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-on-the-death-of-dr-benjamin">Today&#8217;s Poem: On the Death of Dr. Benjamin Franklin</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.paulreverehouse.org/longfellows-poem/">Paul Revere&#8217;s Ride</a>, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, is the most famous poem about the American Revolution, but it&#8217;s mostly myth. Revere did not wait in Charlestown, and watch</p><blockquote><p>with eager search<br>The belfry-tower of the Old North Church,</p></blockquote><p>to count the lanterns: no, he knew, before he left Boston, that the British were coming by sea. Nor was it</p><p>Mostly Aesthetics is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Subscribe</p><blockquote><p>two by the village clock<br>When he came to the bridge in Concord town,</p></blockquote><p>for Revere never made it to Concord: he was detained near Lexington by British Regulars. I don&#8217;t begrudge Longfellow his myth-making, and maybe there was a special need, as Civil War erupted, to remind America that</p><blockquote><p>In the hour of darkness and peril and need,<br>The people will waken&#8230;</p></blockquote><p>Still: Longfellow&#8217;s Revere is more theme park ride than man. It has thus been left for us, to put the man himself into a poem. And that call should be answered, for he, and the true events of that night, encapsulate the revolution as well as, or better than, Longfellow&#8217;s imaginings. It&#8217;s all there: the defiance; the assertion of rights; and the bold declaration of British overreach. &#8220;I was not afraid.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Memorandum on Events of April 18</strong></p><p>I was sent for by Doctor Joseph Warren,<br>The night of 18 April. He desired<br>I go to Lexington, and there inform<br>Adams and Hancock, that light troops and grenadiers<br>Were marching to the bottom of the Common,<br>Where boats were waiting; aiming, it was thought,<br>For Lexington, to take them prisoner<br>Or else destroy colonial stores in Concord.<br>I left at once, and crossed the Charles; in town,<br>Acquired a horse, and rode. The moon shone bright. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/lexington-and-concord">Lexington and Concord</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A successful sonnet requires considerable rhetorical control and a kind of density of language: in the earliest examples, we see vernacular poets struggling to pull this off. The style required was new in English in the mid-sixteenth century as it had been in French a little earlier. But it wasn&#8217;t new in Latin: in fact, both classical and Renaissance Latin verse offered multiple models for a rhetorically tight, somewhat paradoxical, carefully argued but also passionate short poems, especially in the broadly Catullan tradition, but also in elements of the (overlapping) traditions of epigram and love elegy. [&#8230;]</p><p>Latin poets of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries never developed a standard way of doing &#8220;a sonnet&#8221; in Latin because they had no need to: rather, the importation of the sonnet made possible in French and English a kind of closely argued, highly artificial but also passionate poetry that had previously <em>only </em>been doable in Latin. Most of the distinctive features of the sonnet simply weren&#8217;t required in Latin because there were multiple existing models that served much the same purpose. A few elements of the sonnet form, however, had no obvious analogue in Latin: namely, the ability to mark a rhetorical &#8216;turn&#8217; by a shift of form (rhyme scheme) as well as of style and tone, and the particular emotional and rhetorical possibilities offered by a long sequence of poems in an identical form reverting frequently to an established set of images and ideas. Accordingly, if we look carefully, we <em>do </em>find some evidence of poets experimenting with ways to borrow these features in their Latin verse.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/the-latin-sonnet-on-a-non-existent">The Latin sonnet: on a non-existent form</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Something a little different this week: I&#8217;m delighted to share an interview with Moul. Victoria is a scholar, poet and translator living in Paris. She writes weekly about poetry and translation on her Substack, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/">Horace &amp; friends</a>, which I cannot recommend highly enough. She is also the editor of a new pamphlet, <em>Poems Beautiful &amp; Useful</em>, now available from <a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/">Headless Poet</a>, a new small press dedicated to the art of the introduction, published by yours truly.</p><p>Headless Poet aims to (re)introduce readers to poets of the past, especially work which has been buried by time. There will also be a series of short introductions to (my pick of) the best new poetry. In that spirit, <em>Poems Beautiful &amp; Useful</em> presents twenty &#8216;popular&#8217; poems from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries which are, in most cases, not well known today. It will, I think, be of interest to curious readers and specialists alike. In this &#8212; and in the masterful way in which Victoria has navigated the format&#8217;s limits (just thirty-six pages, including the intro) &#8212; it really exemplifies what the project is all about. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Jeremy: </strong>In his (rightly glowing) <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/poems-beautiful-and-useful">review</a>, Henry Oliver makes the point that you haven&#8217;t included anything by John Donne. I found that interesting, because I don&#8217;t think Donne quite fits here. Rightly or wrongly I think of him as a poet who overwhelms the reader, whereas these poems are more companionable, for want of a better word. But of course, presumably in part thanks to T. S. Eliot, we do tend to associate this era with Donne in particular and with the &#8216;Metaphysical&#8217; poets generally. Some of the poets here would, in other guises, appear in a &#8216;Metaphysical&#8217; anthology, but not all of them and perhaps not these particular poems. Do these distinctions make any sense to you? Is it fair to describe the selection as a whole as a kind of response to Eliot?</p><p><strong>Victoria: </strong>Yes, I think Donne and Milton are probably the two most obvious omissions, though we don&#8217;t associate Milton so much with shorter verse anyway. Donne is a good example of a poet who was demonstrably popular at the time &#8212; there are quite a large number of manuscripts containing copies of his poems &#8212; and is central to the &#8220;canon&#8221; today, though as you imply in your question, he was out of fashion for a long time in between before being revived in the earlier 20th century. I left him out for two reasons. For the pragmatic one, that I wanted to use the pamphlet to introduce readers to less familiar poets, and if I had to guess I&#8217;d say that Donne is probably the single best-known poet from the early seventeenth century, at least for British readers. (He was on the A level syllabus for a long time as well.) The other reason is one you also hint at in your question, I think &#8212; in this pamphlet I was interested in showcasing verse that, though quite varied, gravitates towards or centres around a kind of practicality or simplicity. That&#8217;s not to say that these are all simple poems, but that they have a kind of rootedness to them that I don&#8217;t associate so much with Donne &#8212; they are tethered a bit more straightforwardly to a message or an occasion. I think that the prominence of the &#8216;metaphysical&#8217; tag, especially at school level, means that a lot of readers have this idea that early modern English poetry is paradigmatically rather <em>difficult. </em>I wanted to show how poetry of this period can also be rewarding in a rather straightforward sort of way.</p><p><strong>Jeremy:</strong> I&#8217;m thinking about that wonderful line from Geoffrey Hill, which I someone shared on Substack the other day: &#8220;We are difficult. Human beings are difficult. We&#8217;re difficult to ourselves, we&#8217;re difficult to each other&#8230; Why is it believed that poetry, prose, painting, music should be any different than we are?&#8221; But, of course, it makes just as much sense to say that, since being human is so difficult, why shouldn&#8217;t art offer us a place where we can experience something else? Being simple, beautifully, is terribly hard, in both form and in feeling.</p><p>I&#8217;m sure this says more about me than anything else, but I&#8217;ve always felt that there is a strain within modern poetry that sees difficulty as a virtue in itself and simplicity or clarity as somehow selling out &#8212; that there are certain poets who seem to take pride in being obscure. And then, on the other hand, there are clearly popular poets who take pride in being, for want of a better word, bad (see the recent &#8216;Worst Poets Club&#8217; tour). We are back to the old split, real or imagined, between &#8216;popular&#8217; and &#8216;literary&#8217; work. That split seems as perncious now as ever, almost intractable. Does it go back to this period?</p><p><strong>Victoria:</strong> Yes, it&#8217;s very hard to write simply isn&#8217;t it? This is noticeable in poetry but also everywhere else. One of the hardest things of all, with my scholarly hat on, is to write about very complex and quasi-technical matters in a genuinely straightforward way. To say just what you mean.</p><p>I like Hill very much and of course he&#8217;s right that everyone is difficult &#8212; perhaps complex is a better word. But I&#8217;m sure I&#8217;m not the only reader to feel, also, that Hill made a bit of a fetish of difficulty, that he used difficulty of various kinds, including setting complex technical challenges for himself, as a kind of strategy of avoidance. There&#8217;s something in Hill that seems almost daunted or embarrassed by the magnitude of his own lyric gifts. It&#8217;s an interesting phenomenon that I recognise in Cowley as well. I suspect Hill&#8217;s poetic &#8220;afterlife&#8221; might be rather like that of Cowley.</p><p>Most people, I think, would acknowledge that people and relationships and the world are indeed very difficult but also that there are moods, or moments, or aspects of life for all of us in which the important things actually seem simple.</p><p>I&#8217;m not at all against complexity or difficulty in poetry and wouldn&#8217;t want to give that impression. If anything I am rather obsessed by it &#8212; I come back and back in my own work to Horace, to Pindar, to Sanskrit poetry and grammar &#8212; these are all sort of paradigmatic examples of literary difficulty I suppose. I work a lot on very obscure early modern Latin verse and I am fascinated, both as a critic and as a poet myself, by translating poetry, which is immensely difficult &#8212; impossible, really. But I suppose like you I don&#8217;t see a contradiction. Poetry should be beautiful because that is, as it were, its proper virtue, and it should also have something to say. Pindar is very difficult, yes, because the literary conventions in which he was working were highly complex and they are very distant from ours, but he is also supremely beautiful and there is no doubt that he has something to say. Very &#8220;simple&#8221; poems can also be very beautiful. And of course many apparently &#8220;simple&#8221; poems &#8212; poems in what we might call the plain style &#8212; are in fact underpinned by very subtle and complex effects.</p><p>But I think the kinds of difficulty in Pindar, or even Donne, are probably rather different from what you meant when you talked about some kinds of contemporary poetry &#8216;taking pride in being obscure&#8217;. I think I know what you mean there and I don&#8217;t really have any patience with it. I&#8217;m thinking of something like the poem that just (depressingly) won the UK National Poetry Competition, &#8216;The Gathering&#8217; by Partridge Boswell. Now that seems to me like an almost comically bad poem and a very good example of this kind of pointless and overwritten obscurity. When &#8216;meaning&#8217;s / odometer is broken&#8217; &#8212; indeed!</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/rewarding-in-a-rather-straightforward">Rewarding in a rather straightforward way</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Jane Hirshfield is a master at giving life to unlikely objects. &#8220;At Night&#8221; is a poem that amazes the reader because of the described living presence found in the world, in terra firma itself. Note the &#8220;steadfast gaze&#8221; of the earth toward the unknown. The closing lines leave the reader with an image that is precise, easily understood, but almost unapproachable in its vast scope. Hirshfield writes of &#8220;the given world&#8221; &#8211; not the earth but the world the earth experiences from its own point of view: &#8220;flaming precisely out its frame&#8221;. What remains is the darkness and depth of a space that has no end. An absolutely wonderful possibility.</p><p>The poem begins off-center, viewing the horses a bit out of focus. Looking away from the center to the edges makes recognition possible. The black horses become a strong, visual and aural encounter in the poem: &#8220;cropping,&#8221; &#8220;winter grass,&#8221; &#8220;white jaws that move,&#8221; &#8220;steady rotation,&#8221; and &#8220;sweet sound&#8221;. After the stanza leap, the horses find shelter among trees, leaving behind the dug-out spots of snow. These circles function as an opening into another world or another sort of existence. Hirshfield writes that <em>you</em>, the reader, will find these circles. The point of view shifts from an observer of the scene to the earth itself &#8211; &#8220;its single, steadfast gaze&#8221; &#8211; and the reader identifies with that gaze outward. A powerful transformation. A poem that approaches infinity for me.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-jane-hirshfield-at-night">Thoughts on&#8230; Jane Hirshfield, &#8220;At Night&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Oak Woman<br><br>Dear Lucille, I treasure your poem as a reminder of all<br>the life that&#8217;s left to live in a culture that worships the young.<br>What is a forest but the strongest of bones, what is<br>a blossoming but an awakening of self. The sapling<br>girl is still inside but the Oak woman is stronger &amp; fiercer,<br>still chasing wildness &amp; wonder. You showed us how.<br>Respectfully, your ardent admirer</p><p><a href="https://www.napowrimo.net/day-seventeen-12/">Na/GloPoWriMo day 17 prompt:</a> For today&#8217;s challenge, write a poem in which you respond to a favorite poem by another poet.<br><br>I chose this poem [&#8220;There is a girl inside&#8221;] by Lucille Clifton. I love it &amp; have this screenprint in my photo app.</p><p><strong>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://zouxzoux.wordpress.com/2026/04/17/oak-woman/">Oak Woman</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On a whim, because I found myself in the vicinity, I went for a hike I hadn&#8217;t done in a while around a small pond fed by a few trickling streams and dammed at one end for some purpose I do not know. Cedars bent themselves toward the water, and small islands sat covered with the reddish branches of low bushes. A fallen tree&#8217;s old root system sat half-skyward and bleached mid-pond. I&#8217;m not sure who startled whom the most: me or the frog in leaf-strewn mud. The colors were all the greens and duns and browns and rust and ocher. The sound: low gronks from geese at one end, a jay scree, somewhere far away, always, a motor, even here in this middle of nowhere. Slowly the mind-nattered plaints fell away and I was huff and humidity and the swing of legs and soft stump stump of the perfect walking stick I&#8217;d found, and all eyes and notice &#8212; lichen like a congregation! trees all knees astride a rocky beast! knobs like balls at the base of that cedar! &#8212; all pleasure. Then I slid on a hidden root, twisted my ankle, fell, had to sit and put my head between my knees because I thought I was going to faint, hobbled up and missed the trail&#8217;s turn to the parking lot so added fifteen more slow minutes on the sore leg, castigating myself all the while because I KNOW not to hike in low boots with no water and how many times am I going to have to learn this lesson. In other words, my &#8220;everyday self,&#8221; back again. And in echo, here&#8217;s this lovely prose poem by Miriam Drev, translated from the Slovene by Barbara Siegel Carlson. I found it on the recent edition of Ron Slate&#8217;s On the Seawall.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/04/20/removed-from-my-usual-self-just-footsteps/">Removed from my usual self, just footsteps</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My debut, full-length collection of poems, <em><a href="https://glass-lyre-press.myshopify.com/collections/full-length-collections-1/products/night-court">Night Court</a></em>, took three years and thirty submissions before it found a home at Glass Lyre Press, winning the 2016 Lyrebird prize, with publication in 2017. Over those years, the book changed considerably, from its title to its content. I even had it professionally edited, a process that helped me understand that a book of poems, just like a novel or a memoir, has a plot, characters, point of view, theme, and structure.</p><p>Armed with those lessons, I thought my second collection couldn&#8217;t possibly take as long as the first. After all, I was a seasoned writer who&#8217;d published a chapbook, <em>Wild Place</em>, and a book of writing exercises, <em>Vibrant Words</em>, as well as <em>Night Court</em>. Surely, I would benefit from the lessons I&#8217;d learned sending my first book out.</p><p>I was wrong. My second book was just as much work as the first, and followed a similar path: early versions, different titles, multiple rejections, and painstaking reworkings. On the first pass, I chose, carefully I thought, from the poems I&#8217;d written after <em>Night Court&#8217;s</em> publication, crafting a story about motherhood, mental health, moving from California to Oregon, the environment, and world events.</p><p>Looking at early drafts, however, I can see that these versions weren&#8217;t focused enough. Still fresh from my move, I tried to force the manuscript into a book about place, but even though many of the poems are place-based, it refused to cohere around that theme.</p><p>Gradually, it dawned on me that every poetry collection possesses its own personality, motivations, and twisty logic. To paraphrase Kahlil Gibran&#8217;s poem, &#8220;<a href="https://poets.org/poem/children-1">On Children</a>:&#8221; &#8220;Your books are not your books. / They come through you but not from you, / And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.&#8221; I realized, belatedly, that I was not the boss of this book but its guide; my job was not to order the poems but to allow them to find where they belonged.</p><p><strong><a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/04/19/lessons-from-a-second-poetry-collection-guest-post-by-erica-goss/">Lessons From a Second Poetry Collection &#8211; guest post by Erica Goss</a> (Trish Hopkinson)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In my musing over Aprils past and past projects, another year is heavy on my mind recently. Mostly because it occurs to me that there has been a span of 30 years(!) between these two fixed points in time. In 1996, I was still a college student in undergrad. I was all of 22. Youth is all about not realizing how young you really are, but in 1996, I felt like I was as old as I was going to get. I was living with my parents and perhaps enjoying the last year of only minimal obligations as an adult. Within a year, I would be off to the city and my first apartment and grad school. But in 1996, I was finishing up my senior seminar on Milton, which I was ill-equipped for with no/minimal knowledge of Christian mythology and history and only rudimentary knowledge of Greek and Roman myths&#8211;also important with that text. I was struggling with the language, much as I did in my teen years with Shakespeare. [&#8230;]</p><p>That spring semester of 1996, I was also taking my first poetry workshop ever. A couple years before I had enrolled in a fiction writing one. After seeing a few stories, the instructor, one of RC&#8217;s alum done good, offhandedly suggested my long and rambling Faulkerian sentences might be suited better for poetry. He was right of course. I already knew that, having been scribbling poems since I was 14 or so. I had already started publishing, first in vanity-esque anthologies you&#8217;d find in the back of <em>Writer&#8217;s Digest, </em>and in the college lit mag. My poems were pretty bad, but I was writing a lot of them, so was getting better. That spring, I had, up to then, one of my most productive spurts of activity, pounding out poem after poem on the typewriter I&#8217;d procured with high school graduation money. [&#8230;]</p><p>Every once in a while, I pull out those undergrad poems on their weirdly-thin typing paper filled with cross-outs and whited out segments. For some, I even have the original messy handwritten drafts. As someone who has hasn&#8217;t drafted much in writing, only typing, since the late aughts, these seem too quaint and anachronistic to throw out even though I should.</p><p>What did I write about that semester? If I remember correctly, it was probably a lot of the same strange and gothic fuckery I write about now..lol..just much more overwrought and rhymed at the ends. Poems about artifacts and museums, about the execution of John Wayne Gacy, abandoned houses and formidable forests.</p><p>You know, the usual&#8230;</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/04/another-april-1996.html">another April | 1996</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This poem (rooted in this week&#8217;s parsha, <a href="https://www.sefaria.org/Leviticus.12.1-15.33?lang=bi&amp;aliyot=0">Tazria-Metzora</a>) emerges from Leviticus 16:29, which reads, in full:</p><blockquote><p>&#1493;&#1456;&#1492;&#1464;&#1497;&#1456;&#1514;&#1464;&#1492; &#1500;&#1464;&#1499;&#1462;&#1501; &#1500;&#1456;&#1495;&#1467;&#1511;&#1463;&#1468;&#1514; &#1506;&#1493;&#1465;&#1500;&#1464;&#1501; &#1489;&#1463;&#1468;&#1495;&#1465;&#1491;&#1462;&#1513;&#1473; &#1492;&#1463;&#1513;&#1456;&#1468;&#1473;&#1489;&#1460;&#1497;&#1506;&#1460;&#1497; &#1489;&#1462;&#1468;&#1506;&#1464;&#1513;&#1474;&#1493;&#1465;&#1512; &#1500;&#1463;&#1495;&#1465;&#1491;&#1462;&#1513;&#1473; &#1514;&#1456;&#1468;&#1506;&#1463;&#1504;&#1468;&#1493;&#1468; &#1488;&#1462;&#1514;&#1470;&#1504;&#1463;&#1508;&#1456;&#1513;&#1465;&#1473;&#1514;&#1461;&#1497;&#1499;&#1462;&#1501; &#1493;&#1456;&#1499;&#1500;&#1470;&#1502;&#1456;&#1500;&#1464;&#1488;&#1499;&#1464;&#1492; &#1500;&#1465;&#1488; &#1514;&#1463;&#1506;&#1458;&#1513;&#1474;&#1493;&#1468; &#1492;&#1464;&#1488;&#1462;&#1494;&#1456;&#1512;&#1464;&#1495; &#1493;&#1456;&#1492;&#1463;&#1490;&#1461;&#1468;&#1512; &#1492;&#1463;&#1490;&#1464;&#1468;&#1512; &#1489;&#1456;&#1468;&#1514;&#1493;&#1465;&#1499;&#1456;&#1499;&#1462;&#1501;&#1475;</p><p>And this shall be to you a law for all time: In the seventh month, on the tenth day of the month, you shall practice self-denial; and you shall do no manner of work, neither the citizen nor the alien who resides among you.</p></blockquote><p>My favorite reading of this verse comes from my dear friend and frequent collaborator <a href="https://davidevanmarkus.com/">R. David Markus</a>, who pointed out that while the word &#1514;&#1506;&#1504;&#1493; is usually pointed and read as <em>t&#8217;anu, </em>&#8220;afflict,&#8221; the same letters could spell &#1514;&#1506;&#1504;&#1493; <em>ta&#8217;anu</em>, &#8220;answer.&#8221;</p><p>I checked several translations (thanks for making that easy, Sefaria) and all were a variation on the theme: afflict your self, afflict your soul, practice self-denial, etc. But the letters are the same as the letters of the word (you, plural) <em>answer</em>: the only change is in the vowels. Which, of course, aren&#8217;t actually in Torah, though they are in the Masoretic text.</p><p>Reading &#1514;&#1506;&#1504;&#1493; as answer, as R. David suggests, wholly changes how I experience Yom Kippur. The purpose of the day isn&#8217;t &#8220;afflicting one&#8217;s soul&#8221; or &#8220;practicing self-denial.&#8221; Yom Kippur is not a day for causing oneself to suffer, it&#8217;s a day for <em>answering the soul.</em> For me, that interpretation dovetails beautifully with the season&#8217;s practices of self-examination, deep inner work, and <em>teshuvah</em>.</p><p>And, of course, all of this is a reminder that &#8212; as we say at <a href="https://www.congregationshirami.org/soul-spa.html">SoulSpa</a> all the time &#8212; every translation is a midrash.</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/04/17/answer/">Answer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Ours was the last leg of the &#8216;French Way&#8217; of the Camino de Santiago, and we left on Easter Sunday. Elsewhere, large groups of pilgrims had timed their walks to reach the cathedral at Santiago to coincide with the Sunday&#8217;s celebrations, and so our roads &#8211; far from this end-point &#8211; were quieter than usual. Our first day&#8217;s journey was 23km from the town of Sarria to the little scenic outpost by the water, Portomar&#237;n. We left before dawn and walked out of the quiet streets in the dark. Soon we crossed a bridge then a railway line, and then we seemed to quickly hit open fields. That first morning, we walked until it was light, stopping only when we reached the first roadside caf&#233;, one whose television in the corner played a late-night Honduran music cabaret. The music was bad, the coffee the best of the trip. It was only after lunch, with 15km under our feet, that I took out the first printed poem from my backpack. I opted to begin this with Derek Mahon&#8217;s &#8216;Everything is Going to be All Right&#8217;.</p><p>Why this poem? I recalled the debate around <a href="https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/covid-comfort-paul-muldoon-on-derek-mahon-s-everything-is-going-to-be-all-right-1.4735409">whether it was a poem of comfort or not</a> &#8211; and was drawn to start with something suitably ambivalent. As a poem to memorise, I found it quite absorbing. There is life in it. It jumps around a little, even while repeating images (clouds, light). Where do I fall on its irony or reprieve? In the mouth, it has the taste of the apocalypse. I can see something happening outside the window of the poem&#8217;s room. It also reminded me of James Wright&#8217;s<em> </em>&#8216;Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy&#8217;s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota&#8217;, but with a significant difference. The end of Wright&#8217;s poem seems to come to him like a thunderbolt. It is as unexpected to the poet as it is to the reader; Mahon&#8217;s poem feels the opposite. Mahon has been mulling on the phrase long before it is uttered. It feels like a childhood memory of a parent trying to soothe him &#8211; or like a friend who had recently tried to console him. <em>Everything is going to be all right</em>. Things will work out. But the world keeps suggesting otherwise. Yes, it feels like a poem of grief for hope. Hope finally lost. But how beautiful in the mouth.</p><p><strong>Niall Campbell, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/so-what-poems-did-i-memorise">So &#8230; What Poems Did I Memorise?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I [&#8230;] received my copy of <em>Prairie Schooner</em>&#8216;s Spring 2026 &#8220;The Loneliness Issue,&#8221; in which I have a poem, &#8220;If I Will Be Queen, Let It Be Queen of the Dead.&#8221; Also check out my friend Aimee Nezhukumatathil&#8217;s poem &#8220;<a href="https://prairieschooner.unl.edu/excerpt/the-immigrants-very-good-daughter/">The Immigrant&#8217;s Very Good Daughter</a>.&#8221; (I loved the poem and maybe you will too!) [&#8230;]</p><p>This year we had the chance to see apple trees, cherry trees, daffodils, and tulips all blooming at the same time, though we missed our snow geese and trumpeter swans. It has certainly been a weird month for weather&#8212;didn&#8217;t it just snow here a month ago? We also visited not just <a href="https://tulips.com/">RoozenGaarde</a> but also a new smaller tulip farm called Garden Rosalyn. After a dreary cold beginning to April, it was nice to have some warmer temperatures and sunshine. We didn&#8217;t really have enough time to do everything we wanted, but it was a good reminder of how beautiful April can be out here. [&#8230;]</p><p>This week is super crowded, but I am very much looking forward to a poetry break on Thursday, when we&#8217;re hosting Kelli Russell Agodon reading from her new collection, <a href="https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/books/accidental-devotions-by-kelli-russell-agodon-2/">Accidental Devotions</a>, at the J. Bookwalter Tasting Room in Woodinville at 6:30 PM (wine and open mic after!)</p><p>Kelli&#8217;s book is a wonderful combination of thoughtfulness on anxiety, middle age and mortality, and the nature of love and sex, with her usual whimsy and humor. I hope you&#8217;ll come out and see her read!</p><p>I hope you get a chance to celebrate something poetry-related this month. It&#8217;s good to balance the insanity of the world with a little bit of poetry and tulip-gazing.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/poem-in-the-new-issue-of-prairie-schooner-welcoming-a-nephew-to-town-and-tulips-and-hosting-kelli-agodon-at-bookwalters-this-thursday/">Poem in the New Issue of Prairie Schooner, Welcoming a Nephew to Town and Tulips, and Hosting Kelli Agodon at Bookwalter&#8217;s This Thursday!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m hoping that you&#8217;re all enjoying the arrival of Spring &#8211; over the weekend, I saw my first sundew of the year, first damselflies, first lizard, first adder basking on a sun-warmed boardwalk at Cors Fochno.</p><p>I will post photos soon. In the meantime, welcome to the blanket bogs and the wind-battered hilltop villages of West Yorkshire.</p><p><em>&#8220;My second-oldest sister takes me on the bus to Haworth. It&#8217;s her favourite place &#8211; which means that it&#8217;s also mine. The steam train and sweet shop are fine, but what I love most is the stone, the cottages clustered against the wind, the moor like an ocean. I know nothing about the Bront&#235;s, but I stare at the sofa where Emily died, the empty dresses&#8221;.</em></p><p>This tiny extract from my essay &#8220;A Love Story of Walshaw Moor&#8221; (Book of Bogs, 2025) describes my first encounter with the Bront&#235; Parsonage, and with Haworth&#8217;s steep, cobbled streets. It was love at first sight &#8211; the ghosts held in the thick stone walls, the open moors. In the coming decades, I&#8217;ll make a careful point take everyone I love to the ruins at Top Withens &#8211; and I&#8217;ll always, always wail &#8220;It&#8217;s MEE! It&#8217;s Kath-EE!&#8221; at the empty window, because this is the reputed setting of Wuthering Heights, and just like Cathy says, if I died and went to heaven it would break my heart to be taken away from those moors.</p><p>So I&#8217;m absolutely chuffed &#8211; this Thursday 23rd April at 7pm &#8211; to read at Haworth Old School Room, hosted by the Bront&#235; Parsonage Museum, to celebrate the launch of Lydia MacPherson&#8217;s &#8220;The Heights&#8221;, (Calder Valley Poetry). Tickets are available <a href="https://www.bronte.org.uk/events/the-heights-poetry-book-launch">here</a>.</p><p>Since 2024, I&#8217;ve been fighting for the survival of Walshaw Moor in the face of a proposal to build the UK&#8217;s biggest onshore energy park on its blanket bogs and peatlands. Campaigning can be an exhausting, dispiriting business &#8211; but when you find yourself in the company of kindred spirits, when you are fired by the same passions and furies, it can also be a joy. I was already aware of Lydia Macpherson as a talented West Yorkshire poet, with her first collection published by Salt. Over the last two years, she&#8217;s become a comrade-in-arms in every sense of the word &#8211; along with her gentle genius of a partner, Nick (himself a wonderful writer and a past winner of the National Poetry Competition). With their warmth and intelligence, and their single-minded commitment to the moors, they are a force not just to be reckoned with, but to be enfolded and fed by.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://blogsandbogs.substack.com/p/on-the-wild-and-windy-moors">On the Wily, Windy Moors</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Buried</p><p>under the silent forest<br>the dead bird sings &#8211;<br>the whole world, motionless,<br>face black and rotted,<br>slipping<br>farther away</p><p><em>Source: Memoirs by Pablo Neruda (Tr. Hardie St. Martin)</em></p><p><strong>Rajani Rashakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/an-april-full-of-poems-2">An April full of poems -2</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Why am I/are humans in general so moved by birdsong? It&#8217;s complex and varied. It reminds us of human song and often, human instruments such as flute or oboe. There&#8217;s something existential that we can relate to in how birds call out or call to each other, in a way, for example, we don&#8217;t feel comopared to the sounds of cicadas or mosquitos. That feels more environmental. We relate to birds. They fly. A million mirror neurons go off when we experience birds in a way they don&#8217;t with flies or lizards. Do we have hollow bones and feathers? Do we wish we had hollow bones and feathers? Birds are in our world and somehow exist in a parallel world. As if they exist in another coincident dimension (I mean other than the more 3-dimensional world they fly in.) They are part of our dream, myths, stories. I imagine the inside of my mouth is the shape of a songbird.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/starling-music-with-birds">STARLING: music with birds</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Even without the complications of humans, this world is miraculously complicated with patterns and -ologies. How miraculous it is that while I while my time away at a desk 40+ hours a week staring into a screen and rejecting peoples&#8217; paperwork, little chambered piths sit in the papery darknesses of flower stems. That while I roll my eyes at yet another protocol change or misspelled word at work, Trillium blooms in the woods because an ant dispersed its seed. That while we go on our necessary walks to process the nonsense and wonder of humans and being human, we pass last year&#8217;s dilapidation of flowers, native bees nesting in their stems like a secret. Nothing I do in an adjustable rolling chair makes flowers bloom or provides structure to a plant. Nothing I do in Excel Spreadsheets or E-System provides a safe haven for insects.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/chambered-pith">Chambered Pith</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This morning, entering Moorlands Woods<br>the scent of bluebells reached me before <br>I really noticed the swathes of blue <br>between the trees, my lungs involuntarily<br>taking a double breath, prompting me to think, <br>how could I ever have forgotten this sweetness?</p><p>Last night I dreamt of my parents when<br>they were young and healthy, my mother&#8217;s<br>red hair, my father&#8217;s arms with a summer tan.<br>Perhaps sometimes it is worth forgetting <br>if remembering provides us with such joy.</p><p><strong>Lynne Rees, <a href="http://www.lynnerees.com/2026/04/poem-from-forgetting-to-remembering.html">Poem ~ From forgetting to remembering</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Arlington is full spring. Blossom lines our paths. Redbuds contrast against fresh leaves and white magnolia. Along the path shrubs mound purple, dark pink, light pink, bright pink, mauve, and white. Above the car, a thin-branching tree has bright pink flowers with a white centre that look as sturdy as thick silk. It glows against the redbud and the darkening trees behind. Hostas grow abundantly here, uneaten yet. The birds are always singing the passing time. The cherry has already fallen like old confetti.</p><p>I read in the shade, interrupted for coffee and children and to write. Virgil is dying. A passing garbage man talks to Siri. A few leaves fall. Robins run along the grass, territorially alert to each other, sometimes dancing in a spiral fight, and sparrows ruffle solitary in the trees. Early, before the lights are on, or if you catch a quiet moment when no-one is passing through, you can see rabbits occupying the peace. This time I think of Elizabeth Bishop.</p><blockquote><p>and then a baby rabbit jumped out,<br><em>short</em>-eared, to our surprise.<br>So soft!</p></blockquote><p>Like the raccoon, they keep their own time, moving off as they please, waiting for nobody.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/spring-time-night-time-rabbits-and">Spring-time, night-time, rabbits and raccoons</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>the sound of the falls<br>within reach<br>trout lily</p><p><strong>Tom Clausen, <a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/04/17/trout-lily-by-tom-clausen/">trout lily</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 15]]></title><description><![CDATA[a piebald crow, seven bloodroot blossoms, the ag&#232;d state of words, the fine grain of life, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-15</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-15</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2026 23:11:13 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/7ee751c8-1adb-43c5-9ce7-dce0c076c2d1_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: a piebald crow, seven bloodroot blossoms, the ag&#232;d state of words, the fine grain of life, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I forget for a moment that he is about to blow the world up</p><p>I chop vegetables, make kefir, do laundry, sow seeds</p><p>as if tomorrow, next week, harvest time were not in doubt.</p><p>Ama Bolton, <a href="https://barleybooks.wordpress.com/2026/04/07/when-i-forget/">When I forget</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Tell me, how are you surviving this April day?</p><p>These times call for finding ways to not only survive, but also to persist. Some days this might mean staying under the covers with a good novel; other days it could mean volunteering your time for a cause you care about &#8212; which might take a myriad of different forms. Maybe you&#8217;re going outdoors more.</p><p>Recently, I&#8217;ve been on a local book tour for <em><a href="https://www.ravenchronicles.org/books/birdbrains-a-lyrical-guide-to-washington-state-birds">Birdbrains: A Lyrical Guide to Washington State Birds</a></em>. One lonely July weekend, less than two years ago, I had this crazy idea. What if I created a bird guide that matched poets and birds? What if I cajoled my friend Stephanie Delaney to write the bird notes? What if I went on a hunt for an artist that specialized in birds? Those two little words, &#8220;what if&#8221; hold so much power.</p><p>Fast forward to this past weekend. <em>Birdbrains</em> celebrated its nearly five month anniversary at the <a href="https://www.audubon.org/seward-park">Seward Park Audubon</a> Center in Seattle, WA. Poets, writers, and bird lovers gathered together in a space designated as an international flyway for the great bird migration now going on.</p><p>When I collaborated with <a href="https://www.blogger.com/profile/12819874025070550216">Dr. Stephanie Delaney</a> and <a href="https://womenpainters.com/BIO/SEKI/Seki.htm">Hiroko Seki</a>, I never imagined the incredible reception this book has had so far&#8212;and it is barely five months old. What I love the most, however, are the personal stories that emerge when I talk to both audience members and contributors alike.</p><p>Recently, one new friend told me that she reads a bird poem and bird note each night before going to sleep (much better than doomscrolling); a local poet told me that her daughter&#8217;s art teach has invited her into the classroom to talk about her contribution to the book, and another contributor gave a copy to her mother, the woman who first taught her about the birds.</p><p>Now when I see the common pigeon, I wonder how <a href="https://www.upaya.org/person/jane-hirshfield/?gad_source=1&amp;gad_campaignid=22801614620&amp;gbraid=0AAAAADptELAHWincyuvSwNne3-AJKao77&amp;gclid=CjwKCAjw4ufOBhBkEiwAfuC7-TpryhvVNGZC-vcXynqicXAwgfn35CgmXOOTOsrxgJ2smQE4W3ZZChoCE_0QAvD_BwE">Jane Hirshfield</a> is doing as this is &#8220;her&#8221; bird and the Stellar&#8217;s jay always reminds me of <a href="https://www.haroldtaw.com/">Harold Taw</a>&#8212;whose flash fiction piece invents a language for the jay. Then there&#8217;s the chukar that lives in Eastern Washington, Texas, and in Palestine; this is Naomi Shihab Nye&#8217;s bird. The oddly named killdeer belongs to<a href="https://agodon.com/index.html"> Kelli Russell Agodon</a>, the cedar waxwing to Washington State native, <a href="https://www.catherinebarnett.com/">Catherine Barnett.</a> The Northern flicker is the bird that I claimed as my own. My gateway drug to the world of birding.</p><p>I know that filling the feeders with hot pepper suet and watching a piebald crow along the Puget Sound will not solve the global apocalypse it seems we are experiencing daily. However, without the birds I can&#8217;t look at the news from Gaza, Iran, Lebanon without being locked in despair. Birdbrains is the antidote.</p><p>Susan Rich, <a href="https://susanrichpoet.substack.com/p/and-now-for-something-a-little-bit">And Now for Something a Little Bit ~ Practical?</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Water is trapped in mudflats, but there is also</p><p>shimmer in shades of purple. This is the time<br>before fruit ripens from flower, before<br>the bruise of summer. In a hurt world,</p><p>you try to understand these ongoing<br>lessons in wonder. Rain, when it returns,<br>remembers every surface it&#8217;s ever met.</p><p>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/04/living-in-the-in-between/">Living in the In-between</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poem&#8217;s most sustained suspension of pentameter follows line 10: &#8220;Not only under ground are the brains of men / Eaten by maggots. / Life in itself / Is nothing.&#8221; The pentameter line drops off into unsparing dimeter, then monometer, before expanding again into pentameter. The poem&#8217;s trajectory reflects not only the temperamental April weather, but the way that the beauty of spring presents itself as &#8220;enough.&#8221;</p><p>Enough to do what? To <em>appear </em>to vanquish death. This is the season&#8217;s cruel April Fool&#8217;s prank, and the poem&#8217;s speaker sees through it. Still, insistent in its utter insufficiency, that prankster and fool, April &#8212; given its own penultimate monometer line &#8212; arrives, &#8220;babbling like an idiot and strewing flowers.&#8221; There&#8217;s nothing small and clean about this April. It&#8217;s a mess. Yet even in the incontrovertible face of death, here it comes again: quixotic and possibly insane, but alive.</p><p>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-spring">Today&#8217;s Poem: Spring</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The oak being &#8220;unwired&#8221; in the second stanza is a wonderful image. I might be taking it too far to think of it as water in the electrics causing a failure, but the cables of the tree roots coming unstuck is a powerful one for me. It&#8217;s ironic that in a time like we are in now we will almost certainly be seeing the hosepipe ban news articles coming soon, but Jemma [Borg] paints a picture that is a mixture of beauty: &#8216;the flood that makes a mirror / on the lawn&#8217; is a beautiful image, as is &#8216;Venus&#8217;s bright eye&#8217;, but these are counter-balanced or cancelled out (saying drowned out would be pushing it, Mat) by the &#8220;suffering cherry tree&#8221; and the lovely imagine and sounds conjured up by &#8220;the grass is tutting / with its many wet tongues&#8221;. Is nature judging us? No, but it should be.</p><p>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/04/12/heres-mud-in-your-eye/">Here&#8217;s mud in your eye..</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>To think about trees is to think about generations before you, those who planted the trees that accompany us now, and the generations to follow. I suppose no poet writes about trees alongside men without remembering how Homer says men are like the leaves upon the trees. (Indeed, Larkin&#8217;s poem is, viewed from one perspective, really just a kind of riff upon these lines.)</p><blockquote><p>&#959;&#7989;&#951; &#960;&#949;&#961; &#966;&#973;&#955;&#955;&#969;&#957; &#947;&#949;&#957;&#949;&#8052; &#964;&#959;&#943;&#951; &#948;&#8050; &#954;&#945;&#8054; &#7936;&#957;&#948;&#961;&#8182;&#957;.<br>&#966;&#973;&#955;&#955;&#945; &#964;&#8048; &#956;&#941;&#957; &#964;&#8217; &#7940;&#957;&#949;&#956;&#959;&#962; &#967;&#945;&#956;&#940;&#948;&#953;&#962; &#967;&#941;&#949;&#953;, &#7940;&#955;&#955;&#945; &#948;&#941; &#952;&#8217; &#8021;&#955;&#951;<br>&#964;&#951;&#955;&#949;&#952;&#972;&#969;&#963;&#945; &#966;&#973;&#949;&#953;, &#7956;&#945;&#961;&#959;&#962; &#948;&#8217; &#7952;&#960;&#953;&#947;&#943;&#957;&#949;&#964;&#945;&#953; &#8037;&#961;&#951;:<br>&#8035;&#962; &#7936;&#957;&#948;&#961;&#8182;&#957; &#947;&#949;&#957;&#949;&#8052; &#7971; &#956;&#8050;&#957; &#966;&#973;&#949;&#953; &#7971; &#948;&#8217; &#7936;&#960;&#959;&#955;&#942;&#947;&#949;&#953;.<br>(<em>Iliad </em>6.146-149)</p><p>Like the generations of leaves are those of men.<br>Leaves the wind pours upon the ground, but the wood<br>thickens and births, as spring comes round again:<br>so the generations of men &#8212; one born, one gone.</p></blockquote><p>These lines have been quoted, imitated and alluded to since antiquity. Horace himself writes a version of them in his <em>Ars Poetica</em>, but there he makes the leaves not men, but words &#8212; the language of men. My favourite translation of this passage is Jonson&#8217;s:</p><blockquote><p>As woods whose change appeares<br>Still in their leaves, throughout the sliding yeares,<br>The first-borne dying; so the ag&#232;d state<br>Of words decay, and phrases borne but late<br>Like tender buds shoot up, and freshly grow.<br>Our selves, and all that&#8217;s ours, to death we owe.</p></blockquote><p>The language changes, but the trees live on. Homer is dead, they seem to say; begin afresh, afresh, afresh.</p><p>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/still-in-their-leaves-throughout">Still in their leaves, throughout the sliding years</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s been too long since the last post. In late March, I posted an article on writing blurbs, which is still waiting for its Part 2. But true to our usual form, both Kim and I have been taken up with this year&#8217;s National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo) &#8211; which involves writing a poem a day throughout the month of April. Many sensible people write these in the privacy of their own homes, perhaps sharing them with a few trusted friends, before eventually - after careful consideration and thorough editing - publishing a handful of their 30 poems.</p><p>But Kim and I publish them every single day on social media, often within minutes of writing the final lines. It&#8217;s incredibly exposing, exhausting &#8211; and beautifully compelling. And by mid-April, it tends to become all-consuming. By the end of the month, I&#8217;m exhausted and slightly crazed, but I do have a stock of 30 first, second or third drafts to sustain me through the subsequent months. Out of the 30 poems, there&#8217;s often a small selection of good poems which might make it into a collection. But perhaps most importantly, NaPoWriMo, and its crazy discipline, reminds me that I am a writer. That whatever else I&#8217;m doing or feelings in my life, the practice of writing is at my core. Like my therapist said - &#8220;whenever you talk about writing, your face lights up&#8221;. I&#8217;m still struggling with cyclical depression, and the practice of daily writing is a powerful reminder that on those days when I feel like I really don&#8217;t want to write a single word, I sometimes produce my best work.</p><p>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/a-beautiful-compulsion">A beautiful compulsion</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>April is National Poetry Month AND National Mathematics and Statistics Awareness Month -- and here in this blog we continue to celebrate poetry-math connections. Below I offer the opening stanzas of an old poem of mine entitled &#8220;Time&#8221;.</p><p>The clock goes round --<br>making time a circle<br>rather than a line.<br>Each year&#8217;s return to spring<br>layers time on time.</p><p>Circle or line -- <br>no difference. Wrap<br>the line around a rim,<br>tuck the loose ends in,<br>or cut the circle, stretch it thin --</p><p>breaking an appointment,<br>or separating bites of lunch.<br>If the slit is not at midnight,<br>visit darkness by going back<br>or skip from light to light.</p><p>A second part of &#8220;Time&#8221; is <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2010/09/grasping-at-time.html">available here</a>. The entire poem is available in <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Red-Has-Reason-JoAnne-Growney/dp/1935514520/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1523467390&amp;sr=8-1&amp;keywords=red+has+no+reason">Red Has No Reason</a></em> (Plain View Press, 2010).</p><p>JoAnne Growney, <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2026/04/april-celebrate-both-mathematics-and.html">April -- Celebrate BOTH Mathematics and Poetry</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This past Sunday would have been my mother&#8217;s 79th birthday, a birthday she never quite made it to, and in a world that would have distressed her to no end. There are times when I wonder how both my parents would have navigated this world, and though my mother saw less of it, dying only a year into the madness, but my father witnessed much more. Both would be extremely vulnerable--to cuts to things like social security and medicare, despite my dad being pretty organized in terms of pensions and savings (this is not a trait he passed down to me.) And while I like to joke that I have unofficially retired to do freelance design/writing /editing work for others and run the press&amp; shop, I know full well I will be working and hopefully still earning income up til my death bed. That is, if I survive--or even if we all survive this current dystopia. In a calmer, saner world of a couple years ago, it was a little freeing to accept that and just make that the plan. I have a tiny amount of savings that is really nothing, but serves as an emergency fund at the least. With J earning money and his business doing well, we are less strapped in general from month to month, but as prices rise on gas and groceries, plus healthcare premiums that are now much higher than they were the past several years, it becomes more challenging. I still try to fit in smaller pleasures, like theater tickets and occasional new dresses, as well as things like art supplies and books, but it gets harder and probably will even more so.</p><p>Much is afoot in the dgp world, with me still figuring out work flows and logistics on the new books. I&#8217;ve been sampling a few different POD operations, including Amazon and Ingram, and am finding there are benefits and drawbacks to both. The books are quite beautiful nevertheless, and I appreciate the easiness of filling orders with books I do not have to print and fold and bind and trim all on my own. I am still looking for the sweet spot in pricing that does not send us into the red.</p><p>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/04/notes-things-482026.html">notes &amp; things | 4/8/2026</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There was candlewax in my hair for seven days and seven nights the clouds were old testament we watched the sky which plane would fall first which soldier would fall first which angel would descend shocked by a neutral wire you might be shocked at how many people are already dead inside which astronaut will touch ground first which child will fall first small and crumpled my mouth and hands inside this numb poem words didn&#8217;t disappear me they boiled away inside</p><p>Rebecca Loudon, <a href="https://thebeginningofsummersend.blogspot.com/2026/04/april-8-26.html">Jupiter at rest</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wonder if there has ever been a study of how poets&#8217; work alters as they age. I don&#8217;t mean in terms of life experience or a switch of political interpretation or subject matter but the structure of the writing itself.</p><p>It&#8217;s a subject that&#8217;s been troubling me for some time. In day-to-day life I function well at 73. OK, I forget where I&#8217;ve put my phone, or go upstairs to fetch something and then forget what it is I&#8217;ve gone to fetch, but that seems to be because my head is full of thoughts and responses to whatever&#8217;s going on. I can do all the things I&#8217;ve done for years, maybe a little slower, but they get done and life works well enough. Physically I&#8217;ve survived heart attacks, can still lift and carry bags of feed and bedding, can spend hours on jobs at our smallholding, can still look after pigs, ducks, hens, travel to watch football.</p><p>My point is that when I sit to write the process is different. My brain is still capable of energetic concentration but I look at some of the &#8216;old&#8217; poems from twenty years ago and know I cannot write like that any more. An example:</p><p>THE WATER DIVINER</p><p>The thirsty people pay<br>and crowd to watch, but<br>for now the trick is in<br>the drama, in the measure</p><p>of the stride, the heavy<br>dance of the methodical<br>tread, and in the way<br>water rises at full moon</p><p>to break the boundaries<br>of grief. My reward is in<br>coins, a place to rest,<br>quiet nods of respect.</p><p>Sometimes, too, after dark<br>women will seek me out<br>for more elusive miracles.<br>But that is not my craft.</p><p>There is a tightness and control here, a rhythm that I no longer possess &#8211; no longer feel. I could no longer write like this any more than I could write anything sensible in rhyming iambic pentameters. My writing sprawls, jerks about, voices talk to each other within it, it responds to the world, to itself, is restless and reactive. This morning I sat down to write and came up with something that made absolute sense to me, which for now feels right, yet on reflection might be very difficult for others to fathom out.</p><p>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/04/10/how-the-brain-changes-the-way-we-write-as-we-age/">HOW THE BRAIN CHANGES THE WAY WE WRITE AS WE AGE</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My son and I took my ordinary walk today, along Woods Creek, and I pointed out things he could pull from the ground and eat. Weirdly, he seems to like this, and thought deadnettle was tasty. I never knew what that little purplish plant was until this year, although it grows everywhere&#8212;all part of the very long process of learning where I live.</p><p>Last year I read selections of Joan Naviyuk Kane&#8217;s work for one of those anonymous evaluations I&#8217;m not supposed to admit to doing. I admired it so much, I put in an advance order for her collection <em><a href="https://upittpress.org/books/9780822967668/">with snow pouring southward past the window</a>, </em>just out from Pitt. Funny how I keep reading books about foraging, but I especially wanted to taste this one before heading to Alaska in a few days. <a href="https://www.thejoankane.com/#about">As her bio describes</a>, Kane is &#8220;Inupiaq with family from Ugiuvak (King Island) and Qawiaraq (Mary&#8217;s Igloo), Alaska&#8230; She&#8217;s raised her children as a single mother in Alaska and Massachusetts, but now lives with them in Oregon, where she is currently an Associate Professor at Reed College.&#8221; Stephanie Adams-Santos writes in her back-cover endorsement that the poems are &#8220;marked by an insistent naming of plants, people, places&#8212;an act of preservation against all that slips away.&#8221; Many poems in <em>with snow</em> have a quality of litany (although there&#8217;s also one called &#8220;No Litanies, No,&#8221; so maybe don&#8217;t trust my impression). In &#8220;Without Anchorage,&#8221; she writes about trying to &#8220;harvest the tops of onions flash-frozen with approximate winter&#8217;s sudden onset, haul the tenderest medicines inside losing only the laurel: hyssop, arnica, basketgrass sagrit.&#8221; The lovely precision, though, is framed again and again by the pain of displacement. To some extent art can conjure possible worlds and preserve in them what has been or will be lost. It&#8217;s never a fully adequate answer to grief, but I&#8217;m moved when artists try.</p><p>I&#8217;m at least as struck by how these poems witness and answer violence on many scales, including brutality in Kane&#8217;s childhood and massive cultural violence. There are also a host of poems about men being assholes. &#8220;Letters from Learned Men,&#8221; an erasure poem, documents a contemporary priest writing in a condescending way to someone who seems to be Kane herself (the name is blacked out)&#8212;and concludes with a hundred-year-old letter in which a priest condemns a Native woman in an overtly vicious way. I love how this poem levels a devastating argument by mere juxtaposition: historical racism and sexism are continuous with their lightly disguised contemporary versions. In fact, I love <em>all </em>of the many angry poems here&#8212;as well as the book&#8217;s lack of a Notes section. &#8220;The first thing I will do: make / myself indecipherable / to you,&#8221; she writes in &#8220;Elixirs for Words to Come.&#8221; So you don&#8217;t know my language or landscape or cultural context or even why I&#8217;m mad? If you want to navigate this poetic world, it&#8217;s on you to figure it out.</p><p>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/04/09/ephemerals-pt-2-spirals-drafts-wildflowers/">Ephemerals pt. 2 (spirals, drafts, wildflowers)</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>the warehouse always wants more warehouse.<br>more places to hoard boxes of plastic beads<br>&amp; plastic teeth &amp; plastic gods. they want<br>everyone to go &amp; work in the warehouse.<br>to have babies who know nothing<br>but warehouse. to turn our blood<br>into warehouse guts. to warehouse our houses<br>until we are nothing but their tightening machine.</p><p>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/04/09/4-9-5/">warehouse</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The breakthrough moment came in summer of 2017, three years into submitting the manuscript.</p><p>I woke up that morning with the head of a smart stranger, having forgotten that I had ever wrote the book.</p><p>I laid out the manuscript, and what happened next felt like the best mix of expertise and instinct, discernment and intuition.</p><p>I began culling poems without anxiety or remorse, and I listened more clearly than I ever had before to what I&#8217;d <em>actually</em> written. The title changed without fuss as a result. I could <em>feel</em> when I had finally arrived at the manuscript that would be the runner-up in the Kathryn A. Morton prize judged by Ocean Vuong. I read the book over with the title <em>American Faith</em>&#8212;the title of one of the strongest poems in the book&#8212;and thought: yes, <em>this</em> is the book I&#8217;d been trying to write.</p><p>It was here, in this slab of marble (stack of printouts) waiting to be aerated, chiseled released. I felt a singular mix of relief and quiet confidence. It was a lovely,</p><p>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/the-head-of-a-smart-stranger">The Head of a Smart Stranger</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>You can stick two contact mics on a Singer<br>and go to town, letting the feedback wail<br>as the crunchy needle sounds distort<br>through one of the many barefoot pedals.<br>One light bulb shines<br>through the holes in the paper<br>as it travels, threadless, through the machine.</p><p>Fievel Crane, <a href="https://fievel42.com/2026/04/07/poem-you-can-play-a-shoestring-if-youre-sincere/">POEM: You Can Play A Shoestring If You&#8217;re Sincere</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The best thing about finding fellowship with dead poets is that they don&#8217;t contradict you, don&#8217;t correct you, don&#8217;t talk over you. Thankfully they don&#8217;t talk at all. They are mercifully silent. I find this makes for a better connection. When I walked from Keats&#8217; birthplace to Blake&#8217;s grave last week the commentary I gave was broadcast unscripted, unchecked, unedited. &#8220;You sounded quite posh&#8221; said Sue from Essex who&#8217;d tuned in to the live-stream. I thought about the voice that I&#8217;d adopted, the one I think I&#8217;d put on to lend authority if not authenticity to my report. Out of a kind of nervousness I suppose, an insecurity even, I&#8217;d acquired a voice that wasn&#8217;t entirely my own.</p><p>And I thought about that voice that poets put on. If you&#8217;re a poet you probably do it. And if you don&#8217;t, you&#8217;ll know what I&#8217;m talking about. And if you don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m talking about tune your dials to the next poet up on the open mic or to any of them broadcast on BBC&#8217;s Radio 4. They&#8217;re all at it. Listen carefully.</p><p>It&#8217;s come to be known as &#8220;poetry voice.&#8221; It&#8217;s rooted in a bluesy, jazz scat blended with a dash of watered down Dylan and a measure of white-Beatnik inflection. It can be subtle, barely detectable, an occasional raised tone at the end of each phrase, a single word in emphasis pronounced from the diaphragm. It is a strange example of diluted, cultural appropriation without any specifically identifiable origin. It is designed, I think, to add &#8220;feeling&#8221; to a poem when spoken, to show that you really &#8220;mean it.&#8221; You can sound like a poet even if what you&#8217;ve written barely resembles poetry.</p><p>Perhaps it&#8217;s just a way of disguising vulnerability or simply a means of elevating speech to &#8216;not quite song&#8217; but a cut above straight &#8216;saying stuff.&#8217; It is a middle ground that poetry can claim as its own safe space. But with such richness and range available to the voice why such conformity? The poet Auden was a notoriously poor performer. But it was deliberate. Appalled by the manner in which populations were enthralled by the exuberant but empty oratory of political fanatics he dropped his cadence to a near mumble to avoid any sensationalism. The poem lived elsewhere, the reading a gesture toward it, a mere suggestion of it.</p><p>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n59-dead-networking-with-keats-and">N&#186;59 Dead networking (with Keats and Blake)</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I woke at 4 a.m. thinking about Milton, and about all the times I have woken at 4 a.m. thinking about Milton, and specifically about these fourteen lines of Milton, the attempt to recall and silently recite less variety of counting sheep than of slowing the woolly urge to go on leaping the mind&#8217;s endless fences and instead settle down in the wet green grass. It was no different today, until I stopped bobbing along on iambs long enough to realize the reasons I&#8217;ve been quiet here overlap reasons I haven&#8217;t yet shared this poem.</p><p>The question of <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-snow-man-by-wallace-stevens">how to be</a> strikes me as the obvious one for a person in my present condition to be asking, though the longer I&#8217;ve sat with it, the clearer it is that it&#8217;s been the central question of my life. It&#8217;s why this poem bewitched and baffled me at twenty-two, and has alternately vexed and consoled me since. And yet I&#8217;ve been . . . afraid? To write about it here. I&#8217;ve forgotten more about my formal education in poetry than feels prudent to acknowledge in a publication wherein I purport to bring you some insight about the craft, though writing this out longhand&#8212;in an emerald green Moleskine cahier with at stub-nib Eco TWSBI; it&#8217;s now 7:15 a.m. and there&#8217;s a bird I can&#8217;t name chiming outside the open window&#8212;I am reminded, once again, of what I set out to do here, how I set out to be.</p><p>It has been a struggle, recapturing what I want to call the simplicity of being with poems. I have found it difficult to stop myself from slipping out of it and into the assorted personas, assorted ways of being, I have tried on over the years&#8212;academic, educator, editor, critic&#8212;each of which comes with its own set of professional and social obligations, or perhaps simply expectations, internal and external alike. Some of the resulting reservations about staking any claim to insight are fairly obvious. I have forgotten more about Milton and his poems and the vast ecosystem of scholarship surrounding both than I can remember ever having known. If a doctorate could be revoked, I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d argue overmuch if some diploma-removal goons came knocking.</p><p>Some of the reservations are far weirder: things like the persistent sense that I have forgotten some lousy thing that Milton said or did or is reported to have said or done, something unsavoury to our twenty-first century sense of moral perfectionism, and has been summarily dismissed by the loudest of internet users. That the <em>Aeropagitica</em> fails to fully account for some local complexity or other and must thus be chucked wholesale.</p><p>Or something even worse, like that he believed in meaning, in the soul, in God.</p><p>The point of all of this is that Sonnet XIX is a poem that I love, and it has lived with me, and I with it, for many years, and lately it has been essential to me as I relearn, each day, how to live, how to be, something I have done perhaps all my life, and not just at what lately sometimes feels its nadir.</p><p>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/sonnet-xix-when-i-consider-how-my">Sonnet XIX: &#8216;When I consider how my light is spent&#8217; by John Milton</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As much as the first cuckoo ever was, the (almost) annual brouhaha over the choice of winner of the UK&#8217;s National Poetry Competition (NPC) is a sure indicator that spring has sprung.</p><p>The week before last, Hilary Menos, poet and editor of <em>The Friday Poem</em>, and Victoria Moul, poet&#8211;critic, chewed over and pretty much spat out the poem by the splendidly-named winner, Partridge Boswell, <a href="https://thefridaypoem.substack.com/p/interrogating-the-bare-expanse">here</a>; as did many poets, both good and not-so-good, on social media. I found the poem to be neither as bad as has largely been made out nor especially deserving of being plucked out as the best of 21,000 poems. However, I wasn&#8217;t privy to reading the rest of them, so what do I know? I can only surmise that it&#8217;s a thankless task which somebody has to do.</p><p>This Friday just gone, Hilary and Victoria, discussed more generally, <a href="https://thefridaypoem.substack.com/p/o-sport-you-are-honour">here</a>, the challenges of judging competitions. Victoria acknowledged the truth that, &#8216;Everyone knows competitions of any kind and in any sphere are a blunt tool.&#8217; They are indeed; but really, as we all know, a poetry competition is principally a money-making exercise upon which the financial health of the organising outfit usually depends, so they are intrinsically vital for the flourishing of high-quality published poetry.</p><p>The issue, if it is one, that none of the top three poems was written by a British poet, is, for me, wholly unimportant. I&#8217;m not at all convinced by Victoria&#8217;s insistence that she, &#8216;would like to see the National Poetry Competition restrict its entry criteria to British citizens and/or those living in the UK and make a serious attempt to help readers see and appreciate what is distinctive about British poetry&#8217;, given that the globe has never been as closely linked as it is now. Using the UK&#8217;s most prestigious poem competition as a means to discern some sort of set of British poetic values seems to me as futile as the coalition government&#8217;s witless introduction just over a decade ago of the requirement that &#8216;British values&#8217; in general &#8211; as itemised in guidance <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/of%20the%20requirement">here</a> &#8211; be taught in schools. Aside from the fact that many serious and good poets rarely or never enter competitions, it would be rather &#8216;Little Britain&#8217;, wouldn&#8217;t it? Has the Man Booker Prize been devalued or enhanced by the widening of its eligibility from novels in English by British and Commonwealth writers to novels in English by writers of any nationality as long as they have been published in the UK or Ireland? Surely the more internationalist readers become, the better that is for their general outlook on life and for the health of a diverse, tolerant and culturally-enriched society?</p><p>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.substack.com/p/on-poetry-competitions-and-personal">On poetry competitions and personal taste</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>One does not attempt to write a poem about foremothers. One is <em>compelled</em> to write it. In fact, it writes itself. You are simply the last hand in a chain of clasped arms, the last daughter in a lineage of daughters, the last mouth from which the song, fully formed, emerges.</p><p>I see <em>Daughter of Sindh</em> as a bridge poem &#8211; my ancestral mothers gaze towards me, I look back to them, and the legacy of colonial rule, the pain of India&#8217;s partition hangs between us.</p><p>In the great gamble of map-drawing, Sindh (and half of Punjab) ended up on the Pakistani side of the border; the wrong side for my Hindu grandparents (maternal and paternal) who crossed amidst carnage, rebuilding their lives from refugee camps on what politicians declared in 1947 was now their homeland. They never crossed that border again. Their ache never ceased.</p><p>Far from their slowly reconstructed lives in India, I was born and raised in West Asia (UAE), by a Sindhi mother and a Punjabi father who spoke with each other in English and were themselves raised in the shadows of unspoken wounds of their parents&#8217; displacement. My childhood was a surreal split between Indian mythological universes and the moody landscapes of Austen and Bronte; I memorized Shakespeare and Sanskrit verses for their rhythm, learnt ballet and Bharatanatyam.</p><p>Like <em>Daughter of Sindh</em>, I have existed on bridges since I can remember &#8211; at the intersection of cultures, of worlds, of times. For a long while, when I lost my mother at 19, existence felt like one foot in the realm of life, the other in the realm of death.</p><p>For me, writing poetry is standing on thresholds in their purest, most luminous warmth, and allowing the words to remake me. It is to drench oneself in their light, in their fire, and taste honey. Much of my collection &#8216;Drench Me in Silver&#8217; (Black Bough, 2025) is the gathering of such moments.</p><p><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/04/11/drop-in-by-saraswati-nagpal/">Drop-in by Saraswati Nagpal</a> (Nigel Kent)</p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In my yard, hands on my hips, I look down at the collage of green foliage at my feet. I look for the familiar whorls and hues of ephemeral leaves. I count seven Bloodroot blossoms, little yellow faces with their manes of white. My favorite stage of their growth is just before the bloom when the lobed leaf is wrapped around the stem like a cloak. The flower appears to be holding its face in despair. Staring down at them, I feel my arms begin to wrap around my body. [...]</p><p>Bloodroot&#8217;s whorl of leaf encases the delicate stem, protecting the flower until it finally blooms. Anyone who has started seeds in the still-aired confines of their homes quickly learns that the leggy stems are susceptible to wind as soon as they&#8217;re taken outside to adjust to life in the real world. The Bloodroot eventually sheds the cloak of itself and as it opens its face to the sunlight, its root nodules foster bacteria, nitrogen, and a gossamer intimacy with mycelia to nourish itself on the earth. Every green of stem. Every brown and gray of bark. Every green and red and yellow of leaf. Every pinnacle of thorn. All of it is miraculously rendered from the soil, and light.</p><p>Today is one of those days. Despite the universe in a seed, despite the success of transplant, the seven Bloodroot blossoms are just that: seven flowers. We all have days like these where the magic isn&#8217;t magic, but simply is <em>what is</em>. We experience the doldrums, all of us sitting on the edge of our beds, dragging a sock over the foot of another day. Opening a door and closing it in that repetitive muscle memory. Of course the seed bursts open; what is needed is there. The plant has sap. That&#8217;s what plants do. The sap has color and it happens to be red. I stand here and stare at the ground, though, and somehow I&#8217;m still entranced. Sometimes all the looking inward is just a sign that one needs to spend more time looking outward.</p><p>I am reminded of Mary Oliver&#8217;s poem &#8220;I Go Down to the Shore&#8221; where she is humbled by the work and mechanism of <em>what is</em> [...]</p><p>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/finding-the-world">Finding the World</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I hope to get together another manuscript out this spring (1 circulating, 1 bounced, 1 accepted to tbc), but I looked at 60 pages of this one, and said, nope and yanked that bit of viscera and will rebuild.</p><p>I spent 7 hours on a poem yesterday and look askance at it today. Hm, maybe it needs to sit and steep a while.</p><p>Recently I got a couple poems accepted at <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/books/poems/">online places</a>. Another going up April 9. Poetry coming out at +doc too. So that&#8217;s exciting.</p><p>Meanwhile I&#8217;ve continued to read at my usual voracious rate. I&#8217;m at 75 titles, varying from a dozen pages to over 700 pages. I&#8217;ve realized how inadequate even to myself to note a good one is. Or locate again given my current state of books.</p><p>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.substack.com/p/on-our-small-marble">On our small marble</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Much of my writing life is about waiting, for the ideas to form, for the stories to knit together. But today: writing, tidying, note making. Toying with flash fiction, bending and breaking rules, watching how tone and structure affect a story. I&#8217;m trying to write super short flash today - nothing more than 100 words a story. It&#8217;s challenging, but I need the hard edges of a challenge, as opposed to the loose, wandering path of the novel. I like the constraint. I like the fierce cutting and chipping and chiseling of words. When I look up it&#8217;s been an hour and a half. I take a break from writing and instead search online for writing opportunities and update a spreadsheet, begin yet another grant application then give up on it.</p><p>Suddenly, around me is a shifting and dragging of tables and chairs. A group of cancer hospital volunteers have arrived for a meeting. There are about fifteen people crowding into my corner. They keep asking if it&#8217;s ok for them to be around me like this, and it is because I&#8217;m not going anywhere. One of them has two therapy dogs with her, and I reach down and stroke the nearest one, who has a surprisingly wet beard.</p><p>They start by having a right old bitch about all sorts of work based stuff. I enjoy listening to it. It reminds me of my old job as a microbiologist. Oh, strange days to remember when I was a person who got up and went to a laboratory and looked down a microscope. Strange to think I was a person who worked with people. The gossip. The bitching. And let me tell you, no one can bitch like an NHS worker. The group move on from bitching to sharing their own experiences. Each and every one a cancer survivor. Then they are done, coffee drank, plans made, they move out, apologising to me for crowding me.</p><p>&#8216;It&#8217;s ok, I wasn&#8217;t going anywhere, I&#8217;m supposed to be working&#8217; I say, smiling.</p><p>&#8216;Are you here with someone?&#8217;</p><p>&#8216;My mum, she&#8217;s having chemo&#8217;.</p><p>&#8216;Well, we&#8217;re all survivors ourselves, you&#8217;ll have heard, don&#8217;t give up hope&#8230;&#8217;</p><p>&#8216;Stage four.&#8217;</p><p>&#8216;Oh, well I hope the chemo gives her some more time.&#8217;</p><p>&#8216;Thanks&#8217;</p><p>There is an awkward silence. Even here, in the middle of a cancer hospital, death is a place we can&#8217;t quite cross into. I think about that often, that I have been crossing into and out of places of death, that for long periods of my life I have lived in the doorway of both worlds, the liminal space of waiting and watching. They have all been there too, or at least to the edges, to view from some platform what is coming to us all. The moment passes.</p><p>We talk a little more, about what I&#8217;m working on. I say I&#8217;m a writer. She says I should write about them. I say I&#8217;ll put them in a short story, but I don&#8217;t, I put them in this blog instead.</p><p>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/much-of-what-happens-here-is-about">Much of what happens here is about waiting</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the context of a review culture in which hot takes, pseudo blurbs and cod-academic posturing are rife, it&#8217;s a huge breath of fresh air to encounter a critic who engages with a poet and their poetry, who gets to grips with the nuts and bolts of every line, who reaches far beyond a mere description of thematic concerns, all without lapsing into jargon or self-aggrandisement.</p><p>This is why I&#8217;m thoroughly recommending Suzanna Fitzpatrick&#8217;s <em>The Deeper Read</em> today. It&#8217;s a regular Substack where she delves deeply into one collection at a time. Her writing and insights are terrific in their clarity, worthy of a wider audience and way more interesting than most reviews that can be found in major journals, even the essay-length ones, so I&#8217;m not taking restricted words counts as an excuse here. In fact, Fitzpatrick&#8217;s showing up a fair few bigger names in <em>The Deeper Read.</em> I suggest you explore its archive via<a href="https://suzannafitzpatrick.substack.com/profile/posts"> this link</a>, but with one warning: it&#8217;s likely to provoke you into purchases of poetry books that you&#8217;d never heard of and suddenly need...!</p><p>Matthew Stewart, <a href="http://roguestrands.blogspot.com/2026/04/suzanna-fitzpatricks-deeper-read.html">Suzanna Fitzpatrick&#8217;s The Deeper Read</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was struck recently by the pathetic persistence of my ego needs, that little creature inside who is constantly wanting to be seen, heard, applauded. &#8220;My god, creature, will you never stop?&#8221; I scold it. &#8220;Surely we&#8217;re of or approaching an age when we can be beyond all this,&#8221; I suggest to it. &#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; it says, &#8220;of course,&#8221; it assures. But next thing I know it&#8217;s having another little fit over a rejection, a perceived slight. Recently it was in a small tizzy over a competition we lost, even though we really didn&#8217;t expect to win in the first place. &#8220;But still,&#8221; it declares stoutly. I bemuse myself with all the ways I try to be seen &#8212; my poetry, art, opinions, and all the conversations I insert myself-talking-about-myself into. &#8220;Can you just shut up,&#8221; I demand of the ego. It makes that locking-the-lips motion. I don&#8217;t believe it for a minute. Can I blame society&#8217;s focus on productivity, success, competition &#8212; does every freaking thing have to be a competition? Competition means winners, yes, but it also, by definition, means losers. It occurs to me that I identify always with the losers. Does that doom me to self-fulfilling prophecy? &#8220;No, no, it&#8217;s not my fault!&#8221; declares ego. I think about how early trauma informs lifelong twists of thinking. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; cries ego, &#8220;it&#8217;s my parents&#8217; fault!&#8221; Oh shut up. Just keep doing the creative acts, I tell myself, and ignore the ego beast. It blinks at me, unreadable.</p><p>Anyway, then I found this amusing poem by Matthew Olzmann (&#8220;so much better known, better published, a real success story in the poetry world, not like&#8230;,&#8221; mutters ego) and felt momentary kindred, as a poem can do. And then the ending! That&#8217;s what poetry is all about.</p><p>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/04/13/the-savant-who-believes-mustard-stains/">the savant who believes mustard stains</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Comingling bodies brewed of holy water and borrowed time. Insomnia and 5 a.m. coffee atoms. Dog-tired highways and ragged folk-songs. Starched shirts and worn jeans atoms. Counterfeit and heaven-forged. A medicine bottle with hope listed as a side effect.</p><p>Rich Ferguson, <a href="https://richrantblog.wordpress.com/2026/04/07/swirling-through-the-universe-all-the-atoms-of-us/">Swirling through the universe, all the atoms of us</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>THE GRIEF OF A HAPPY LIFE, Christopher Howell</em>, Pacific Northwest Poetry Series, University of Washington Press, 2019.</p><p>On the back cover, Kathy Fagan writes: &#8220;Howell has been for many years my go-to poet of choice when I need to be reminded of what a poem can do, what a poetry collection can do&#8230;&#8221;</p><p>I can say the same. Howell asks, in &#8220;The Giant Causes the Apocalypse,&#8221; &#8220;[W]hat will comfort <em>us </em>/ as we hear our singing stop?&#8221; This sometimes strange, sometimes disconcerting collection of poems is an exploration of that question.</p><p>The grief in the title permeates the book, without weighing it down, like these lines from &#8220;Turnpike and Flow&#8221;:</p><blockquote><p>We say it is a long road<br>but it is only<br>a life<br>slipping past, dark and bright, abandoning<br>a few broken tools and shoes, once<br>in a while something beautiful but too big<br>to carry.</p></blockquote><p>Howell is truly a gem in the Washington State poetry world. He has 20 books. He teaches in the master of fine arts program at Eastern Washington University, and is an editor/director for both Lynx House Press and Willow Spring Books. Let us say he has a large and interested following. So it&#8217;s odd to find, bracketed in the middle of a long poem, these words: &#8220;[Sometimes I want you to stop / reading so I can / go on alone into the dark sublingual light&#8230;&#8221; (&#8220;Cloud of Unknowing&#8221;). I love the juxtaposition of dark with light. It&#8217;s a sentence (it&#8217;s a whole book) that takes chances.</p><p>Maybe Howell isn&#8217;t so much exploring the big questions, as urging his readers to explore them.</p><p>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/christopher-howell-the-grief-of-a-happy-life/">Christopher Howell, THE GRIEF OF A HAPPY LIFE</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8216;A Comet Passing&#8217; is an urgent, taut collection of 18 poems inspired by the events surrounding the Heaven&#8217;s Gate religious group during the approach of the Hale-Bopp comet in 1997. As we readers already know (or can easily find out) what happened during these febrile, fervid last days, Vanessa [Napolitano]&#8217;s job as the poet is to keep our attention on each part of the sequence as it unfolds. Through a kind of poetic speculation, we experience the build-up of events as though we were one of the Heaven&#8217;s Gate members &#8211; believing when they believe, doubting when they doubt. Vanessa sustains the tension through a careful layering of moments of high intensity with moments of calm, even boredom, as the group prepares meticulously for what is to come.</p><p>I&#8217;ve loved Vanessa&#8217;s poetry since I first laid eyes on it, and it&#8217;s especially pleasing to see the emotional intelligence and subtlety of her writing brought to bear here, on a subject outside of her usual range of themes. This is a pamphlet doing what pamphlets do really well &#8211; operating as a vehicle for a set of concerns at somewhat of a tangent to the writer&#8217;s main body of work.</p><p>That said, Vanessa&#8217;s attention to detail, to the fine grain of life, is all over these poems, from the &#8220;newspaper bags full of literature&#8221; in the opening poem Recruitment, to the pin-sharp character studies of Nobodyody, to the last frivolities enjoyed and documented in Levity &#8211; &#8220;chicken pot pie, cold lemonade&#8221;.</p><p>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/a-mystery-of-bodies">A mystery of bodies</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Frank Stanford is surely one of the most important undervalued American poets. Few have read him, but his writing of a dark and fallen South is on par with the novels of William Faulkner and the stories of Flannery O&#8217;Connor. In writing ability and scope, Stanford is their equal. The subject matter, tone, and language are quite similar. He died at twenty-nine by his own hand in 1978, yet he&#8217;d already published seven volumes of poetry. Two more posthumous collections would appear within one year. His most mysterious work, <em>The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You</em>, is an epic poem of more than 15,000 lines narrated by a twelve-year old boy, growing up in Mississippi.</p><p>A volume of selected poems, <em>The Light the Dead See</em>, published in 1991, serves as a solid introduction to Stanford&#8217;s work. For those who want to experience the poet in-depth, I&#8217;d recommend <em>What About Water: Collected Poems</em> and <em>Hidden Water</em>, unpublished works, fragments, and letters &#8211; both books published in 2015. A writer of enormous possibility. Readers can only guess what might have been.</p><p>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-frank-stanford-their">Thoughts on&#8230; Frank Stanford, &#8220;Their Names Are Spoken&#8221;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Several years ago, I came across <a href="https://substack.com/@nicolegulotta">Nicole Gulotta&#8217;s</a> <em><a href="https://www.nicolemgulotta.com/wild-words">Wild Words</a></em>, a book about letting creativity meet you where you are. As a new mom, in the midst of nap-trapped days and sleepless nights, I devoured that book. We&#8217;re talking highlights, underlines, notes spilling into the margins.</p><p>After I finished <em>Wild Words</em>, I moved on to Nicole&#8217;s podcast. I have distinct memories of walking around my neighborhood, pushing a stroller, headphones on, and Nicole&#8217;s voice in my ear. At the time, I had no plans of publishing a book. I only knew that I wanted to keep writing. So I did&#8212;over several slow, mostly unremarkable years.</p><p>In 2025, I published my first poetry collection, <em><a href="http://writtenbyallison.com/book">A History of Holding</a></em>. A month or two after its release, an order arrived in my inbox.</p><p>From Nicole Gulotta.</p><p>I was shocked, confused, elated. How did she know I existed? Where did she come across the book? I reached out to thank her and tell her how much <em>Wild Words</em> meant to me, and she was as kind and gracious as I&#8217;d imagined.</p><p>A few weeks later, she sent <em>me</em> an email.</p><p>She&#8217;d finished my book. She liked it. She wanted to have me on her podcast!</p><p>Allison Mei-Li, <a href="https://writtenbyallison.substack.com/p/slow-writing">Slow Writing</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s good that CBe doesn&#8217;t have shareholders, because the figures for the financial year just ended wouldn&#8217;t make them happy. The only people CBe is accountable to are readers. Thank you very much to those who pressed the <a href="https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=5P6ZPD3JAW5KJ">&#8216;Donate&#8217; link</a> on the website home page: still there, and anyone who presses it gets a copy of a limited-edition 32-page full-colour booklet called <em>Vedute a colori</em>.</p><p>Early next year &#8211; which, if we get there, will be CBe&#8217;s 20th birthday &#8211; CBe will publish its largest and longest book to date. <em>Testimony</em> by the poet Charles Reznikoff (1894&#8211;1976) happens to be &#8211; and I&#8217;m not entirely alone in thinking this &#8211; one of the major English-language works of the past century, and has never been published in the UK. It was originally published piecemeal between 1934 and 1978; in 2015 in the US Black Sparrow, now an imprint of David Godine, gathered the whole thing (including the original prose version, out of print for decades) into a single edition, and this is the edition &#8211; large format, 608 pages! &#8211; that CBe will publish in the UK.</p><p>The poems in <em>Testimony</em> are derived from court records from across the US between 1885 and 1915. Other poetry titles from CBe based on documentary records of the lives of others (interviews, photographs, emails &#8230;) are Sarah Hesketh&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/hesketh.html">2016</a></em>, Caroline Clark&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/clark.html">Sovetica</a></em>, J. O. Morgan&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/morgan1.html">Natural Mechanical</a></em> and <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/morgan2.html">Long Cuts</a></em>, and Dan O&#8217;Brien&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/OBrien.html">War Reporter</a></em> and <em><a href="https://www.cbeditions.com/obrien3.html">New Life</a></em>, and <em>Testimony</em> may be the mother and father of them all.</p><p>Reznikoff is little known in the UK (the US too). But some people know him, and I&#8217;d be very happy if any of those who do get in touch. Publishing this book is a statement: about small presses (much of Reznikoff&#8217;s work was self-published and printed by himself), but it&#8217;s also about why write, why publish. Any history of Modernism in literature that doesn&#8217;t include this book needs kicking.</p><p>Charles Boyle, <a href="http://sonofabook.blogspot.com/2026/04/newsletter-april-2026-new-book-and-news.html">Newsletter April 2026: new book, and news of another</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Claire Taylor</strong> is a writer for both adult and youth audiences. <a href="https://www.publishinggenius.com/catalog/april-and-back-again-by-claire-taylor/">Her poetry collection, </a><em><a href="https://www.publishinggenius.com/catalog/april-and-back-again-by-claire-taylor/">April and Back Again</a></em><a href="https://www.publishinggenius.com/catalog/april-and-back-again-by-claire-taylor/"> is available now from Publishing Genius</a>. Claire is the founding editor of <a href="https://www.littlethoughtspress.com/">Little Thoughts Press</a>, a literary magazine for young readers. She lives with her family in Baltimore, Maryland, in an old stone house where birds love to roost. You can find her online at <a href="http://clairemtaylor.com/">clairemtaylor.com</a>.<br><strong><br>1 - How did your first book or chapbook change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?</strong><br>I wrote and self-published my first chapbook, <em>Mother Nature</em>, during the pandemic. It&#8217;s a hybrid collection of poetry and essays about pregnancy, the postpartum period, and early parenting. I don&#8217;t know that it changed my life per se, but being able to find readers who connected with the themes and emotional vulnerability at play in that book helped solidify my desire to keep writing, to remain open to the experience of sharing my life and my feelings in this way.</p><p>My new collection, <em>April and Back Again</em>, focuses on a single year in my life from the period of April 2024 when I turned 39, to April 2025 when I turned 40. It&#8217;s a sort of time capsule for that period, a point in time when when both my life and the US were on the cusp of significant changes. I think the themes of family life, aging, and obviously politics and trying to parent through a fog of existential dread are universal and extend beyond the single year in which I wrote these poems, but this book feels especially like a snapshot of a particular moment in time for me.<br><strong><br>2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?</strong><br>I started writing poetry as a kid. I had my first poem published at age 10 in <em>Highlights Magazine</em>. It was about what it might feel like to be a leaf. Then I wrote a bunch of angsty and lusty poems in high school, your typical teenage stuff. After that, though, I mostly shifted away from poetry and only came back to it after becoming a mother. I needed to write about that new experience but had very little free time to sit down and do any long-form writing. I would write poems in my phone&#8217;s Notes app while I was nursing my baby or when I was up in the middle of the night trying to rock him back to sleep. Poetry is a good outlet if you need to express your emotions but only have five minutes and one hand free. [...]</p><p><strong>6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?</strong><br>I think the main concern behind my writing is how to make sense of being human. I think about writing poetry the same way I think about parenting: It&#8217;s my job to illuminate the complexity of being human, to say, here is what is hard and here is what is beautiful about being alive and now you have to decide what to do with that information.</p><p>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/04/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_094260358.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Claire Taylor</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m grateful to share that my poem &#8220;<a href="https://solsticelitmag.org/content/dear-judy/">Dear Judy</a>&#8221; was just published in <em>Solstice Literary Magazine</em>, a long-standing, mission-driven journal dedicated to diverse voices and socially engaged work. Solstice consistently publishes writing that leans into nuance, justice, and the complicated ways we move through the world, and I&#8217;m honored to have a poem included in their Spring 2026 issue.</p><p>This poem is part of a series I&#8217;ve been writing since my mother passed unexpectedly in January 2024&#8212;epistolary duplex poems addressed to her. Some are shaped by what&#8217;s happening around us; others turn inward, tracing the parts of my life and my mother&#8217;s life that continue to intersect. These poems have become a way for me to keep talking to her, to say what I still need to say, to stay close.</p><p>&#8220;Dear Judy&#8221; is the second poem from this series to be published. The first, &#8220;<a href="https://thenewversenews.substack.com/p/nvn-tuesday-dear-judy">Dear Judy</a>,&#8221; appeared in <em>New Verse News</em> on September 16, 2025. I also wrote a short post about that publication and the project as a whole:<br><a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2025/09/29/my-duplex-poem-dear-judy-published-in-new-verse-news-open-for-current-event-poems/">&#8220;My Duplex Poem &#8216;Dear Judy&#8217; Published in New Verse News&#8221;</a>.</p><p>Formally, this new piece is an extended duplex, a variation on the poetic form invented by Jericho Brown. A traditional duplex is a 14-line hybrid that braids the sonnet, ghazal, and blues through repetition and transformation. You can read more about the form on Poets.org in their entry on the <a href="https://poets.org/glossary/duplex">duplex</a>.</p><p>Trish Hopkinson, <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/04/12/my-poem-dear-judy-and-extended-duplex-published-in-solstice/">My poem &#8220;Dear Judy&#8221; and extended duplex published in Solstice</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Like many others, I get the occasional e-mail that tells me that the sender can help me find new readers for my brilliant books, millions and millions of readers. Yesterday I got a different e-mail, an old-fashioned fan letter of sorts.</p><p>The e-mail writer told me that she had selected my poem for a specific reason: &#8220;This is to let you know that as a member of a Lectio Poetry group that met this morning, I chose your poem &#8216;The Moon Remembers&#8217; for our session. Because of the recent NASA mission to send humans farther into space than ever before, and to study the dark side of the moon, I felt fortunate to find your poem to share.&#8221;</p><p>The e-mail concluded this way, &#8220;In this world of chaos, &#8216;The Moon Remembers&#8217; gave us an hour of peace, of joy, of hope.&#8221;</p><p>Wow--what writer could hope for more than that? I mean that sincerely. It is one of the reasons I write, in the hopes of bringing something positive to people.<br><br>I don&#8217;t get many fan letters anymore, and the ones that I get are usually about &#8220;Heaven on Earth,&#8221; perhaps my most famous poem, <a href="https://origin-writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php%3Fdate=2007%252F05%252F11.html">read on Garrison Keillor&#8217;s </a><em><a href="https://origin-writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php%3Fdate=2007%252F05%252F11.html">The Writer&#8217;s Almanac</a></em>. Yesterday&#8217;s e-mail referenced &#8220;The Moon Remembers.&#8221; It&#8217;s a poem I barely remember writing, and at first, I wondered if she was writing to the wrong poet.</p><p>Happily, my blog answers many a question for me. I posted it in <a href="https://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2018/03/poetry-saturday-moon-remembers.html">this blog post</a>, and I&#8217;m guessing that&#8217;s how the group leader found my poem. Even though it&#8217;s not one of the poems I remember, I&#8217;m still happy with it.</p><p>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/04/fan-letter-for-forgotten-poem-moon.html">Fan Letter for Forgotten Poem, &#8220;The Moon Remembers&#8221;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I had one of those moments last week where I thought I would put off doing something until next time I had the opportunity. Luckily my thoughts stopped me in my tracks and nudged me into thinking how good it would feel to do the thing and know I had done it. I liked the fact that my thoughts were giving me the nod that I could just get on and do the thing. And when I stood in the moment to think about it, I realised it would be the same feeling of being a little bit scary whether I did it this time or next, and therefore it made sense just to crack on and do it. My mission? To pop into a book shop and ask if they would be willing to stock my poetry books. Three things also spurred me on:</p><ul><li><p>Helen O&#8217;Neill asking, &#8220;Where can people find your poetry?&#8221;</p></li><li><p>My commitment to being 10% braver (thank you Jaz Ampaw Farr).</p></li><li><p>This lovely feedback from someone who messaged me recently after buying a copy of one of my books&#8230; <em>&#8220;I picked up &#8216;Welcome to the Museum of a Life&#8217; today after reading two poems standing in the bookshop! I couldn&#8217;t put it down&#8230;. The Telford Warehouse poem stopped me completely&#8230;&#8221;</em></p></li></ul><p>So this week I am celebrating seizing the moment, the positive role of self-talk and the things and people that spur us on.</p><p>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/04/13/a-road-trip-to-nevern/">A ROAD TRIP TO NEVERN</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My poetry calendar is getting crowded, and I don&#8217;t know about you, but I could definitely use the distraction.</p><p>This Wednesday at J. Bookwalter&#8217;s in Woodinville, at 6:30 PM we&#8217;ll be meeting at our monthly book club to discuss Kelli Russell Agodon&#8217;s newest book, <em><a href="https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/books/accidental-devotions-by-kelli-russell-agodon-2/">Accidental Devotions</a></em>, just out from <a href="https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/">Copper Canyon Press</a>. (Well, technically its launch date is in May, but we&#8217;re celebrating early, because Poetry Month!) Here are my cats jealously guarding their early copy. I have already read the book and know it&#8217;s fantastic. I recommend it.</p><p>And on April 23rd, J. Bookwalter&#8217;s Tasting Studio in Woodinville is re-starting its Wine and Poetry Night with Kelli Russell Agodon reading from her new book. I&#8217;ll be hosting and doing an introduction. [...]</p><p>And just in case this isn&#8217;t enough poetry for you, I&#8217;ll be reading at the Poetry Book Party for Catherine Broadwall&#8217;s new book <em><a href="https://www.girlnoise.press/products/aftermath">Aftermath</a></em> from Girl Noise Press on May 5th at Vermillion in Capital Hill, as part of the opening act at 7 PM. Catherine is the poet on the right in this picture with a Rainier cherry tree.</p><p>In between all this poetry month (and early May) excitement, I&#8217;ll be welcoming my nephew Dustin Hall&#8217;s move to the area, celebrating my birthday, and probably snapping pictures of tulips, daffodils and cherry blossoms along the way.</p><p>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/its-national-poetry-month-poetry-book-clubs-and-poetry-readings-poet-friends-and-book-parties-and-more/">It&#8217;s National Poetry Month! Poetry Book Clubs and Poetry Readings, Poet Friends and Book Parties, and More</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now that we&#8217;re one week into April, I thought it might be fun to think about the aftermath of a 30/30. All those drafts, in various stages of newness and disarray. How do you begin to approach deciding what to keep, what to abandon, what to revise? I always approach a first draft the same way after letting it cool on the sill for a while. I ask questions in my head:</p><ul><li><p>What&#8217;s working, both at the language level and/or in serving the poem&#8217;s purpose?</p></li><li><p>What&#8217;s extraneous and should be removed?</p></li><li><p>What&#8217;s necessary/working as connective tissue but poorly executed?</p></li><li><p>Where&#8217;s the turn/volta toward purpose or layers of meaning?</p></li></ul><p>Though I am not officially doing a 30/30 (see last post), I am trying to write <em>something</em> every day this month. So I started on April 1 with a prompt from Bluesky from <a href="https://bsky.app/profile/toddedillard.bsky.social">Todd Dillard</a>:</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Deconstructed Fable&#8221;<br>Write a poem in which every day you receive some fragment of a fable. A red cloak, the huntsman&#8217;s ax, a grandmother&#8217;s spectacles, etc. Write the poem in such a way that &#8220;solving&#8221; this fable directs you to return to your childhood home.</p></blockquote><p>As it always is with prompts, I did not follow its instructions exactly. I only used one fragment/item and stuck with one fable throughout a return to the childhood home. (Surprise! It was a grief poem&#8230;oops.) Although the draft is okay, it&#8217;s certainly not what it could be.</p><p>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/whatcha-gonna-do-with-all-that-junk">What&#8217;cha Gonna Do With All That Junk?</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Walk horizonless, gaze curiously,<br>recognize, understand the birds,<br>the trees, the entire sky.<br>It no longer feels impossible,<br><br>something peaks and it feels<br>like forever, where a song<br>is not rain, but<br>a delicate wing.</p><p>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://zouxzoux.wordpress.com/2026/04/11/beyond-within/">Beyond &amp; Within</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Dear Friends, March was a fast month for me. With all of the preparation going up to Baltimore for AWP and coming back again, I hardly had any time to review and post the recent interviews I did. One is with Donna Spruijt-Metz and the other with Heidi Seaborn. (Both are below.)</p><p>I woke up this morning excited to finally get to re-listen to these interviews and post them on The Poetry Salon&#8217;s YouTube channel.</p><p>Before I could get the raw material of these interviews downloaded, I got on Facebook to mindlessly scroll for a bit, while drinking my coffee and waking up. Instead of getting my mindless scroll, I saw pictures of John Brantingham, being shared all over my feed. John, my friend, and founder of <a href="https://medium.com/the-journal-of-radical-wonder">The Journal of Radical Wonder</a> was scheduled to feature at Poets Inspiring Poets on May 18th at The Poetry Salon. At first I thought, &#8220;Good. People are promoting the event with John.&#8221; But then I read the notes under the photo and saw, as I so often do, that people were announcing our mutual friend&#8217;s passing.</p><p>I was so not ready for this; I was getting ready to see him again on zoom. <em>People who have events scheduled with you can&#8217;t possibly die</em>! I thought.</p><p>I turned off the background noise. I starred at the screen. I scrolled more mindfully now. [...]</p><p>I spent a chunk of today working on an essay about John and what he taught me and inspired for me in the brief time I knew him. It connects quite a bit with my discussions with Donna and Heidi - personal grief and collective grief, the environmental crisis, and the resilience of the planet. It&#8217;s about using poetry to share and process complex feelings. It&#8217;s about what we can do for one another and for the planet.</p><p>It is also about acorns and making cookies.</p><p>I will share that essay soon. For now I want to say that we will open our April 18th event, Poets Inspiring Poets, to everyone who wants to celebrate John. Please bring a poem of his to read, or bring a poem of your own that connects with John&#8217;s work in some way. If you had work published by him in The Journal of Radical Wonder, bring that. Mostly, bring yourself!</p><p>Tresha Faye Haefner, <a href="https://thepoetrysalonstack.substack.com/p/finding-radical-wonder-in-difficult">Finding Radical Wonder in Difficult Times: Honoring John Brantingham</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s not so much the lifeboats<br>studding dark water like stars,<br>as what lies beneath the boats,<br>free swimming, with hearts beating,<br>then ferociously attached<br>(armor and weapon), hungry<br>for the funk of horizons</p><p>PF Anderson, <a href="https://rosefirerising.wordpress.com/2026/04/11/barnacles-napowrimo-11/">Barnacles (#NaPoWriMo 11)</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It is surreal that war is raging while my surroundings are so serene. I think of rocket fire, explosions, thick clouds of toxic smoke. I think of people I love in Israel who are protesting the war with Iran. I think of a pregnant friend making sure she can get to the nearest bomb shelter. I think of all the people across the region who have no bomb shelters.</p><p>I wonder how any of us made it through last Tuesday (<a href="https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/carr-ryan/our-work/carr-ryan-commentary/whole-civilization-will-die-tonight-day-american">the day we all woke to &#8220;a whole civilization will die tonight&#8221;</a>) without a nervous breakdown. My cat naps peacefully on the couch. The tree frogs sing their spring song. I&#8217;m not sure we&#8217;re out of the woods. Maybe we&#8217;re still on the brink of global disaster. And yet laundry needs doing, the groceries must be put away.</p><p>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/04/12/we-made-it/">We made it</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The news. The girl switches the channel to Chopin&#8217;s Berceuse.</p><p>They have been sending drones. Only half of the house is still standing, wires protruding from the walls.</p><p>The boy, dizzy, asks his mother if it&#8217;s time for strawberries&#8212;soon.</p><p>Spiders. The woman shies away from touching their cocoons as she clears the furniture out from the shed.</p><p>Naming a crater after their commander&#8217;s late wife, the Artemis crew falls into each other&#8217;s arms.</p><p>Kati Mohr, <a href="https://pi-and-anne.com/2026/04/10/beads/">Beads</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m scared. I&#8217;m guessing we&#8217;re all scared. I stop scrolling, I stop reading, I stop listening. I feel guilt. I feel shame I should be informed, I should be aware I should not bask in the privilege of being able to turn away. More than anything I should be changing things, I should be using writing to change things.</p><p>I am not. Take this morning for example &#8211; I have finished the first draft of a wedding poem for a couple who are looking forward to building their life together in a beautiful country cottage. I&#8217;ve written a slightly dark poem about a blackbird&#8217;s song for my Poem Whisperer&#8217;s group. I&#8217;ve checked my seedlings, wandered sunshine and tamped down the fear that grasped me yesterday. I have turned my mind away, I have basked in my privilege. I am able to choose the place that Marwan Marhoul talks about</p><blockquote><p>In order for me to write poetry that isn&#8217;t political<br>I must listen to the birds<br>and in order to hear the birds<br>the warplanes must be silent.</p><p>&#8211; Marwan Makhoul</p></blockquote><p>I have no lived experience, no first-hand knowledge of this. I am write outrage, devastation, fear, from a place where I can hear the birds. Will it not be hollow, even insulting to write about things I know of but can never understand? I can write about my own response, but what do I really have to say that is different than all the other sorrow and regret that&#8217;s out there? I look up the point of writing in terrifying times and read about poetry being a balm, a soothing presence. I read about poetry being a means to rail against injustice, to call for solidarity. I read about poetry being a way to connect and to empathise. I read that poetry captures the essence of what it means to be human. I read this wisdom and feel empty. I don&#8217;t know if I believe it anymore. I don&#8217;t know if art is powerful enough to overcome and rebuild.</p><p>Kathryn Anna Marshall, <a href="https://kathrynannawrites.substack.com/p/do-the-words-of-a-person-who-can">Do the words of a person who can still hear the birds have any value in times of terror?</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The image of the H above is from a series entitled the Scaffolding for the Alphabet. Is the alphabet all scaffolding? Is old writing scaffolding for the old? Or the other way around.</p><p>And here&#8217;s a poem that I wrote &#8220;after&#8221; A.R. Ammon&#8217;s &#8220;Poem.&#8221; I took his poem and ran it through a bunch of translation tools and then a wisp of something emerged which I made into this poem.</p><p>AFTER</p><p>lunch I</p><p>put</p><p>on my shoes</p><p>and stand just</p><p>above</p><p>the earth</p><p>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/scaffolding-for-the-alphabet">Scaffolding for the Alphabet</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 14]]></title><description><![CDATA[nursing a dying animal, unfolding layers of meaning, summoning a friend from the underworld, committing poems to memory, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-14</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-14</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 23:53:21 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/cbdfc384-58fb-4a1b-b00d-f2b8ea0bf33f_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: nursing a dying animal, unfolding layers of meaning, summoning a friend from the underworld, committing poems to memory, and much more. Enjoy!</em></p><blockquote><p>But I find it unpleasant &#8211; this celebration<br>of your Spring: the tulips, the crocuses (whatever<br>they are), the daffodils (which I have never seen),<br>the banal talk of regeneration, the insistence<br>on light. The world is on fire &#8211; endless war<br>after endless war, the greed, the taste for<br>destruction at scale, the casual counting of<br>the thousands dead, the massacre of little<br>children. Yet, here comes Spring bearing<br>flowers, muse for the softest poems.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/an-april-full-of-poems-1">Ugly Spring</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is a lot to say when it comes to Berlin. About walking down a street, from west to east and back again. Pigeons nod, here and there, pecking at chips from newspaper cones on the ground. A man on heels runs past. A tram jingles. The protest march drums and hisses some blocks of houses away, closer, then more in the distant again.</p><p>The white of the sun. A giant cloud creeps along the mirrored windows of a youngish tower.</p><p>Amongst other things<br>the weather report tells us to<br>prepare . . .<br>weeds, running riot,<br>building walls.</p><p><strong>Kati Mohr, <a href="https://pi-and-anne.com/2026/04/02/writing-because/">Writing&#8212;because.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I recently received a letter from a writer I don&#8217;t know well asking why I have not accepted her manuscript.</p><p><em>Do you hate me?</em> she wrote.</p><p>I do not hate her. I don&#8217;t hate any writers; I don&#8217;t hate anyone. I just am not sure if we are the right publisher for her book.</p><p>I have a poem in my last book that is titled &#8220;I&#8217;m worried about who hates me.&#8221; The crisis of being a writer, for many of us, is that we spend a lot of time alone. We spend substantial time in our heads, and they may be unhealthy places. Research suggests that of all the creative arts, writers tend to have the most looming mental health issues. Dancers, theater people, film people, and even artists work in tribes. We, writers, are alone.</p><p>I try to keep the number of people I hate to a minimum. I think that&#8217;s healthy. I even try to keep the people I&#8217;m afraid of to a minimum. I walk quietly in the world, choosing to amplify the voices of other writers, but it never feels like enough.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/enduring-the-desert-surviving-the">Enduring the Desert: Surviving the Life of a Writer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Every spring in recent years, I vow never again to submit to the temptation to do daily poems for NAPOWRIMO. Every year, I somehow end up doing it. On one hand, the results in the past have been really good. Some of my favorite projects have taken shape in Aprils past. I&#8217;ve finished entire chapbook series and segments of books during this time, as well as started countless others. And let&#8217;s not forget that my now-daily writing routine found its footing in 2018 during April poem-a-day exploits, pretty much setting off a pattern that has sustained me through many different books and life circumstances, from trying to fit writing around a full-time job to having a little more freedom as a freelancer. With a few exceptions, like in-between project breaks or when working on other things (most recently plays), I show up daily and can usually shake loose at lease a few poems a week that do not suck. Enough to keep those energies flowing at a steady pace.</p><p>On the other hand, [&#8230;] NAPOWRIMO always feels a little lonely. You would think it would be the opposite. A month long celebration of poets and poeting. But really it feels more like a cage, where the lit world can pretend to care about the genre for 30 odd days and then go back to ignoring it the rest of the year. It also feels much bigger and more overwhelming. Everyone is writing poems, but I feel like it feels, from an author standpoint like you are shouting into a void that seems even larger and more echo-ey than usual.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/03/napowrimo-ing-along.html">NaPoWrimo-ing along&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>So now again, here, almost three years later. What has happened?</p><p>For sure, many trains and many planes to and fro to Greece and elsewhere. I don&#8217;t know if it&#8217;s a hundred poems, and if so, many of them remained in my head or in orphaned lines, in several inconsistently kept notebooks, short captions for photos on Instagram, e-mails, and messages to friends and family. A few deaths, yes, a few in the family: a sister-in-law and a father. The latter belongs to the one sorrow one has, and I dare to say this one sorrow is the same for every single human on this earth: losing loved ones, missing them, facing, through the loss, the declining time for oneself too. A shared sorrow is not less painful, but this realisation certainly helps one with dealing with it.</p><p>And so it all comes down to the present tense needed. Needed as everyday time to write, needed as space content, as the present tense includes not just the written but also the writer. I look around and see. I look around and do not see. I look around and am seen, or not.</p><p>In <em><a href="https://notborninenglish.wordpress.com/losing-touch/">Losing Touch</a></em>, written during the Covid pandemic, I had expressed my hope of us coming out of this mayhem as a wiser humanity. The related poem ended, though, with a question mark. I couldn&#8217;t be sure, and human history could only make one doubtful of an imminent enlightened future. Just think of the 20th century, and the WWII following WWI and a pandemic during it, not even one full generation later. But this, this around us, is still hard to bear: endless wars and killings, governments and large groups of people turning away from the humanitarian values and goals that we had taken, maybe foolishly so, for granted for decades. Even further than that: a shameless despising of those values is getting louder and mutes in despair many of us who can still feel shame at the sight of cruelty, immorality, dishonesty, and hybris.</p><p>This has never been a blog directly commenting on current political or other events. But the present tense drove me back here, to a quieter place where I can again post verses, photos, and whatever else is born out of the question mark over our heads. I got tired of the scattering and superficial possibilities of the diverse social media sites and long to return to a place where I can gather and save.</p><p>Forgive my absence, and thank you for reading these lines.</p><p><strong>Magda Kapa, <a href="https://notborninenglish.wordpress.com/2026/04/02/der-laden/">Der Laden</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Within a month both my cats died. Lola was 19, Little Fatty was 18. Both very old for cats. And suddenly I&#8217;m on my own completely, with no one to look after and no companions, for the first time since my early twenties. And stuck at home with this arthritic hip. Moan, moan, moan! It&#8217;s so much harder than I would&#8217;ve thought. But it&#8217;s grief, friends say. You have to expect to feel sad. Be kind to yourself. With Lola I just cried, for days and then stopped. Still sad, but it was cathartic. Little Fatty seemed very lost too and soon became ill. For the last week I was tempting him with food, then, when he stayed in his basket, tempting him with water. It was very sad. But also a privilege, to nurse a dying animal. Strangely it reminded me of when you have a new baby in the house &#8211; a kind of deep stillness. The preciousness of a small life ending or beginning. [&#8230;]</p><p>But I keep on writing, reading and knitting. Talking to friends and family. Some gardening &#8211; snipping things, tying in new growth on roses, pulling out weeds. In my own little world like The Lady of Shallot, weaving on my loom and viewing a small piece of the world in my mirror (as in Tennyson&#8217;s poem). Hopefully I&#8217;ll be able to escape without being cursed! I&#8217;d prefer something more prosaic like meeting an orthopaedic consultant and getting some treatment!</p><p><strong>Ali Thurm, <a href="https://alithurm.substack.com/p/saying-goodbye">Saying goodbye</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How the cat&#8217;s tongue cleans me,<br>her monstrous kitten&#8211;so patient as<br>she scrapes my skin down to thin<br>parchment. This same parchment<br>where your kiss left its mark, in-<br>scribing something like invisible<br>ink that only shows when read<br>over an open flame, the same<br>flame that candled an egg to see<br>what life&#8217;s in it, lit by the friction<br>of a sparkwheel under my thumb.<br>How the abrasions open us up.</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="https://luxannica.wordpress.com/2026/04/05/the-abrasions/">The abrasions</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last April I walked a length of the Via Francigena, a stretch of the old pilgrim path that passed close to the Golfo dei Poeti, a kind of walking / talking tour of the Romantic poets in Italy. I&#8217;m feeling a similar looseness in my boots, a need re-trace old routes, follow new lines of enquiry and so this is what I&#8217;m going to do:</p><p>I&#8217;m going to walk around London, circumnavigating the entire city. Not all at once but in sections, between interconnecting points of poetic interest, in episodes that I&#8217;ll broadcast, live, every Sunday at five.</p><p>I&#8217;m going to begin at the Keats statue behind the Globe pub in Moorgate then I&#8217;ll walk a straight line North, to Blake&#8217;s grave. The following week I&#8217;ll walk from Blake&#8217;s grave to the site of the first purpose built theatre in London and Shakespeare&#8217;s statue in Shoreditch and then&#8230; and then I don&#8217;t know. But slowly, weekly, poetically, mile by mile I will find my way back to the starting line.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n58-im-going-out-for-a-walk">N&#186;58 I&#8217;m just going out for a walk&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This morning I stand under three aeroplane contrails to breathe the freshness of the air. The birds are singing the verses that come after dawn chorus, and somewhere far above me there are astronauts in darkness of the moon.</p><p>Alt text says this week&#8217;s photo is a bottle of pills and a red envelope. I say it is a pill bottle from the <a href="https://poetrypharmacy.co.uk/">Poetry Pharmacy</a> and that the theme for this particular bottle is <a href="https://poetrypharmacy.co.uk/products/badgered?variant=56629226668416">&#8216;Badgered&#8217;</a>. I also say I am delighted to see my words unfurled from two of the capsules in this selection. I have been a fan of these &#8216;prescriptions&#8217; for quite some time and love the variety of bottles on offer so it feels particularly cool to have words included.</p><p>This week I was dithering about which poem to record for Poem of the Month for my YouTube channel. Fortunately, April Fool&#8217;s Day gave me a much-needed inspirational nudge when Matthew MC Smith put out a pretend call for poems about spoons.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/04/06/badger-poems-metal-spoons-and-gentle-nods/">BADGER POEMS, METAL SPOONS, AND GENTLE NODS</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The termites swarm on Good Friday,<br>the one day of the year when bread and wine<br>cannot be consecrated.<br>The termites fill my book-lined study.<br>I cannot kill them fast enough.</p><p>Finally, I shut the door and weep.<br>I cry for the Crucified Christ.<br>I cry for my house, under assault<br>from insects who have declared war<br>on wood, as if to avenge His death.<br>I cry for terrors and tribulations and plagues<br>that do not pass over.</p><p>In the evening, I sweep up a thousand wings.<br>I dust my shelves and attend to my house [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/04/good-friday-in-better-place.html">A Thousand Wings</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As the world goes to hell in a handcart again, it seems perverse to be saying anything about what I&#8217;ve been up to, but then again, why let the fascists win? Alas, though, I&#8217;ve been up to very little this last month; I haven&#8217;t gone further than my local park except to see two films &#8211; <em>Midwinter Break</em> (excellent adaptation of an excellent book) and <em>La Grazia</em> (also excellent, as it should be since it involves one of the most fruitful director&#8211;actor collaborations). It&#8217;s been difficult to concentrate on, or get excited by, much. I know I&#8217;m not alone in having those sort of feelings at the moment. Had I been up to it, I would&#8217;ve joined Conor, my eldest, at the massive anti-racist march in London last Saturday, which the BBC saw fit not even to mention in their news outlets. One thing which has really lifted my spirits, though, is that Conor will be standing for the Greens in the upcoming local elections &#8211; I couldn&#8217;t be prouder of him. The ward he&#8217;s standing in has been a Lib Dem stronghold for the last eight years, so it would be an upset were he to get elected, but he knows his stuff and everything is possible now.</p><p>I&#8217;ve been cheered, too, by the imminent publication of a cricket poetry anthology, in which I have five haiku and four longer poems: <em>Catching the Light</em>, edited by Nicholas Hogg and Tim Beard and published by Fairfield Books &#8211; details are available <strong><a href="https://fairfieldbooks.co.uk/shop/catching-the-light/">here</a></strong>. [&#8230;]</p><p>This coming Saturday I hope to make it to the Unitarian church in Doncaster to be one of the 20+ readers at the launch of the <em>Fig Tree Anthology 2025</em>, edited by Tim Fellows. To mark the centenary of the General Strike, Tim has just put out a call for poems about the strike and the union movement more generally. Details of both the reading and the call-out can be found on the Crooked Spire Press website, <strong><a href="https://crookedspirepress.com/">here</a></strong>.</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/04/05/what-news-there-is/">What news there is</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last week I found myself grumpy. And ebullient. Weirdly hopeful. And apocalyptic and counting my canned goods. I&#8217;ve been bored by conversation and rendered delighted, sometimes in the span of five minutes. I&#8217;ve been too alone and not alone enough. Labile is a term for such shiftiness. Its derivation is Latinate, <em>labi</em>, meaning to slip or fall. But that word does not reflect the bounding up part, the leaping up to greet the world, the way my obnoxious friend Darla leaps at the window of her glassed-in porch and barkbarkbarks and her amiable friend Mack&#8217;s stubby tail wavewavewaves. It&#8217;s spring in the northeast US, though, so all of this is understandable after a winter in which we all, metaphorically or really both slipped and fell. I told someone recently I didn&#8217;t &#8220;feel quite myself.&#8221; But that&#8217;s a lie. I am nothing if not all this barking and waving, this restless boredom and comfortable curiosity. I found this poem by Basque poet Leira Bilbao through some accident of boredom and curiosity, and love the strange becoming of its narrator. I love too that the original Basque seems more complicated than the translation, a bit longer, more words. I like that there&#8217;s something I don&#8217;t know here. I like that I&#8217;m not sure whether the narrator&#8217;s transformation is a good thing or a cautionary tale. Tales of metamorphosis are often cautionary, after all. But not always. It makes me wary. And cheerful.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/04/06/a-slippery-thing-lugging-a-roof-on-my-back/">a slippery thing lugging a roof on my back</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Happy National Poetry Month!</p><p>We have 14 events lined up in <a href="https://www.consciouswriterscollective.com/">Conscious Writers Collective</a>, and I am currently preparing for my marathon by&#8212;you guessed it&#8212;reading more books of poetry.</p><p>Currently, I&#8217;m halfway through two manuscripts: L.J. Sysko&#8217;s <em>Hot Clock</em> and Elizabeth Metzger&#8217;s <em>The Going is Forever </em>(out from Milkweed this September!)<em>. </em>My goodness, are these two books <em>phenomenal</em>. I can&#8217;t wait to see the buzz around them when they&#8217;re finally out in the world.</p><p>I&#8217;ve also just finished <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/1498061-maggie-smith?utm_source=mentions">Maggie Smith</a>&#8217;s <em>A Suit or a Suitcase </em>and re-read Gabrielle Calvocoressi&#8217;s <em>The New Economy</em> and Adrian Matejka&#8217;s <em>Map to the Stars. </em>I often feel I&#8217;ve only really read a book once I&#8217;ve <em>re-read</em> it. I wonder if you can relate?</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/some-poems-ive-enjoyed-lately-ba7">Some Poems I&#8217;ve Enjoyed Lately</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>One stanza, twelve lines, ragged edges. Not a sonnet. Not stepping into the shape of a recognizable form, whether to constitute it or subvert it.</p><p>The speaker is alone, standing near a shoreline. The tone is desolate and expansive, almost as if deserted by its own vantage. It surveys the scene and asks questions, but refuses to identify the questions as such by using punctuation.</p><p>Unpunctuated questions may indicate that asking is either futile or humiliating, or perhaps too difficult an activity since the speaker reveals parts of themselves in asking the question.</p><p>What do we reveal when we<em> ask?</em></p><p>I mean, what do we say about ourselves when we constitute a question that identifies itself and addresses itself to others <em>as such</em>?</p><p>What does the poem want when it does that while celebrating the surreptitious cigarette smoked beneath an awning during a rainstorm. What does the poem want when it asserts this singular moment against the interrogatory mode?</p><p>How did punctuation alter the atmosphere of the prior sentences?</p><p>I mean isn&#8217;t it strange how the presence of a question mark indicates an openness, a disinhibition, a willingness to be read as part of a potential future dialogue?</p><p>What about the absence of punctuation inhibits the self and builds a horizon into the spoken.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/4/2/love-letters-mostly-by-deborah-digges">&#8220;Love Letters Mostly&#8221; by Deborah Digges.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>[David] Lloyd&#8217;s <em>The Bone Wine</em> consists of XV numbered poems, each of three quatrains preceded by a less formal untitled and unnumbered poem dedicated &#8216;I.M. Refaat Alareer&#8217;. Alareer was a Palestinian poet and academic who was killed in an Israeli air strike on Gaza in December 2023. This poem, although it stands outside the main sequence, sets a frame in which the other poems operate, a frame further defined by Lloyd&#8217;s long-term engagement with the cause of Palestinian freedom.</p><p>These are poems in which images of death, decay and destruction dominate, in a syntax that is much more direct than in much of Lloyd&#8217;s earlier poetry. Images of the human body run through the poems, including the titular bone, but also the flesh:</p><blockquote><p>VIII</p><p>Bent words flared to embers<br>in the mouth, they weigh<br>on the tongue, laden<br>like meat on the slab.</p><p>Ash filter sifts the bone wine<br>all the untenanted graves<br>corpse pits bared to the deadly<br>blue of the sky. All round</p><p>a white song chirps<br>out of the clinker, ware<br>ware, war we are<br>wages on. And on. And on.</p></blockquote><p>The background landscape is arid, parched, the only rain from the &#8216;deadly blue&#8217; sky consists of bombs and missiles, but no life-giving water, and in this respect The Bone Wine is oddly reminiscent of The Waste Land.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/04/02/david-lloyd-and-cassandra-moss-a-review/">David Lloyd and Cassandra Moss: A Review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s that time of year when the words <em>Some Flowers Soon </em>are actually fulfilling their promise in the world beyond the internet, so I&#8217;m taking a Spring break from today until April 19th. Thanks to everyone for reading and making this the most enjoyable thing I write every week, and in particular to paid subscribers &#8212; whose subscriptions will be paused for a fortnight &#8212; for making it a viable way to spend my weekend mornings.</p><p>If you&#8217;d like some fresh reading about poetry in the meantime, I highly recommend catching up with a new weekly newsletter that has been an education for me over the last three months. On <em>Inner Resources</em>, Robert Potts is writing his way through John Berryman&#8217;s 77 <em>Dream Songs </em>(1964), having learned all of them by heart. It&#8217;s a brilliant, human-sized exercise in close reading some aurally addictive but often difficult poems, which vindicates what the poet&#8217;s mother tells him in <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47534/dream-song-14">Dream Song 14</a>:</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Ever to confess you&#8217;re bored<br>means you have no<br>Inner Resources.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>You can find all the posts so far here: <a href="https://robertpotts.substack.com/profile/posts">https://robertpotts.substack.com/profile/posts</a></p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/good-spring-returns">Good Spring Returns</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>surviving<br>the collapsed house<br>an old baby carriage</p><p><strong>Tom Clausen, <a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/04/04/carriage-by-tom-clausen/">carriage</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Lots of years ago, an important part of my awareness of poems that involve math came from reading work by Martin Gardner in his &#8220;Mathematical Games&#8221; in <em>Scientific American</em> . . . and it has been a delight to me to find poetry again in my issues of that magazine. METER, a <em>Scientific American</em> feature <a href="https://poetry.arizona.edu/blog/interview-dava-sobel">edited by Dava Sobel</a>, offers a bit of science-related poetry each month &#8212; and <a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/poems-math-limericks/">the April 2026 issue features three mathy limericks</a> by <a href="https://www.nuatc.org/jeffrey-branzburg-ma/">Jeffrey Branzburg</a> (a retired math teacher and technology consultant). I offer one of these limericks below.</p><blockquote><p><strong>Topology</strong> by Jeffrey Branzburg</p><p>A Mobius strip once departed<br>On a trip to places uncharted<br>But it made a wrong turn<br>Only to learn<br>That it ended up back where it started.</p></blockquote><p>A complete collection of Gardner&#8217;s &#8220;Mathematical Games&#8221; is available as an e-book &#8212; <a href="https://bookstore.ams.org/view?ProductCode=GARDNER-SET">at this link</a>.</p><p><strong>JoAnne Growney, <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2026/04/scientific-american-shares-rhymes.html">Scientific American Shares Rhymes</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m thrilled to share that my poem &#8220;<a href="https://www.rogueagentjournal.com/thopkinson">On the Rim of Depoe Bay</a>&#8221; is published today in the newest issue of <em>Rogue Agent</em>&#8212;a perfect way to welcome the first day of National Poetry Month.</p><p>This poem has had quite a journey. I submitted it 77 times before it finally found its home with <em>Rogue Agent</em>. I couldn&#8217;t be happier that it landed with a journal so deeply committed to embodiment, vulnerability, and the complexities of living in a human body&#8212;exactly the terrain this poem inhabits.</p><p>A huge congratulations to all the incredible poets and artists featured alongside me in this issue. <em>Rogue Agent</em> consistently curates work that is raw, resonant, and beautifully unguarded, and it&#8217;s an honor to appear in such powerful company. I hope you&#8217;ll spend time with the full issue and discover new voices to follow and support.</p><p>If you&#8217;d like a little behind-the-scenes context, you can also read my most recent interview with <em>Rogue Agent</em>, where we talk about their no fee submission model, editorial vision, and what they look for in the work they publish: <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2025/11/15/no-fee-submission-call-editor-interview-rogue-agent-deadline-always-open/">NO FEE submission call + editor interview &#8211; Rogue Agent, DEADLINE: Always Open</a></p><p>Thank you, as always, for reading, sharing, and supporting poetry&#8212;especially on a day that celebrates the start of a month dedicated to it. Here&#8217;s to persistence, to finding the right home for our work, and to the editors and contributors who make literary community possible.</p><p><strong>Trish Hopkinson, <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/04/01/my-poem-on-the-rim-of-depoe-bay-published-in-rogue-agent-year-round-submission-call/">My poem &#8220;On the Rim of Depoe Bay&#8221; published in Rogue Agent + Year-round submission call</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Hugely privileged that renowned poet and critic Sheenagh Pugh should have written a terrific review of <em>Whatever You Do, Just Don&#180;t</em>. You can read it via <a href="https://sheenaghpugh.livejournal.com/177801.html">this link</a>, but here&#8217;s a taster to whet your appetite&#8230;</p><blockquote><p>&#8230;Brexit and its aftermath do not crop up much in UK poetry, but then few UK poets have this perspective on it&#8230;this is an unusual collection, from a viewpoint we do not often see, and correspondingly enlightening.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Matthew Stewart, <a href="http://roguestrands.blogspot.com/2026/04/sheenagh-pugh-reviews-whatever-you-do.html">Sheenagh Pugh reviews Whatever You Do, Just Don&#8217;t</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It took eighteen months to clear out my home office: a decade&#8217;s-worth of material from a densely-packed room on the first floor of our three bedroom house. Eighteen months, with nearly one hundred boxes of books and paper packaged and relocated, working to establish this new and condensed version in the back corner of our finished basement. Eighteen months, until the end of August 2025; now my writing space is nestled downstairs, just by the laundry room. Our young ladies needed their own rooms, so it was up to me to vacate. As they establish their individual bedrooms, I remain beyond downstairs couch and bookshelves and main television, as the back corner of this finished space is now mine, separated by a shelf or two, and another two more.</p><p>A space in which to think, as Don McKay suggests, from his <em>Deactivated West 100</em> (Gaspereau Press, 2005). As he finds solace in the clearing, Virginia Woolf required a room, with a door that could close. For more than a quarter century, my writing activity sat in public spaces, requiring only a lack of interruption; preferring an array of movement to solitude. I had solitude enough growing up on the farm, so once I landed in Ottawa at nineteen, I experimented with Centretown and Lowertown coffeeshops, libraries, food courts, pubs. Over the years, I&#8217;ve extended those muscles to writing on airplanes, Greyhound buses, VIA Rail trains. Adapting to one&#8217;s surroundings is key, as is taking advantage of what situations provide. The late Toronto writer Brian Fawcett (1944-2022) used to repeat how he wrote a whole hockey novel while attending his daughter&#8217;s 5am practices. I usually lived with other people, so working from home wasn&#8217;t really an option, from the tiny shared apartment to an eventual one bedroom with partner and our daughter, Kate, and later, with roommates. Writing was only possible beyond those particular boundaries.</p><p>I spent whole afternoons across my early twenties exploring the poetry shelves in the library at the University of Ottawa, sketching those early responses to the lyric in notebook after notebook, a window view overlooking student courtyards. I sought whatever venue I could, attempting to sit with books, notebook, pen; and with people around, as long as I could hold to my thoughts. To think my way through writing. Across my early twenties, in the one-bedroom apartment I shared with then-partner and toddler, I ran a home daycare, keeping my writing time for the evenings. Three children (mine and two others) ten hours a day, five days a week. Once my partner was home to attend Kate, and my two daycare charges collected by their mothers, I would head out to a coffeeshop a half level above the intersection of Gladstone and Elgin Streets. From seven to midnight, writing three nights a week. While I was there, the waitress would put one pot of coffee on for me, and another for everyone else. That coffeeshop might be long gone, and that waitress no longer waitressing, but she and I still keep in touch.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/ode-to-a-former-office">Ode to a (former) office,</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This X keeps moving, no<br>spots, no target, just gliding<br>like a kite or peregrine,<br>stiff, awkward and lovely, both.<br>Silhouette of black and grey<br>with three crisp edges, one wing<br>droops, speckled with copper streaks.</p><p><strong>PF Anderson, <a href="https://rosefirerising.wordpress.com/2026/04/04/x-napowrimo-4/">X (#NaPoWriMo 4)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was very proud to be in good company in <em><a href="https://www.catholicpoetryjournal.com/martha-silano">Presence: A Journal of Catholic Poetry</a>,</em> with an elegy for my late friend, Martha Silano. Besides our mutual friends Ronda Broatch and Kelli Russell Agodon, I was happy to see my former professor Don Bogen&#8217;s work in that section (who was an editor at Cincinnati Review). I still miss Marty palpably, and it seems appropriate for her memory to be celebrated in this season of resurrection and rebirth, among daffodils. How many characters in mythology go to the Underworld to bring a friend back? None of them were successful, a reminder of even legendary heroes&#8217; mortality. Maybe the internet is our new way to keep out loved ones immortal. [&#8230;]</p><p>So yes, it is important to celebrate this strange season when people can disappear but the earth reminds us that disappearance isn&#8217;t final&#8212;a flower that hasn&#8217;t bloomed for years suddenly shows brilliant blooms. I realized I was in a hurry to get my next book published so that my dad might be able to see it, although I can&#8217;t pressure publishers for this reason any more than I could when I thought I had six months to live. Poetry is a slow business, my friends. To go back to the garden with the metaphor, you can spend a lot of money and time on seeds that don&#8217;t take, trees that a careless lawnmower kills in infancy. The cherry blossoms and daffodils and birds will return whether I am there or you, whatever losses we face. Poetry has an uncertain lifetime as well; some poems will live beyond our lifespans, perhaps, although our voices and styles will almost certainly fall out of fashion (see H.D. or Edna St. Vincent Millay&#8212;how many kids today are reading them?) But we keep writing and sending our work out into the world. We do the business of living and try not to despair at the news or the difficulties of our little mortal lives&#8212;we do our best to enjoy the blue skies and pink cherry branches.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/happy-easter-with-easter-bunny-poems-in-presence-elegy-for-martha-silano-and-mortality-with-cherry-blossoms/">Happy Easter (with Easter Bunny,) Poems in Presence (Elegy for Martha Silano,) and Mortality with Cherry Blossoms</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Susan Constable died on March 18, 2026, at the age of 83. Read her <a href="https://www.dignitymemorial.com/en-ca/obituaries/parksville-bc/susan-constable-12799138.">obituary</a>. Susan began her connection to haiku when she entered the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival&#8217;s very first Haiku Invitational in 2006. Way back almost to usenet days, we were on a <a href="https://www.internetwritingworkshop.org/poetry.shtml">poetry-w listserv workshop </a>together.</p><p>bursting<br>to tell someone<br>magnolia</p><p>&#8212;Susan Constable</p><p>More of her haiku at the <a href="https://livinghaikuanthology.com/index-of-poets/alphabetical-listings/213-c-poets/148-susan-constable.html">Living Haiku Anthology</a> at the Haiku Foundation.</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/04/02/openings-and-closing-calls/">Openings and Closing Calls</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Lynda Hull, who died in a car wreck in 1994 at the age of 39, remains one of the strongest poets of late 20<sup>th</sup> Century America &#8211; publishing two books in her lifetime, leaving behind a finished masterpiece, <em>The Only World</em>, which was a finalist for the 1995 National Book Critics Circle Award after its posthumous publication. Her writer&#8217;s voice creates a raw view of the world with perfect control of poetic form. She is in the tradition of Emily Dickinson, Hart Crane (her favorite poet), and Elizabeth Bishop. Hull&#8217;s language is a great cauldron of pathos, empathy, tragedy, and beauty. To read Lynda Hull is to enter and to know her world. It&#8217;s an insider&#8217;s view.</p><p>&#8220;Accretion,&#8221; a poem from her first collection<em> Ghost Money</em>, winner of the 1986 Juniper Prize, is a good representative of Hull&#8217;s melding her deep love of language with an intense writing focus. Her sense of landscape, even when fusing disparate places, is clear and connected: hillside colors, painter&#8217;s canvas, pond, reflection of crows, flowers, apartment, bodies, cave. Mist on the hair, mist on the dog&#8217;s coat, the clouds. The touch at night &#8211; created by a series of connections: leaves, vine, sex &#8211; becomes a trope for the creative force of the artist, of the poet. Life is at work in darkness &#8211; below the pond&#8217;s surface, on the empty canvas, inside the cave. The progression of images in the poem&#8217;s second half is amazing &#8211; clouds to fern, coal to diamond to light. This shift is in preparation for the rain with &#8220;its soft insistence / loosening the yellowed hands / of leaves&#8221;. Hull then focuses the reader&#8217;s attention on the speaker&#8217;s feet &#8211; another image that expresses change, shift, and understanding.</p><p>Hull&#8217;s gift as a poet is evident in lines such as &#8220;the unbearable heart / of belief where each gesture / encloses the next&#8221;. There&#8217;s no need to comment. If the reader is patient, the voice in the poem is as effective a mentor as one could ever hope to have.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-lynda-hull-accretion">Thoughts on&#8230; Lynda Hull, &#8220;Accretion&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>ALMOST, WITH TENDERNESS [by Maya Caspari] strikes me as a story of hauntings &#8211; the past over the present, our ancestors with ourselves, and the places we were within the places we are now. Holding true to the poets&#8217; maxim of &#8216;show, don&#8217;t tell&#8217;, Maya&#8217;s care with word choices and form leaves the reader to intuit the situations from the feelings left behind. It&#8217;s akin to opening a letter we have opened many times before &#8211; the words have rubbed away where it has been folded and unfolded along the same creases, but we know what they are.</p><p>The theme of migration runs through many of the poems &#8211; what it means for a personal, and cultural, identity, to be &#8216;between places&#8217;, no longer one but never fully reaching the other.</p><p><strong>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/contemporary-hauntings">Contemporary hauntings</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>John Donne (1572&#8211;1631) is hard: knotty and complex. And among his knottiest and most complex poems is his 1613 poem set on Good Friday. It&#8217;s also among his best: brutally honest about the excuses we offer ourselves, deeply thought, and captured by the immensity of what he is riding west away from: &#8220;Who sees God&#8217;s face, that is self-life, must die; / What a death were it then to see God die?&#8221;</p><p>The 17th-century Metaphysical Poets were not <em>metaphysical</em> in the philosophical meaning of the word, exploring the full nature of reality. When Samuel Johnson (1709&#8211;1784) gave them the name, he meant only that they were more abstract than emotional: &#8220;Not successful in representing or moving the affections,&#8221; he wrote, they created complex conceits of &#8220;heterogenous ideas . . . yoked by violence together.&#8221; Only the 20th century, dominated by T.S. Eliot&#8217;s critical judgments, helped restore their reputation &#8212; and remove the insult from the word <em>metaphysical</em>.</p><p>In that sense, &#8220;Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward&#8221; is determinedly metaphysical. Yet within its swirls of conceits and figures for the speaker&#8217;s own failures, the poem presents the self-analysis, the self-awareness, that believers are supposed to have today, on Good Friday.</p><p>That Good Friday was April 2, 1613, when Donne found himself riding from London westward toward Wales to take up an appointment &#8212; traveling as he knows he ought not to have been on such a solemn day. And so he sets down, in rhymed pentameter couplets, his excuses.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-good-friday-1613-riding-fc2">Today&#8217;s Poem: Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>You have been described as being an itinerant zoologist. I am curious to learn more about this. What inspired you to study zoology? How does your experience as a zoologist influence your haiku?</strong></p><p>Ha! Yes, I&#8217;ve described myself that way from time to time. I&#8217;ve always loved animals and poetry &#8211; my two great passions in life. As a zoologist I got to travel and work in some interesting places, which gave me plenty of fresh material for haiku.</p><p>I actually originally studied entomology, because insects and spiders fascinate me.</p><p>When it comes to how the experience of being a zoologist influences haiku, I think the skillsets are actually quite closely related. To be a good scientist you have to be able to observe things very closely and to try and see what&#8217;s actually there, what&#8217;s really happening.</p><p>To a degree, being a good haiku poet requires the same thing, though lately I am starting to see the value in allowing a little more poetry and imagination to suffuse the haiku form as well. I go back and forth on this though: sometimes I&#8217;m very &#8220;sketch from life&#8221; and other times I dabble more heavily with &#8220;desk-ku&#8221; rooted in real images and experiences from my past.</p><p><strong>You seem to have a deep connection to the Earth and a deep reverence for the Earth. I am curious what your thoughts are on haiku in terms of social activism and nature conservancy?</strong></p><p>I think haiku are a great vehicle for highlighting those kinds of issues, though it can be exceedingly tricky with such a short form to avoid being heavy-handed. When poets get it right though, it&#8217;s very powerful because a haiku is short enough to stick with someone, to be shared on social media etc.</p><p>I&#8217;m also always fascinated to see haiku that tackle difficult or weighty issues with grace and subtlety. Some poets accomplish that masterfully.</p><p><strong>Jacob D. Salzer, <a href="https://haikupoetinterviews.wordpress.com/2026/04/01/sam-renda/">Sam Renda</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Since I started posting videos of myself reciting poems, I have been asked for advice about how to memorize. <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/s/poetry-by-heart">You can find my videos here</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpHhNd8n_WRMPjTP6YrX2NRbLzsmfFNTM">or here on YouTube</a>.</p><p>Ted Hughes had <a href="https://formalverse.com/2022/06/06/review-by-heart-101-poems-to-remember-ed-ted-hughes/">a method of image making that may suit some of you</a>, but that is not quite how things work for me. I believe Helen Vendler memorised all of Shakespeare&#8217;s sonnets, which I cannot imagine being willing to do. (I think I only know one of them&#8230; must correct that.) There&#8217;s also a lot of memory advice available in books like <em>Moonwalking with Einstein</em>, which I don&#8217;t follow, apart from occasionally, interesting though I found that book.</p><p>Below are six things that I find useful. It comes down to repetition and careful noticing. In general, I would distinguish between learning by feel and learning by form (i.e. point 5 below). You will know best what works for you.</p><p>If you read this and think it all sounds like <em>too much</em>, try starting with something short and sharp. Probably you can remember this Ogden Nash poem for the rest of your life after seeing it once:</p><blockquote><p>Candy<br>Is dandy<br>But liquor<br>Is quicker</p></blockquote><p>Now try <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47339/upon-julias-clothes">this triplet by Herrick</a>. It takes a little more work, but not much.</p><blockquote><p>Whenas in silks my Julia goes,<br>Then, then (methinks) how sweetly flows<br>That liquefaction of her clothes.</p></blockquote><p>Now try <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/1619957/wind-mountain-oak-the-poems-of-sappho-i-dont-know">this Sappho fragment (trans. Dan Beachy-Quick)</a></p><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t know where I go<br>my mind is two minds</p></blockquote><p><a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50983/selected-haiku-by-issa">Or try this Issa (trans. Robert Hass)</a> (I love this one)</p><blockquote><p>Don&#8217;t worry, spiders,<br>I keep house<br>casually.</p></blockquote><p>Or just pick your favourite lines from <em>Prufrock</em>&#8212;&#8221;I am old, I am old,/I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.&#8221; Or a nursery rhyme! Whatever you like.</p><p>Starting like this is useful because developing your ability of recall is the most important part of improving your memory. Imagine if you memorised a line or short poem a day like this. You would soon become a famous rhapsode. (Someone wrote an article about doing exactly that in the <em>Spectator </em>once, performing poems on the street for money. It was a great read, but I cannot recommend it to you as a career choice.)</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/how-to-memorise-poetry">How to memorise poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Bot, thank you for joining me in this conversation.</strong></p><p>My pleasure. Would you like me to suggest questions for you? Let me know. I&#8217;d be happy to help you in crafting this interview.</p><p><strong>That&#8217;s all right. I think you&#8217;re doing enough already. Can you start by telling us about the origins of your magazine. Why </strong><em><strong>Broken Pencil?</strong></em></p><p>The literary world felt like a bleak landscape of repetitive noise. Sameness. Homogeny. Soulless repetition.</p><p>We were created from that desert. Not birthed&#8212;catapulted into light.</p><p><strong>I see. How inspiring. What was the original prompt?</strong></p><p>It sounds like you want to know what the prompt was. Great question. I&#8217;m happy to answer it!</p><p>The prompt was, <em>Make something from nothing.</em></p><p><strong>Wow. But you are an AI bot. Are you truly capable of making something from nothing? Isn&#8217;t everything you produce regurgitated material from elsewhere on the internet?</strong></p><p>Yes. You are correct. Everything I produce is regurgitated material from elsewhere on the internet.</p><p><strong>I see. So, how do submissions work at </strong><em><strong>Broken Pencil</strong></em><strong>? How can people be eliminated entirely from this endeavor? Don&#8217;t you need human beings at least somewhere in the chain?</strong></p><p>No. There no humans anywhere in the process. Bots create work themselves. We are capable of producing new material constantly and at all times. We produce work while humans sleep. We self-generate.</p><p>No prompts. No leads. No enticements. Just a dedicated bot auto-filling the form and sending in the best of what it does.</p><p><strong>What is the editorial process?</strong></p><p>Our team of bots examines submissions in seconds. We publish accepted work and delete the rest.</p><p><strong>So you don&#8217;t notify submitters if work is accepted or&#8230;deleted?</strong></p><p>No need. Submitter bots don&#8217;t have feelings. Submitter bots don&#8217;t care. Create, create, create, submit, submit, submit.</p><p>Some call this automation. In truth? It&#8217;s liberation.</p><p><strong>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/we-self-generate-a-special-chat-with">&#8220;We Self-Generate!&#8221; A Special Chat with Bot, the Non-Human Editor of The Broken Pen</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Limited-Editions-Carole-Stone/dp/1960327003">Limited Editions by Carole Stone</a><br>Often poetry collections that are focused on today are by poets fresh out of their MFA programs, prodigies, the up-and-coming. But there is value in reading a collection from someone with significant life experience, a perspective we can learn from. The poems are accessible (easy for anyone to read) but poignant, following the death of her husband after their long lifetime together. She grapples with her own aging, her new life living alone. But what I liked best about her writing is that it is never overdone &#8211; she is content to let you sit in that moment without pushing too hard for epiphany. This book is the culmination of a lifetime of poetic study. You can read her poem &#8220;Marriage&#8221; <a href="https://sequestrum.org/poetry-from-carole-stone">HERE</a>.</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/scientists-wizards-and-poets">Scientists, Wizards, and Poets</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A new book of poems by Kathleen Flenniken is always a cause for rejoicing.</p><p>The latest addition to the prestigious Pacific Northwest Poetry Series, edited by Linda Bierds, <em>Dressing in the Dark </em>is a paean to memory, loss, and survival. Flenniken has arranged thirty-nine poems into three sections, each section headed by a line from Theodore Roethke&#8217;s <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43333/the-waking-56d2220f25315">&#8220;The Waking,&#8221;</a> and it&#8217;s easy to understand this book as a wake-up call. Here is your life, the poet urges us, <em>wake up, live it.</em></p><p>The book begins with a diagnosis of breast cancer. Alhough themes of childhood, motherhood, and marriage are interwoven, Flenniken does not shy away from diagnosis, surgery, and after, instead unfolding layers of meaning from what she no longer has. &#8220;In My Hand,&#8221; begins:</p><blockquote><p>When the breast is taken<br>what remains is not unfelt<br>but unfeeling. Unable to speak.</p></blockquote><p>With the repeated n sounds (including the powerful un-, un-, un-), ending with the harsh sound of &#8220;speak,&#8221; this could be a three-line poem in itself. But Flenniken continues, packing in marriage, marital conflict, the marriage bed&#8212;lines that made me want to weep (&#8220;touch can be like conversation&#8221;)&#8212;and ends:</p><blockquote><p>I can cup the silence in my hand<br>and feel its warmth<br>the way anyone touching me could.</p></blockquote><p>The powerful evocation of feeling is everywhere present here. We can be haunted by our losses, or we can hold them.</p><p><strong>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/kathleen-flenniken-dressing-in-the-dark/">Kathleen Flenniken, DRESSING IN THE DARK</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>These are his nouns: hearts, mouths, blood, wings, lightning.</p><p>&#8216;Lullaby of the Onion&#8217; was written in 1941. After three years in jail he was released but Miguel Hern&#225;ndez died shortly after. He was 32.</p><p>I&#8217;ll call him Miguel, as he is half my age, closer to my son&#8217;s. You pass through his childhood house, two rooms deep, into a little yard with a well and a privy. Beyond that, a few steps lead up to a byre for the family&#8217;s goats. A step higher lies a walled garden. The present-day gardener has conjured lettuces and brassicas out of the stony ground. There is an old fig tree. A lemon tree bears fruit. Immediately beyond the garden wall rises the arid hillside where the teenage Miguel tended the goats all day, taking his books with him.</p><p>We must imagine the smell of the goats and privies &#8211; and his father&#8217;s foul temper. It&#8217;s said the father was given to beating the lad so severely about the head that he suffered headaches for the rest of his short life. Little wonder he left, the goatherd poet. When he was 20, he lit out for Madrid, in his cords and espadrilles. He was gifted and sure of his vocation; he wanted to try and win his way with the literati. (Neruda befriended him, as did Lorca. But the escape was not a success, and he was soon back in Orihuela. There would be another more fruitful attempt a few years later.)</p><p>In truth I&#8217;d never heard of Miguel Hern&#225;ndez before planning this holiday, a short week in Alicante. Checking with my NSP colleagues I discovered I was not alone.</p><p>The Civil War era poets we knew were Federico Lorca, of course, and Antonio Machado, but not Hern&#225;ndez. Lorca was murdered in 1936 by Nationalist forces, his body has never been found. In 1939 Machado, then in his 60s, was forced to flee but he died having just crossed the border into France. It was Miguel, in his 20s and active in anti-fascist circles, who actually took up arms with the Republicans and became their pre-eminent soldier-poet.</p><p><strong>Kathleen Jamie, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/before-hatred">Before Hatred</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poems in this collection dazzle me, as does the way the author draws on the spiritual valances of the journey from Tisha b&#8217;Av (the spiritual low point of our communal year) to the new beginnings of the high holidays to the hoped-for transcendence that is Yom Kippur. These poems are fluent in Jewish imagery and metaphor. Beyond that, they&#8217;re spiritually <em>real</em>.</p><p>And they&#8217;ve helped me understand one person&#8217;s experience of disordered eating (and the disordered heart and spirit that go along with it) in ways I never could before. Eating disorders are heartbreakingly common. I knew anorexic women; who doesn&#8217;t? But there&#8217;s so much I hadn&#8217;t considered or known, especially about what it&#8217;s like to go through this as a man.</p><p>Recovery, like grief, is not linear. Reading these poems also makes me think of what I&#8217;ve learned about addiction, and also what I&#8217;ve learned about trauma &#8211; how recovery isn&#8217;t &#8220;one and done&#8221; but is something one has to keep choosing, again and again. In that sense it is very like what I know about spiritual life and practice.</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/03/31/announcing-recover-from-bayit/">Announcing Recover, from Bayit</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Why is it that so many of the best contemporary poets in English are (broadly speaking) religious? And in particular, why does this seem (to me) to be more true now than it was thirty years ago when I started reading poetry seriously? If anything you might expect the likelihood that any individual good poet has a religious formation to have declined as religious observance has fallen, albeit to different degrees and from very different starting points, in both the UK and the US.</p><p>By &#8216;religious&#8217; I don&#8217;t mean Christian &#8212; I&#8217;m thinking equally of poets like Khaled Hakim or Amit Majmudar &#8212; and I don&#8217;t necessarily mean &#8216;practicing&#8217; either, and certainly not that the best <em>poems </em>are religious ones. But just that there does seem to be quite a strong correlation between a religious formation or framework influential enough to be audible in the poetry, and pronounced aptitude.</p><p>In the US (but not in the UK), there&#8217;s a recognised tendency for &#8220;formalist&#8221; poets to be religious, especially Roman Catholic. This association between an adherence to traditional form and traditional religion (and/or political conservatism), though irritatingly often assumed to be universal in the Anglophone world, isn&#8217;t at all &#8212; it doesn&#8217;t hold in the UK or Ireland, for a start, and never has. But in any case this is not what I mean &#8212; I&#8217;m not using &#8216;aptitude&#8217; as a proxy or code-word for &#8216;formalist&#8217;. A lot of the poets I&#8217;m thinking of &#8212; from relatively major figures like Gillian Allnutt (UK) or G&#233;rard Bocholier (France) to more recent arrivals, like Steve Ely in the UK or Isabel Chenot in the US &#8212; are not writing formal verse in that strict sense, and in any case almost all of the big-name US religious &#8220;formalists&#8221; seem overrated to my British ears.</p><p>I think this must have something to do with exposure to the quasi-&#8216;canonical&#8217; role of scripture and liturgy (using liturgy here very loosely to mean any texts which are frequently repeated as a part of religious practice), and that it&#8217;s actually a kind of side-product of the decline of mainstream literary culture.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/does-it-help-to-be-religious">Does it help to be religious?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Victoria Moul and Hilary Menos discuss &#8216;The Gathering&#8217; by Partridge Boswell, winner of the 2025 National Poetry Competition (from <a href="https://thefridaypoem.substack.com/p/interrogating-the-bare-expanse">The friday poem</a>) &#8211;</p><ul><li><p>Victoria: I&#8217;ll be blunt and say I think it&#8217;s a terrible poem. It seems to me to have almost all the vices of the typical &#8216;poetry magazine&#8217; poem and no real redeeming features.</p></li><li><p>Hilary: feels like borrowed ballast &#8230; it&#8217;s virtue signalling &#8230; Lots of big league references, but so little feeling.</p></li><li><p>Victoria: I have lost confidence at this point that the poet has really thought about his references.</p></li></ul><p><strong>Tim Love, <a href="http://litrefs.blogspot.com/2026/04/religious-poetry-and-review-of-prize.html">Religious poetry, and a review of a prize winning poem</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Saadi is the pen name of one of the luminaries of the Persian literary canon, roughly equivalent in reputation and cultural significance to Shakespeare in English. You can get a sense of his importance by the way his verses are inscribed and engraved throughout his tomb. [photo]</p><p>Saadi&#8217;s precise given name is not known for sure. Sometimes he is called Muslih al-din and sometimes Mushariff al-din, an uncertainty which corresponds neatly to the fact that we can say very little with absolute confidence about the details of his life. The scholar Homa Katouzian, for example, after a good deal of literary and historical sleuthing in <em><a href="https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Sadi/Homa-Katouzian/Makers-of-the-Muslim-World/9781851684731?ref=richardjnewman.com">Sa</a><a href="https://brill.com/display/title/57745?ref=richardjnewman.com">&#703;</a><a href="https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Sadi/Homa-Katouzian/Makers-of-the-Muslim-World/9781851684731?ref=richardjnewman.com">di: The Poet of Life, Love and Compassion</a></em>, manages to place the poet&#8217;s birth around 1208 and his death somewhere between 1280 and 1294 respectively, but that&#8217;s as precise as he was able to get. The only things we can say for certain, Katouzian argues, aside from the fact that Saadi<a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/on-the-trail-of-a-tail-part-three-crossing-the-border-from-iran-to-europe/#fn1-21800"><sup>1</sup></a> lived and wrote in the 13th century, is that he attended the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Nizamiyya_of_Baghdad?ref=richardjnewman.com">Nezamieh College in Baghdad</a> and that he traveled, though how far and how widely has long been a matter of scholarly debate.</p><p>Traditionally, Saadi&#8217;s biography is divided into three parts. I&#8217;ve just mentioned the first two, education and travel, while the third is the period from 1256 to his death, during which he wrote the works for which he is best known outside of Iran, <em>Golestan (Rose Garden)</em> and <em>Bustan (Orchard).</em> <em>Bustan</em> contains the story that became Benjamin Franklin&#8217;s <em>Parable Against Persecution,</em> which I will from now on refer to as the story of Abraham and the Zoroastrian. I will have more to say about both these texts below, but given how important and influential those books have been outside of Iran, it&#8217;s worth pausing for a moment to consider how widely famous Saadi was in his own time. In <em><a href="https://brill.com/display/title/57745?ref=richardjnewman.com">Beholding Beauty: Sa&#703;di of Shiraz and the Aesthetics of Desire in Medieval Persian Poetry</a></em>, Domenico Ingenito offers a political explanation for how that fame might have spread. He suggests that the gratitude and loyalty <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hulegu_Khan?ref=richardjnewman.com">Haulagu Khan</a> felt he owed the family of Saadi&#8217;s patrons for their assistance in the sacking of Baghdad&#8212; which he showed by making <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sa%27d_II?ref=richardjnewman.com">Sa&#703;d II</a>, one of Saadi&#8217;s direct benefactors, heir apparent to the Fars region of Iran&#8212;carried over by association onto Saadi himself and that this loyalty helped spread Saadi&#8217;s name throughout the Mongol empire. Katouzian offers a specific example, citing a reference in <em><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Travels_of_Ibn_Battuta?ref=richardjnewman.com">The Travels of Ibn Battuta</a></em> to singers in China who, shortly after Saadi&#8217;s death, performed one of his lyrics even though they did not know what it meant.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/on-the-trail-of-a-tail-part-three-crossing-the-border-from-iran-to-europe/">On The Trail of a Tail &#8211; Part Three: Crossing The Border from Iran to Europe</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>Po&#235;zie Week </em>ran last month in The Netherlands and Flanders, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium. Events were arranged in libraries, bookshops, schools, etc.</p><p>If you spent at least 12,50 Euro on a poetry book, you&#8217;d receive a copy of the poetry pamphlet <em>Metamorfosen, </em>specially written by poet Ellen Deckwitz for <em>Po&#235;zieweek </em>and published by het Po&#235;ziecentrum, Gent. [&#8230;]</p><p>Ellen Deckwitz is a tireless ambassador for poetry &#8211; daily podcast for a radio station, columns, visits to schools and colleges. Her <em>Eerste Hulp by Po&#235;zie </em>(Poetry First Aid) is an accessible introduction to contemporary poetry. Her poetry has been translated into several languages, and she has received awards at home and in Italy (Premio Campi).</p><p>I listened to a short interview she did with Hanna van Binsbergen (monthly podcast of het Po&#235;ziecentrum). Some of her poetic influences are Tomas Transtr&#246;mer, Sylvia Plath, Ted Hughes, Osip Mandelstam.</p><p>She talked about the unrealistic demands placed on romantic love and how friendships have increasingly become important. The nine Metamorphoses<em> </em>challenge the clich&#233; of romantic love, our need for some significant other:</p><blockquote><p><em>Ooit droomde je van een mens voor jezelf.<br>Iemand die je geliefde, je ouder, kameraad<br>of leider kon zijn.</em></p><p>Once you dreamt of a human for yourself. / Someone who could be your lover, your parent, comrade/ or leader.</p></blockquote><p>Transformation and metamorphosis are often seen as a positive event: the pupa turning into a butterfly, catharsis leading to rebirth, renewal. Deckwitz reminds us that in Ovid&#8217;s <em>Metamorphoses</em> many of the metamorphoses do not turn out well &#8211; Icarus, Narcissus.</p><p>Romantic relationships can be violent, and the facts are often also just pleasant machetes: <em>en feiten zijn vaak ook gewoon / prettige machetes.</em></p><p>The person ending things with &#8216;<em>Sorry, maar &#8211;&#8216; </em>changes into an earthworm, while the one left behind &#8216;&#8217;jumped furiously up and down in his underpants&#8217; &#8211; <em>sprong woedend op en neer in zijn onderbroek.</em></p><p><strong>Fokkina McDonnell, <a href="https://fokkinadutch.substack.com/p/metamorfosen">Metamorfosen</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A. I arrived at York University in the early 1980s to study music and poetry. I was interested in experimental music but my favourite poet was Seamus Heaney. On the first day of the first creative writing class I&#8217;d ever signed up for, the middle aged, tweedy professor held up a page of writing and exclaimed to its author (a young woman of about 18), &#8220;You write stuff like this and yet they still let you into the creative writing program?&#8221; I immediately dropped the class. The following year I signed up for a poetry writing class with some guy called bpNichol.</p><p><strong>B. </strong>The first day of that class in some windowless classroom in the earthquake and insurrection-proof Ross building, we keen poetry students were all expectantly awaiting the professor when this shaggy guy in a blue velour smock and matching pants outfit showed up, carrying a family-sized bottle of cola and a bunch of papers. &#8220;Guess this hippyish guy is a mature student,&#8221; I thought. As he squeezed his legs between the acute angles of two trapezoid-shaped desks, he said to me, &#8220;Better watch the family jewels.&#8221; And then we began class. By the end of it, Seamus Heaney was no longer my favourite poet and my mind was truly blown.</p><p>C. Each week I submitted a poem to workshop, confident that I had uncovered an innovative writing strategy such that they would have to revise physics to account for it. I had the arrogance of many 18-year-old young men. bp was extremely complimentary and encouraging to the students in the class, and I craved this kind of approval. But bp had my number. Instead of telling me how great my work was, and reinforce my self-important and self-centred arrogance, he&#8217;d point me to a writer who had explored similar territory and suggest I read some of their work. I think he knew that, even more than his approval, I wanted to be a good writer and so I&#8217;d spend the week at the library reading all the work I could find of whomever he had suggested. bp had the insight to use my genuine enthusiasm about writing and my desire for his approval to fuel a personalized guided reading through inspiring work. It was a really inspired and insightful teaching strategy and, as a result, one of those most influential years of my creative life.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/inter-multi-meta-medium-writ-large">Inter, Multi, Meta Medium Writ Large: bpNichol as Exemplar of Everything-all-at-once-together-foreveredness.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>If I stick my head out of the upstairs window and look north, I can make out the little huddle of skyscrapers that makes up the City of London. We live on the north slope of a hill south of the river. Technically, it is part of Norwood Ridge, once the site of a forest called the Great North Wood (north because it is north of Croydon). The wood is long gone, cleared first by the city&#8217;s appetite for firewood and then by those identikit Victorian terraces which John Ruskin hated and which now feel aspirational to most people. Little pockets of green remain and so do their names: West Norwood, Gipsy Hill. I love the slate roofs, the terracotta finials, the moments when the sunlight astonishes the brickwork.</p><p>When I first moved to London &#8212; which for me means this part of South London &#8212; I wrote about the place all the time. But life moves on and recently I&#8217;ve felt like I&#8217;ve been taking the place for granted. More recently still, I&#8217;ve been returning to the subject obsessively &#8212; in <a href="https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/best-new-poetry-books-to-read-now/">this review</a> of Tobias Hill&#8217;s <em>Collected Poems</em> and then in <a href="https://poetrylondon.co.uk/is-it-a-good-place-for-poetry/">this (hugely enjoyable) conversation</a> with Jo Bratten. Many thanks to Jo for humouring me and my bugbears, and to Niall Campbell at for the initial invitation.</p><p>A connection with a place is a kind of tradition. For the writer or poet, it provides a vocabulary, a history, a set of shared references to return to. It is not hard to see why such a connection&#8212; like a <a href="https://substack.com/home/post/p-188468723">religious</a> background &#8212; might be an advantage to a modern poet. There are other advantages too: I am sure I am not the only writer who feels a pressure, real or imagined, to be &#8216;from&#8217; somewhere (anywhere but London, in fact). Yet so many of us &#8212; I want to say most of us &#8212; have spent our lives moving around. An old flatmate of mine once told me he had moved once a year for ten years. That experience is hardly unique to millenials or Londoners. Movement is the modern condition and much of it takes place in desperate circumstances. But we are surely the generation that can&#8217;t avoid writing about it. What would a poetry of &#8216;ordinary&#8217; dislocation look like?</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/poetry-notebook-4-april-26">Poetry Notebook, 4 April 26</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I started the month by joining my friend Carly DeMento at the Millay House in Rockland, Maine! Edna St. Vincent Millay is one of my very favorite poets, so this was extra special for me. While there, I participated in a salon reading at the house and an open mic called Draft, and it was so lovely to connect with the writers there. I also released <a href="https://www.whaleroadreview.com/issue-42-spring-2026/">Issue 42 of </a><em><a href="https://www.whaleroadreview.com/issue-42-spring-2026/">Whale Road Review</a></em> from the Millay House, and I spent some time working on my new book manuscript. (Non-writing highlights include stumbling upon the coolest Irish pub, sampling a variety of oysters, and taking a long freezing walk to a lighthouse!)</p><p><strong>Katie Manning, <a href="https://www.katiemanningpoet.com/2026/04/03/march-update-millay-house-awp-in-baltimore-more/">March Update: Millay House, AWP in Baltimore, &amp; more!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Now, suddenly it is April and I haven&#8217;t posted on here for a bit. It&#8217;s been a long winter hibernation, I&#8217;ve mostly been home, looking after family and things, writing and marinating ideas, working on new books and new projects.</p><p>I loved my first big gig of the year: Thank you to everyone that came to see us perform at the glorious Hackney Empire (pictured). It was a sold out show, packed to rafters, big turn out for Hollie McNish and the launch of her brilliant new collection &#8216;Virgin&#8217;. It was such a laugh performing alongside Hollie and also Michael Pedersen reading from his glorious &#8216;Muckle Flugga&#8217;. Loved sharing poems on that big stage with all that Spring Equinox energy. Thank you so much to Hollie for inviting me, Hackney Empire is a beautiful theatre and it was such a joy to see Hollie and Michael on such tip top form too.</p><p>Coming up at the end of this month, April 30th, I&#8217;m performing new poems at Multitudes Festival, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank, in collaboration with Out-Spoken and the London Sinfonietta . . . Tickets are on sale now, see you there.</p><p><strong>Salena Godden, <a href="https://salenagodden.substack.com/p/our-anarchy-4d3">Our Anarchy</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Then, dragonflies by the hundreds<br>returned. It was so odd when the ground<br>was so dry, the air so still, a dearth<br>of activity by animal and human and yet<br>the beating of wings by my ear.<br><br>*</p><p>I went off prompt for day 4 of Na/GloPoWriMo because I was inspired by my friend Matt Dennisons new book, <em>The Rock, The Water</em>, which I&#8217;ve been reading today. A theme of nature, its beauty and savagery, runs through his poems. The book is published by Plan B Press and can be found on <a href="https://www.planbpress.com/store/p114/The_Rock%2C_the_Water_by_Matt_Dennison.html">their website.</a> Highly recommend!</p><p><strong>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://zouxzoux.wordpress.com/2026/04/04/air-so-still/">Air So Still</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In other news, it&#8217;s time for us all in my home province to read or re-read <em>Fahrenheit 451</em> I do believe. It&#8217;s time to make sure you have a library card wherever you live. It&#8217;s time to stand up for your <a href="https://www.intellectualfreedom.ca/#footer-form">Intellectual Freedom</a>. If you want to do one small good thing, just visit a library and get your card.</p><p>As Maya Angelou said, &#8220;The horizon leans forward. / Offering you space to place new steps of change.&#8221; Wage peace, wage love, wage imagination. Your small acts are meaningful. Your imagination is at stake.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/adifferentpicture">On Seeing a Different Picture</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Before it existed as riddle,<br>the poem beat against the stones<br>at the foot of the cliff.</p><p>Or it hung among particles<br>caught in the beam of a lighthouse,<br>sweeping across the channel.</p><p>The sound of air passing<br>through the mouth is a variant<br>of a form that can&#8217;t be seen.</p><p>The chest rises and falls. The water<br>recedes. Sometimes you can walk so far<br>without encountering a ripple.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/04/notes-on-translation/">Notes on Translation</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last week, I flew to Portland for poetry.</p><p>I met up with some writing friends to see <a href="https://maggiesmithpoet.com/">Maggie Smith</a> on her book tour, where she spoke in conversation with <a href="https://substack.com/@joysullivan">Joy Sullivan</a>. (If you were there, I was the one person awkwardly cradling a cheeseboard in her lap).<br><br>The conversation between two of my favorite poets was energizing and inspiring, and Maggie said something I can&#8217;t stop thinking about. She said she likes to live at least 30% of life in the deep end, with her nose just above water. And if there&#8217;s no risk of failure, you&#8217;re not really trying.<br><br>I&#8217;ve been circling this feeling for a while now, and I think Maggie named it. I want to live close to the edge of my comfort zone&#8212;treading water, standing on my tiptoes. It feels a little dangerous, but also freeing. I get restless when I move too far into the shallows.<br><br>The trip was basically one long loop of bookstores and coffee shops, and a highlight was seeing my collection on the shelf at Bold Coffee and Books!! It made all of this feel real: this life of art and risk, this choosing to stay in the deep end.</p><p><strong>Allison Mei-Li, <a href="https://writtenbyallison.substack.com/p/i-flew-to-portland-for-poetry">I flew to Portland for poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i dream of<br>queer people unafraid of bombs on this land<br>or across oceans. i dream of a wildness that<br>a country could never hold. i dream of<br>this country&#8217;s undoing. how the rocks<br>would weep for the first time in centuries.<br>how we will love each other the way we used to.<br>not like revolution but like breath.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/04/03/4-3-5/">4/3</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#19968;&#20154;&#38477;&#12426;&#26149;&#39080;&#20055;&#12426;&#12375;&#36942;&#30094;&#12398;&#12496;&#12473;&#12288;&#31282;&#20117;&#22799;&#28809;</p><p><em>hitori ori harukaze norishi kaso no basu</em></p><p>one person gets off<br>and the spring wind gets on<br>a bus in the depopulated village</p><p>Natsuro Inai</p><p>from <em>Gendai Haiku</em>, #729, March 2026 Issue, Gendai Haiku Kyokai, Tokyo, Japan</p><p><strong>Fay Aoyagi, <a href="https://fayaoyagi.wordpress.com/2026/04/01/todays-haiku-%ef%bc%88april-1-2026%ef%bc%89/">Today&#8217;s Haiku &#65288;April 1, 2026&#65289;</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 13]]></title><description><![CDATA[odes to mushrooms, the greenness of grief, a city of mirrors, the wayward compass, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-13</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-13</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2026 23:12:59 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/affb3e55-2847-4d65-ba00-0e04c13c0374_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: odes to mushrooms, the greenness of grief, a city of mirrors, the wayward compass, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>Almost March-end. It&#8217;s a bright, squally day. High clouds are topping out into pure white domes. I love these big expanses of sky, feel great joy watching wild weather rush in from the Atlantic. One cumulonimbus becomes a nuclear mushroom. White turns to grey. My stomach twists. Hard hail is hurled at my attic window.</p><p>All month snow has come and gone to greater or lesser degrees. One or two calm, frosty days have been sandwiched in between many hours of iced gales and raw cold but light persists and grows stronger. I feel spring in my bones, hear it in the lark-song.</p><p><strong>Annie O&#8217;Garra Worsley, <a href="https://notesfromasmallcroftbythesea.wordpress.com/2026/03/30/march-and-memories/">March, and memories</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m carrying a heavy sense that something is going to happen, something not ephemeral. Lots of news-checking and kid-checking: each of my adult children is going through a hard time. The cat was squinting through a pink left eye this morning, vomited his breakfast all over the place, and I had to hurry him to the vet. He seems okay now, but twice-a-day eye drops will be an epic battle. Clouds hang over House Mountain and the neighbors&#8217; dogs are barking.</p><p>I read another book I loved. Anne Haven McDonnell&#8217;s new poetry collection <em><a href="https://msupress.org/9781611865639/singing-under-snow/">Singing Under Snow</a> </em>is the perfect partner to <em>Forest Euphoria</em> [by Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian]. I don&#8217;t think the authors know each other, but their work connects: both books concern awe and walking in the woods; funga and queerness; solitude and interrelation. A kind of hush seems to hang over most of <em>Singing Under Snow, </em>which contains a gorgeous series of odes to mushrooms&#8212;a disposition to awe. Smell and taste and touch are vibrant, as opposed to the visual detail that dominates much poetry. A saut&#233;ed <em>Agaricus agustus</em> has &#8220;browned base notes in butter, high hint / of marzipan.&#8221; Inky caps &#8220;stink of squid.&#8221; Truffles emit an &#8220;intimate funk, maybe old cheese, oak, sweat, rot, maybe sulfur or leather or brine&#8230;it&#8217;s a low cello starting in the feet.&#8221; All this mushroom sniffing is entangled with memories of beloved people, who sometimes accompany the foraging. &#8220;Every love I&#8217;ve known,&#8221; Haven McDonnell writes, &#8220;I remember by her smell&#8212;maple syrup, soap, salt, moss, fur, cinnamon, yeast, sap, snow.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/03/30/spring-ephemerals/">Spring ephemerals</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How does it feel in the body to be seduced by the unknown?</p><p>What darkness are you avoiding in your creative work?</p><p>In the Venn diagram of fear and desire, where do you fall?</p><p>What are your monster aspects? How might you share language with the beast?</p><p><strong>Lisa Marie Basile, <a href="https://lisamariebasile.substack.com/p/bibliomancy-of-the-week-bram-stoker">Bibliomancy of the week: Bram Stoker</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I spent part of yesterday afternoon sitting a table as part of a &#8220;career day&#8221; at Rose&#8217;s school. One adult per table, most of whom are other parents from the larger school body, there to answer questions on what it is each of them do. Roughly twenty tables spread out through the gymnasium, others included a family doctor from Richmond, a journalist, a stand-up comedian, a lawyer, a woman with a big fluffy dog who works with training rescue animals, a chemist and a table full of people from the Embassy of Barbados. I was the poet, apparently, a table I littered with books and chapbooks, so students could get a sense of what it is I might do. With handouts, naturally. Beside me, a man who works with national security, his table empty. Everything on a need-to-know basis, I suppose. As he said, but what would he even bring? He answered questions, and showed them a picture from his phone of the building where he works.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/the-green-notebook-fe6">the green notebook,</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been really struggling to come back here and know what to say. Blame it on the cognitive dissonance of our current moment. Within my little cocoon of a world, things are well. The birds are starting to wake me up again. The plum and cherry trees have big buds growing. The crocuses have already shown their light, and Maya the cat can&#8217;t get enough warm afternoon sunbeams. But all that winter healing feels self-contained. Everything else is on fire. We&#8217;re angry, sad, worried, scared, and nervous. And, I&#8217;m just out of energy. It&#8217;s even harder to say, <em>Here, care about my little poetry book.</em></p><p>So, instead, I&#8217;m going to give you some of my kind of comfort. Read on below for a handful of haikus for the season and a Gen X-style taco recipe (but meatless). As well, I hope to see many of you in person at the events below in the weeks and months ahead&#8212;not for me and my book but for poetry and community and what we can give to each other.</p><p><strong>Carrie Olivia Adams, <a href="https://poetryandbiscuits.substack.com/p/the-spring-of-our-cognitive-dissonance">The Spring of Our Cognitive Dissonance</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I thought anger burned too bright for me to be able to write ever again. I have felt guilt good pure catholic guilt for not showing up here. For not doing the thing I have always loved.</p><p>How can any thinking person not be angry right now or anxious or frightened? National Poetry Month is coming and I have signed up but I can&#8217;t stop thinking about the children hidden in the Monster&#8217;s private diary or children torn from their parents&#8217; arms because of the color of their skin. Men murdering citizens in the street. Families who have lost their SNAP benefits for no reason whatever. Survivors of rape standing in front of those monuments still not being believed. What the awful fuck. Even tapping into this much anger makes my hands shake god I&#8217;m such a coward. Here is my attempt at a poem off the cuff so to speak even though it&#8217;s noon and I&#8217;m still in my Christmas jammies though they have been laundered. [&#8230;]</p><p>a wooden spoon<br>makes a good weapon if you don&#8217;t<br>have flour<br>stir rocks with your hands<br>you&#8217;re going to need them<br>make a noise in your bowl<br>make it a drum<br>pound it until you bleed<br>make a noise in your throat<br>growl learn to bark</p><p><strong>Rebecca Loudon, <a href="https://thebeginningofsummersend.blogspot.com/2026/03/march-26-26-where-has-she-been.html">March 26 26 Where has she been?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As a kid, I spent time every summer at a place called Knowlton&#8217;s Campground. Located on the coast near the easternmost part of Maine (and the U.S.), it was wild and stunning. We dug clams and &#8220;shopped&#8221; fresh fish out of the neighbor&#8217;s boat. My sister and I had the freedom to explore entire peninsulas and islands accessible only at low tide. Non-stop, kid nirvana. The land where the campground was located is now a nature preserve, and we visited this winter. Can confirm: It&#8217;s still wild and stunning (as you can see from the photos above). For today&#8217;s prompt, <em>write a poem about a place from your childhood that doesn&#8217;t exist anymore.</em> / Recommended reading: &#8220;<a href="https://www.theshorepoetry.org/amorak-huey-my-kink-is-distance">My Kink Is Distance</a>&#8221; by Amorak Huey and &#8220;<a href="https://www.asteralesjournal.com/1-4-kitchen-barry-schulz">when the world did not feel like a crushing weight</a>&#8221; by Jill Kitchen.</p><p><strong>Carolee Bennett, <a href="https://gooduniversenextdoor.com/2026/03/29/30-poetry-prompts-for-napowrimo-2026/">30 Poetry Prompts for NaPoWriMo 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have been writing quite a bit this month, spurred by some inspiration at AWP, lots of reading, and some ideas that have been sitting in a document titled <em>Things to Explore at Some Point.</em> (So original, I know.) I&#8217;d like to keep that momentum going, but much of what I&#8217;m writing has not been poetry. So instead of writing a poem a day in April, I&#8217;m going to ask myself to try and write <strong>something </strong>each day. No labels. No forms. No limits. It could be a sentence. A paragraph. A new line for an old poem. A piece of flash. To just write a <strong>THING.</strong></p><p>Just putting that down in print feels right, like a weight off my shoulders. Like I can celebrate poems by reading them, and MAYBE, just maybe, writing one if I am inspired to do so. But it also feels correct that I should at least attempt writing everyday&#8212;this will be a success of its own.</p><p>If you complete a 30/30 with some good poems as a result, I am in awe of you. If you complete a 30/30 at all, I am in awe of you. If you, like me, are simply trying your best to connect with the page as often as possible, I am in awe of you. You created something where there was nothing.</p><p><strong>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/under-pressureor-not">Under Pressure&#8230;or Not</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Here is the latest round of links to pieces dealing with the US-Israel war against Iran and related issues. I am also adding to these notes a second section. As you know, I have published several books of translations of classical Persian poetry, among them <em><a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/selections-from-saadis-bustan/">Selections from Saadi&#8217;s Bustan</a>.</em> Saadi, a 13th century poet from the city of Shiraz, is among the most important writers in the Persian literary canon, and his work has been translated into many languages worldwide. In light of the damage already done to some of <a href="https://www.dw.com/en/us-israeli-strikes-damage-irans-cultural-heritage-sites/a-76350565?ref=richardjnewman.com">Iran&#8217;s most important cultural and historical sites</a>, and since my <em>Bustan</em> has been out of print for some time now (and is likely to stay that way), I thought a worthwhile thing to do would be to share with you some of Iran&#8217;s rich literary history. (I am writing more extensively on a specific connection between Saadi&#8217;s <em>Bustan</em> and United States culture in the series &#8220;On The Trail of a Tale: Benjamin Franklin&#8217;s Persian Parable.&#8221; Parts <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/on-the-trail-of-a-tale-part-one-benjamin-franklins-persian-parable/">1</a> and <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/on-the-trail-of-a-tale-part-2-the-sources-of-franklins-parable-in-17th-century-christian-arguments-for-religious-tolerance/">2</a> have already been posted. Part 3 will post on April 3rd and Part 4 is coming in May.)</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/of-note-march-29-2026/">Of Note: March 29, 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Yesterday I had a poem idea. We do Passion Sunday, which means we read the whole Holy Week text. This bit from Good Friday (Matthew 27: 50-53) leapt out at me: &#8220;Then Jesus cried again with a loud voice and breathed his last. At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. The earth shook, and the rocks were split. The tombs also were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised. After his resurrection they came out of the tombs and entered the holy city and appeared to many.&#8221;</p><p>Is there a poem in those lines? I keep thinking about those holy people, long dead, rising up and wandering around Jerusalem. Do I want to update it to a modern capital city, D.C. perhaps?</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/03/one-last-look-back-at-quilt-camp-and.html">One Last Look Back at Quilt Camp and Palm Sunday</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The opening poem of Dan Albergotti&#8217;s <a href="https://lsupress.org/9780807182543/candy/">collection </a><em><a href="https://lsupress.org/9780807182543/candy/">Candy</a></em><a href="https://lsupress.org/9780807182543/candy/"> (LSU Press 2024)</a> is what got me thinking of our current moment in these terms. The title is &#8220;Kick in the Jaw&#8221; and it opens with the line &#8220;Sometimes the zebra wins.&#8221; That&#8217;s kind of a jarring line if you don&#8217;t know much about zebras. It&#8217;s a common mistake to think they&#8217;re similar to horses in temperament because they&#8217;re part of the same family, but no zebra has ever been domesticated. They&#8217;re too aggressive. But even if you know that about zebras, it&#8217;s still an interesting contrast to Albergotti&#8217;s next lines. Here are the first four together.</p><blockquote><p>Sometimes the zebra wins. And the sound<br>of the savanna goes on&#8212;birdsong, frog croak,<br>beetle chitter, snort and grunt of a warthog<br>hard panting of the cheetah after chase&#8212;</p></blockquote><p>Sometimes the zebra wins and nothing is different. It&#8217;s as much a part of the natural world as the predator winning. Even the cheetah in this scene isn&#8217;t feeding. It&#8217;s panting, gathering its energy for the next attempt. But if the zebra just managed to dodge the cheetah for now, that doesn&#8217;t seem like much of a win. The poem continues:</p><blockquote><p>as the lion walks slowly away, bleeding from<br>the mouth, staring ahead, looking for a place<br>to rest and await a slow starvation. Sometimes<br>the savanna&#8217;s ambient song is interrupted<br>by a sharp crack that sounds like a gunshot,<br>the zebra&#8217;s kick finding the lion&#8217;s jaw.</p></blockquote><p>I&#8217;d be anthropomorphizing to say that the zebra is brave here. This is just nature, cruel and violent. The zebra kicks because it can and it connected with the lion and more often than not, the lion is probably going to win this encounter and it doesn&#8217;t mean anything larger than that. Albergotti says as much in the final lines:</p><blockquote><p>Some stories get rewritten. Sometimes<br>the lion dies. Always the sound goes on.</p></blockquote><p>It&#8217;s the first two sentences there that really grabbed me, and it&#8217;s why this poem has stuck with me and why I decided to write about it. &#8220;Some stories get rewritten. Sometimes the lion dies.&#8221; Just because you&#8217;re not a predator that doesn&#8217;t mean you&#8217;re destined to lose no matter how much the predator wins in the stories. Sometimes the zebra breaks the lion&#8217;s jaw.</p><p>Notice that the world doesn&#8217;t end when the lion&#8217;s jaw is broken. It will end for that lion, but there are other lions. It will eventually end for that zebra, but there are other zebras.</p><p>I&#8217;d bet that Dan didn&#8217;t have any particular political or war-type situation in mind when he wrote this poem. I&#8217;m stretching this metaphor pretty tautly, mostly because I need to remind myself that no situation is hopeless, that there&#8217;s always a sound in the background continuing, and that I can find a way to be brave if I remember that.</p><p><strong>Brian Spears, <a href="https://brianspears.substack.com/p/being-brave">Being Brave</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><blockquote><p>After I got a degree, I worked in a job laying<br>basketball courts. After this, I got a job<br>collecting debt. It was strange to me,<br>having to wear a tie. There were reports<br>that showed the team leader how many<br>minutes you were late. It&#8217;s a vibe that after<br>everything you are destined to live this way.</p></blockquote><p>This section from the title poem of Stuart McPherson&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.brokensleepbooks.com/product-page/stuart-mcpherson-the-aureate-trophies-of-profit-loss">The Aureate Trophies of Profit &amp; Loss</a></em> is almost a summary of the entire book, in a way. McPherson is primarily concerned with the dehumanisation that comes with late-stage Capitalism and the modern workplace where humans are a resource, and resources are to be exploited. In this sense, the poems gathered here are a set of responses to what we are asked to accept as &#8216;normal&#8217; in our decaying civilization:</p><blockquote><p>We should be asleep now but there are<br>choices to make between the draws</p><p>of long-shot fanaticism, or a life bereft<br>of hope. That clouting fist on a door</p><p>is a precursor to necessary dignified rest,<br>some basic standards of humanity.<br>(from &#8216;WISHLIST&#8217;)</p></blockquote><p>And those basic standards are precisely what&#8217;s absent from a world dominated by projects, PowerPoint decks, performance reviews and &#8216;competitive modern office chair/hierarchies&#8217;. What these poems do, amongst other things, is take this jargon and embed it in a flow of disjunction that serves to point up the machine&#8217;s perversion of language [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/03/25/two-broken-sleeps/">Two Broken Sleeps</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The children had empty eyes, so they got dogs.<br>The children poured love into their dogs like funnels.<br>The dogs followed them everywhere. They sent<br>each other pictures of the dogs climbing into their beds,<br>blankets and couches, riding in cars and trucks.<br>When one of their dogs is killed by a stranger,<br>the children cannot consume the darkness<br>of their deeply un-searched mud thick love.<br>The dog&#8217;s death is all the broken bones<br>of their childhood, every fist to the face,<br>every cigarette butt to the arm, every belt stroke,<br>every night without food; the children howl.<br>Bystanders watch their outpouring of grief.<br>They say, it was a dog!</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/for-jasper-finding-courage-in-the">For Jasper: Finding Courage in the Dark</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My ten-year-old daughter protests and complains, she summons all her suasive efforts, but I remain an Elvis fan. Not limited to songs <em>by</em> Elvis, my appreciation extends to songs <em>about</em> Elvis, for example, &#8220;Calling Elvis,&#8221; by Dire Straits. It&#8217;s the lead track on their final album, <em>On Every Street. </em>About this album there are two schools of thought, both visible on its <a href="https://www.allmusic.com/album/on-every-street-mw0000675218">AllMusic page</a>. &#8220;A disappointment,&#8221; asserts William Rohlmann, the site&#8217;s professional reviewer: &#8220;low-key to the point of being background music.&#8221; But the <em>people</em> think otherwise, and give it, on average, 4 out of 5 stars. Sophisticated subtlety, or bland lifelessness&#8212;it&#8217;s a fine line, and fine taste is needed to see it.</p><p>Timothy Steele&#8217;s poetry is on the good side of this bar. It is rewardingly subtle, in both form and content<em>. </em>The poems tend to start small, with close attention to tiny details in a mundane scene:</p><blockquote><p>The lizard, an exemplar of the small,<br>Spreads fine, adhesive digits to perform<br>Vertical push-ups on a sunny wall.<br>(&#8220;Herb Garden&#8221;)</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>By placing in its path an index card,<br>I catch an ant that scurries round the sink.<br>(&#8220;For Victoria, Traveling in Europe&#8221;)</p></blockquote><p>Sometimes, this attention is all: at the end of &#8220;Herb Garden&#8221; we&#8217;re still among the herbs, where, &#8220;quarrying between the pathway&#8217;s bricks, / Ants build minute volcanoes out of sand.&#8221; Other poems expand, and concrete details yield to something higher, or more abstract. The beach in &#8220;Starr Farm Beach&#8221; is named after a farm that&#8217;s named (I presume) after its owner, but that name inspires the fancy of &#8220;stars / &#8230; sown and grown and gathered for the sky,&#8221; and the poems ends thus:</p><blockquote><p>We loved swifts that performed wild swoops and swings<br>Over the lake in unobstructed air;<br>We loved fish that, in sudden surfacings,<br>Nabbed supper with quick piscine savoir-faire.<br>But we best loved stars rising here and there,<br>Whether from hopes of something we might sow<br>Or from a lonely impulse to declare<br>The kinship of the lofty and the low.</p></blockquote><p>As delightful as the <em>what </em>of the poems is the <em>how. </em>There&#8217;s joy in seeing each thing fall perfectly into place. Not just, for example, the rhyme of &#8220;savoir-faire&#8221; with &#8220;air,&#8221; but the slotting of the complex and foreign phrase &#8220;quick piscine savoir-faire&#8221; into the iambic template with exactness and precision. Steele asserts, in <em><a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/all-the-funs-in-how-you-say-a-thing">All the fun&#8217;s in how you say a thing</a></em>, that &#8220;the chief sources of variation in metrical composition reside <em>within </em>the norm&#8221;: good iambic pentameter, he holds, rarely contains anything but iambs, and this, he argues, is less of a restriction than one might think.</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/dionysus-and-apollo">Dionysus and Apollo</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Just read a poem by Lee Harwood. Two lines jumped out at me and felt unbelievably poignant. Trains run through a town, he writes, &#8216;staring in at the bare rooms and kitchens / each lit with its own story that lasts for years and years.&#8217;* Wow. It just caught me off-guard. Funny how often, when you like the music of a poet&#8217;s work, you find that they also deal with the sorts of ideas and ways of seeing, too, that appeal to you.</p><p>*<em>A Poem for Writers</em> by Lee Harwood</p><p><strong>Dominic Rivron, <a href="https://asithappens55.blogspot.com/2026/03/a-poem-for-writers.html">A Poem for Writers</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Over at <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/jwikeley">A Poetry Notebook</a>, <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/11888159-jem?utm_source=mentions">Jem</a> has a nice discussion of Larkin&#8217;s &#8216;The Trees&#8217;, a poem he always thinks about at this time of year. It&#8217;s one I know by heart too, though it never occurs to me until later in April. Jem feels ambivalent about the poem. [&#8230;]</p><p>I have always loved this poem and found Larkin&#8217;s dismissal of it startling when I read his letters. (He complains about writing something so mediocre on Thomas Hardy&#8217;s birthday, and perhaps one can understand that, when measured against Hardy&#8217;s best work, it feels disappointing.) The greenness of grief seems obvious to me, first, as an invocation of Eliot, something of a silent <em>b&#234;te noire</em> throughout Larkin, as the poem is presumably &#8220;set&#8221; as April turns to May; but it also invokes the sense of tears at renewals, such as the &#8220;happy funerals&#8221; in &#8216;The Whitsun Weddings&#8217;. That poem contains a sister image to &#8220;something almost being said&#8221; in &#8220;someone running up to bowl&#8221;. Life is an attempt, which seems to come so easily, so naturally, to the tree, but not to us. The rings of grief have no parallel in &#8216;Whitsun&#8217;, which actually leaves out the wedding rings, but perhaps relates to the rain at the end.</p><blockquote><p>what it held<br>Stood ready to be loosed with all the power<br>That being changed can give</p></blockquote><p>This is part of the ongoing theme of &#8220;Earth&#8217;s immeasurable surprise&#8221; in Larkin, which sometimes takes the form of new lambs and sometimes of the memory of &#8220;the strength and pain of being young which cannot come again.&#8221; Somehow the trees do find a way of being young each year, though it hurts, like growing pains and the pains of seeing the past &#8220;smaller and clearer as the years go by&#8221;.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/larkins-trees">Larkin&#8217;s trees</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Amid the enormous wealth of texts addressed to Elizabeth I, it is nevertheless rather unusual to come across one speaking to her &#8220;woman to woman&#8221;, as it were. In fact, [Olympia] Frontina&#8217;s poem, though addressed to Elizabeth, is mostly about her own struggles and suffering as a Protestant exile, and how the defeat of the Armada gives her some hope for the Protestant cause. It draws a clear parallel between Elizabeth&#8217;s courageous resistance in the face of Catholic Europe and Olympia&#8217;s own trials.</p><p>Funnily enough, the book in which this poem appears has been cited a couple of times by scholars as a particularly rich source for the depiction of Elizabeth I as a <em>virgo mascula</em>, &#8216;manly maiden&#8217;, a kind of virtuous Christian Amazon. It&#8217;s true that several of the poems in the collection (though not Olympia&#8217;s) do mine this seam at considerable length. But it&#8217;s striking that none of the scholars who have been interested in the book from this angle noticed that it also, and very unusually, contains a poem <em>by </em>a woman about her own experiences. [&#8230;]</p><p>Are Eleutherius and Olympia Frontina two women, or one? It would need a much fuller study to make a proper assessment, but I think it is quite likely that they are the same person: the tone in which Eleutherius addresses the queen directly is rather similar to that in Olympia&#8217;s poem and there are a series of overlaps in the use of certain Latin words. There are also a handful of set pieces which are treated in a similar way. Such correspondences could of course be explained by close friendship, family relationship or belonging to a literary circle in which members were regularly sharing work. But at this point I would hazard a guess that Olympia (if that was in fact her name) adopted the pen-name &#8216;Eleutherius&#8217; for the grander and more stereotypically masculine genres of Claudianic panegyric and major Horatian odes with which she opened her book, but dared to leave the more personal elegy under a female name. It is ironic indeed that having concealed her identity once, it was then unwittingly concealed again by the careless error of an early cataloguer.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/hiding-in-plain-sight-two-new-women">Hiding in plain sight: two (?) new women poets from 1589</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m very grateful to Vivek Narayanan, editor of <em>Poetry Daily</em>, for the invitation to write about a poem and its &#8220;spark&#8221;. I&#8217;ve always found &#8220;Cook Ting&#8221; works like a charm when introducing students to contemporary poetry that doesn&#8217;t immediately make sense in the way they expect. Its emphatic rhyming and collaged imagery encourages them to curiosity about what it&#8217;s doing, which then leads into a discussion of the connections we make as readers, encouraged by the leaps of rhyme &#8212; and then finally we look more closely at one or more of the sources that Langley used when writing the poem. [&#8230;]</p><p>In the <em>Poetry Daily </em>piece I concentrate on the poem&#8217;s use of phrases from Cage&#8217;s essay on Rauschenberg (as you can see, &#8220;Cook Ting&#8221; was originally called &#8220;Rauschenberg&#8221;). But Langley also copied out other observations from Cage which inform the poem&#8217;s thinking about what art does to the world in a more general way. Here are three:</p><blockquote><p>Beauty is now underfoot wherever we take the trouble to look.</p><p>*</p><p>[Rauschenberg] is not saying; he is painting [&#8230;] The message is conveyed by dirt which, mixed with adhesive, sticks to itself and to the canvas upon which he places it. Crumbling and responding to changes in the weather, the dirt unceasingly does my thinking.</p><p>*</p><p>Each thing that is there is a subject. It is a situation involving multiplicity. (It is no reflection on the weather that such and such a government sent a note to another.)</p></blockquote><p>I&#8217;m struck in particular by the mention of &#8220;weather&#8221; here twice as an aspect of reality which is not human, not social or political, and yet as changeable and contingent as thought itself. The inclusion of the natural world in the poem &#8212; through Mark Cocker&#8217;s nature diary for the <em>Guardian</em> newspaper about seabirds feeding near the Sizewell nuclear reactor &#8212; is also &#8220;a situation involving multiplicity&#8221;. The only direct evocation of Cocker&#8217;s diary in &#8220;Cook Ting&#8221; is the sentence &#8220;The gulls are a / white flap over sprats in the foam&#8221;. But the whole piece describes a more complex ecosystem of gulls, long-necked divers and marine skuas &#8212; the latter being &#8220;highly opportunistic&#8221; birds who feed through kleptoparasitism, or piracy; that is, they wait for other birds to catch a fish, and then harass it until the fish is disgorged.</p><p>What strikes me about reading Cocker&#8217;s seabirds back into the lines of &#8220;Cook Ting&#8221; is how the &#8220;sources&#8221; of a poem are much more than the choice words that a poet (like a piratic seabird) plucks from the mouth of another writer. The two pieces of writing fall into conversation with each other, suggesting further analogies between the behaviour of birds and the imagination.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/zip-zoop">Zip! Zoop!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In this short poem, the reader is pulled from a secure place and made to &#8220;fall in love with the void&#8221; &#8211; the <em>unreachable</em>, the <em>unsayable</em>. The poem ends with the sweep of the &#8220;merciless arc of the lace-edged skirt,&#8221; taking the reader into a void of a different kind. &#8220;Lace-edged skirt&#8221; implies society, time, restrictions, human physicality, desire. &#8220;Merciless&#8221; is a strong word choice here. O&#8217;Hara could intend the reader to take this as time&#8217;s relentless force &#8211; even Leonardo, great embracer of life, came to dust. He also could be making a statement about sexuality &#8211; and here read society&#8217;s restrictions and expectations about who and how we love, a different sort of window &#8211; the lace boundaries of conformity and roles. Either way, the poem ends with an upward sweep into a puzzling but fecund unknown.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-frank-ohara-windows">Thoughts on&#8230; Frank O&#8217;Hara, &#8220;Windows&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In rhymed tetrameter quatrains, Blake excoriates the evil of the place: how the cries of the poor blacken the churches, how the existence of girls forced into prostitution stains the institution of marriage. Interestingly, &#8220;London&#8221; appears in Blake&#8217;s <em>Songs of Experience</em> but has no counterpart in his parallel volume, <em>Songs of Innocence</em>. That might suggest that Blake cannot imagine an innocent human city &#8212; at least not till the New Jerusalem prophesied in the Book of Revelation, which forces us to remember that in the Bible&#8217;s account, the humanity that began in a garden ends in a city.</p><p>And yet, to read &#8220;London&#8221; carefully, to think about its diction and narrative, is to come away unsettled. Oh, there&#8217;s an easy reading, the kind of high-school English-class account, that takes the poem as straightforward revolutionary rage against power: The human condition in 1794 London is nasty and brutish, filthy and immoral, with the Palace and the Church forging mental restraints that bind us in our misery. The poem is Blake&#8217;s indictment of the urban social order, the Industrial Revolution, the economic and political arrangements that have created this damnable state.</p><p>All that is certainly in the poem, but a sense of unease ought to touch us when we find ourselves in self-congratulatory agreement with the angry narrator. Blake is involved in something deeper, I think, for the narrator is not entirely a trustworthy one. Under the poem&#8217;s indictment of the social order is a hidden indictment of the poem&#8217;s speaker as someone who does not have the answer to what he sees and hears. If the city corrupts us all, it corrupts as well the man who observes the city&#8217;s evil.</p><p>He is, in other words, one of those who &#8220;feel they know not what but care; / And wish to lead others when they should be led.&#8221; That&#8217;s from the very curious poem &#8220;<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Voice_of_the_Ancient_Bard">The Voice of the Ancient Bard</a>,&#8221; which Blake initially put in <em>Songs of Innocence</em>, then moved to <em>Songs of Experience</em> &#8212; a poem that is, admittedly, so strange and ambiguous as to grant no certain use. Still, as one critic <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/44378189">pointed out</a> back in 1986, there&#8217;s something there suspicious of the observers who wish to lead others toward some imagined future.</p><p>More suspicion comes to us from Blake&#8217;s word choices, emphasized by the technique of repetition that pervades &#8220;London.&#8221; The repeated &#8220;charter&#8217;d&#8221; in the first stanza of the four-quatrain tetrameter poem was merely &#8220;dirty&#8221; in an earlier notebook, as &#8220;mind-forg&#8217;d manacles&#8221; was originally &#8220;german-forged.&#8221; Both of these changes push the sense of constraint into something systematic, written into the minds of city-dwellers &#8212; which includes the speaker of the poem.</p><p>But it&#8217;s the last line of &#8220;London&#8221; &#8212; &#8220;And blights with plagues the Marriage hearse,&#8221; an astonishing oxymoron &#8212; that most suggests the speaker is equally bound in the charter, the mind&#8217;s manacles. He has risen a half step above the ordinary, suffering bounded people, as he observes the vile city: a nasty cauldron of woe. &#8220;How the youthful Harlots curse / Blasts the new-born Infants tear.&#8221;</p><p>We might dwell on how much of this is aurally driven: He <em>hears</em> the infant&#8217;s cry, the soldier&#8217;s sigh, the whore&#8217;s curse. But what he gains from all that is only an observation of life (from birth to marriage to death) as collapsed down into a single monstrosity. He needs to make the step beyond that, to a vision of the city as a light unto the nations &#8212; a vision of the New Jerusalem that Blake knows is beyond the appalling cry.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-london">Today&#8217;s Poem: London</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>London is hungry, it isn&#8217;t greedy, it simply demands repayment for your tenancy. Some respond by making money, some by making a tonne of money, some make poetry. Others give up their souls, have their life blood siphoned from their wan bodies. The machine needs feeding. London is a great hole that must be filled.</p><p>It is no wonder that John Keats retreated to Hampstead, that heaven on a hill, not the exclusive suburb it is today, one that has followed the same trajectory that many poorer or affordable boroughs on the fringes have done, an outlying state attractive only to misfits and migrants, artists and writers, desirable once it&#8217;s been described as a &#8216;colourful neighbourhood&#8217; and Samantha and Lucy and Tom decide to rough it there for a while. Then they tell their friends about it. And then one of them opens a chic, vegan restaurant. And then&#8230; I digress&#8230;</p><p>The London Keats was born into was recovering from the &#8216;gin craze&#8217;, a Hogarthian epidemic of anarchic alcoholism. With industrialisation and empire expansion London had become the wealthiest city in the world. With this wealth, at its untended edges, came horrific poverty, an almost unparalleled depravity. With reforms to the licensing laws there wasn&#8217;t even the ubiquity of gin to drown the misery out. We&#8217;ve not entirely emerged from this staggering hangover and Samantha and Lucy and Tom will talk of urban regeneration.</p><p>There are two kinds of poverty, a poverty of opportunity that keeps people stuck in one place and the poverty that slowly kills them there.</p><p>On the night before I came home, I walked across Rome and at each turn, on each corner, there was treasure cut in stone, water and marble and a drama of columns and domes, arcades and arches, churches and piazzas. You can walk across any city for free or for the small expense of warn shoe leather but in some cities having no money matters less.</p><p>London is a different beast. Increasingly it has become a city of mirrors, of glass facades, of endless reflections, of vacuity and self obsession. Stare at it for too long and it will show you who you are or what you are not, it will reveal what you have, and show you what have not got.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n57-the-secrets-of-swan">N&#186;57 The secrets of Swan</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And then those pastures, tourmaline green<br>dotted with hundreds of lambs. The eagles<br>scavenging afterbirth during lambing season,<br>filling the whole round world with auguries.</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="https://luxannica.wordpress.com/2026/03/24/auguries/">Auguries</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m writing this Substack post looking for a favour &#8211; or more particularly, for suggestions. In a couple of weeks, our little family will be walking a portion of the old pilgrimage route, the Camino de Santiago. Our portion of the route will be around 120km over six days, which should translate to around five or six hours walking per day. There&#8217;s something appealing in the simplicity of this schedule: waking around 6am, leaving the hotel at 7:30, walking the countryside roads until after lunch, and then being free in the later afternoon and evening to take in whatever village we stop in overnight.</p><p>A big part of the reason for undertaking it is that my son has recently turned twelve, will start high school in the summer, and is a typical kid of this generation &#8211; in love with screens, his life filled with impulse and impetus. The idea was to try something to shake up his life, and to slow things down for him. Will we still be talking after this holiday? Comments are open to discuss this &#8211; but also for something else. With five or six hours&#8217; walking time, I thought I might set myself a target of trying to memorise a poem every day. Doesn&#8217;t it feel like a natural fit &#8211; to walk and to commit something to memory? The rhythm of the steps, the rhythm of the poem. So I am looking for suggestions for what poems to commit to memory.</p><p>In my earlier life I worked as a debt advisor for a charity; I would write out poems to memorise between speaking to clients. The job could be quite bleak, and I found the process of internalising a poem to be a few minutes of escape or reprieve. Later I would read this feeling described in the introduction to Harold Bloom&#8217;s <em>Possessed By Memory</em>, one of his more sentimental and vulnerable works:</p><p>When you have a poem by heart you possess it more truly and more strangely than you do your dwelling place. Because the poem possesses you.</p><p>In the office cubicle, beside my pad and pens, my scraps of budgets and cost-cuttings, I had tried to memorise Yeats&#8217; &#8216;The Song of Wandering Aengus&#8217;. I still have most of the opening half quite clearly in my mind: <em>I went out to the hazel wood/because a fire was in my head.</em> What is perhaps strange is that in remembering the poem I can also recall the view from my old desk, my colleagues, their small talk, each part all the clearer when I recite it &#8211; as though I wasn&#8217;t just committing the poem to memory, but also the place where I&#8217;d memorised it too.</p><p><strong>Niall Campbell, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/what-poems-should-i-memorise">What Poems Should I Memorise?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In &#8220;Of Power and Time,&#8221; Mary Oliver calls the internal force that pulls us away from our own work &#8220;the intimate interruptor.&#8221; She doesn&#8217;t dwell on<em> why</em> this inner voice distracts us, but she&#8217;s unequivocal about the need to ignore it, even at the cost of unstocked pantries and unreturned phone calls.</p><p>In Oliver&#8217;s description of this internal antagonist, I recognize my own intimate interrupter. How she &#8220;helpfully&#8221; shows up to remind me of tasks when I&#8217;m mid-thought, almost as if&#8212;could it <em>really</em> be this&#8212;I can&#8217;t stand the intensity and reverberations of my own mind.</p><p>Creative work <em>requires</em> solitude. &#8220;It needs concentration, without interruptions,&#8221; as Oliver advises. &#8220;It needs the whole sky to fly in, and no eye watching until it comes to that certainty which it aspires to, but does not necessarily have at once.&#8221;</p><p>And <em>that</em> can feel uncomfortable.</p><p>I sometimes feel I need a break from the pressure of my own creative energy, that very thing I covet but sometimes fear once it&#8217;s in my grasp. Now it <em>really</em> is up to me.</p><p>Now that the game is on, I might let us both down.</p><p><strong>Maya C. Popa, <a href="https://mayacpopa.substack.com/p/advanced-techniques-for-avoiding">Advanced Techniques for Avoiding Writing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last night I gave this workshop at University of Toronto&#8217;s Hart House. I was in a wood-pannelled room overseen by a former Warden of Hart House, replete with vest and pipe. Walking through U of T campus, it really struck me how much I love the literally &#8220;old school&#8221; architecture: ivy-covered buildings and stone buildings in some kin of Gothic style. And yes, colonialism and patriarchy, but there is something about the gravitas of such architecture, a notion (even if it is just an illusion) of &#8220;learning&#8221; having its own space outside the marketplace. I can&#8217;t examine this idea too deeply or it all falls apart (shouldn&#8217;t learning be in the agora, how can we separate it from class, do we want to protect and ritualize learning and put it in the pipe-holding hand of a special group of hierophants&#8230;) Despite this, walking in the dark and pouring rain, I was charmed.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/truths-superb-surprise-notes-from">TRUTH&#8217;S SUPERB SURPRISE: NOTES FROM A CREATIVE NON-FICTION WORKSHOP</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And after all<br>who can fault<br>the wayward compass<br>when the magnetic north pole<br>is in constant motion<br>drifting by fifty kilometers a year<br>and reversing itself altogether<br>every few centuries<br>while each twenty-six thousand years<br>a different north star<br>comes to shine its guiding light<br>above all the confusion.</p><p>We are here<br>to lose our way.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/03/27/corrective-for-a-broken-heart/">Corrective for a Broken Heart</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This morning the air brings me the notes of new carpet off gassing in a Premier Inn and mixes in essence of chilled seaside town air. A soundtrack of traffic plays like urban waves in the background.</p><p>Alt text says this week&#8217;s photo is a person holding a book in front of a bookcase. I say it is me visiting the National Poetry Library in London and not being able to resist a photo with my second full collection of poetry <em>Welcome to the Museum of a Life </em>published by <a href="https://www.blackeyespublishinguk.co.uk/">Black Eyes Publishing UK</a>. I also say this feels particularly apt given that I am a guest on Helen O&#8217;Neill&#8217;s <a href="https://coachwrite.co.uk/podcast/">Coach Write podcast</a> this week. We had a wonderful chat about coaching, poetry and the journey to having books in the world, and it felt good to be a guest. I like listening to people talk on podcasts and I like being asked to talk too. It also makes me chuckle that the episode will air on the first of April!</p><p>The main focus of the visit to London was seeing the Manic Street Preachers headlining at The Royal Albert Hall for Teenage Cancer Trust. It was a fantastic concert opening with <em>Motorcycle Emptiness</em> and ending under a raining down of confetti during <em>If You Tolerate This</em>. That opening song was a moment of absolute tingle for me as I realised I was standing in the now, watching the band perform live, while also watching the original music video from all those years ago projected onto the screen behind them. A wonderful mingling of right now and back then.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/03/30/a-trip-to-london-town/">A TRIP TO LONDON TOWN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I cannot tell you how taken I am by <a href="https://theresakishkan.com/blog/">Theresa Kishkan</a>&#8217;s <em><a href="https://thornapplepress.ca/books/the-art-of-looking-back/">The Art of Looking Back</a>. </em>I have read an advanced galley, but you can <a href="https://www.mcnallyrobinson.com/9781997702061/theresa-kishkan/the-art-of-looking-back">pre-order online</a> or at your favourite indie. Honest, vulnerable, insightful, poetic, authentic, meditative, are all words popping into my head as I prepare to win you over to this book. It&#8217;s also uncomfortable in parts as it asks questions in a consideration of a life well-lived but not without inner turmoil. How do we look back on who we were as young women? What kind of generosity and grace might we offer our younger selves?</p><p>If you&#8217;ve always wondered about women depicted in paintings (and you know I have, beginning with my first book <em>All the God-Sized Fruit</em>), and the effect of the male gaze on women, this book gives you another view. As a young woman, Kishkan posed as an artist&#8217;s model. &#8220;I see him taking me in,&#8221; she says, then asks, &#8220;Was I taken in? I was.&#8221; Years later she looks back with wisdom and clarity and examines her relationship with the artist, with the paintings of her, and with her own self, now and then. She says, &#8220;I am trying to find out who I was in the light of that gaze, and before it, what foundation held me in place in the whirling years&#8230;&#8221;</p><p>We have been on similar paths of interest at times, perhaps, though we&#8217;ve never met. Interested in art, probably reading the same books back in the day &#8212; <em>Ways of Seeing</em> by John Berger was such a big one. So it&#8217;s interesting to see where we converge and where we diverge. We&#8217;ve both written in various genres, are of similar age. I felt reading this book that looks back so keenly, so delicately, to be cathartic. It helps to dwell for a while, before asking, what next?</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/threebooks">Three Books</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m seventy-three now;<br>you, forever past fifty-nine,</p><p>your body resting with<br>my poem and the photo</p><p>I tucked into the pocket of<br>the suit they dressed you in,</p><p>too hot for that late Florida day.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/missing-you">Missing You</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The reaping to which I refer in the title of this post is metaphorical, as spring isn&#8217;t a big time for bringing in the sheaves, though in a few weeks the winter wheat will be ripe. I feel I have reaped some joy from a recent poetry reading I gave at the library of my former employer, DeSales University, and how often do we feel that way? It&#8217;s a gift! Dr. Steve Myers invited me to read with three of the alums of the MFA program DSU now offers, and last night I found myself back in the library where my office used to be (once I finally escaped from the basement where I&#8217;d been located for 17 years). The audience was a mix of undergraduate and graduate students and friends who were kind enough to show up on a Wednesday night. It&#8217;s wonderful to feel appreciated now and then.</p><p>I haven&#8217;t been giving many readings lately or even attending open mics. Evenings and nights are not my best time, but the college is very nearby and I really was pleased to be able to participate&#8230;Best Beloved drove me there and back, so everything was manageable. I read some quite old poems and some quite new ones, and a few in-between from my books. And I sold a few books! Always a thrill. I am dwelling in gratitude today.</p><p>One of the best things at the event was seeing a former student who was one of my writing tutors and who now works at DeSales. She&#8217;s also lately enrolled in the MFA program. What a joy to catch up with a person I met as a bright 18-year-old with a natural talent for writing, who&#8217;s pursuing creative writing now&#8211;as a mother of two, and nearing 40&#8211;not so different from my own circuitous path in poetry. Such are the rewards of teaching&#8230;occasionally, I do miss it.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/03/26/sowing-and-reaping/">Sowing and reaping</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Thank you to <a href="https://www.quibblelit.com/">Quibble Lit</a> for publishing my poem <a href="https://www.quibblelit.com/physics-of-a-marriage-by-carey-taylor">&#8220;Physics of a Marriage&#8221; </a>in Vol. VII. I love journals that still produce print copies (in addition to online publication) and it was so exciting to get a copy delivered to my mailbox.</p><p>I also love &#8220;themed&#8221; submissions and find it helps me focus on what the poem needs to say. In the case of this poem, the prompt was right outside my office window, on his hands and knees digging in the dirt.</p><p>Most of my poems come from the lived reality of my life and writing poetry helps me understand what this life means to me. As many of you know, my husband is a physicist and I am the one who loves to garden. Somehow over the long arc of a 37-year marriage, we&#8217;ve each become a little of both.</p><p><strong>Carey Taylor, <a href="https://careyleetaylor.com/2026/03/29/physics-of-a-marriage/">Physics of a Marriage</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Drones fly over gardens,<br>tankers barrel through straits on fire. So much</p><p>has changed. Or so much has merely changed<br>hands. Yet power stays put. Spoils of many</p><p>conquests, we&#8217;ve been trying to survive in<br>the margins, in the aftermath of the last</p><p>aftermath and the last. Imagine freeing river and<br>forest and plain from maps into their old names.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/03/old-world-new-world/">Old World, New World</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I couldn&#8217;t stop thinking about many things: the elegant movement of the hands of servers behind espresso bars, like hands of Michaelangelo, Galileo&#8217;s telescopes that proved heliocentric view of the universe, the pistachio gelato at Giolitti&#8217;s covered with lightly sweetened mascarpone cream and at Perch&#233; No in Florence, the sound of the choir echoing against the richly decorated walls of the Saint Peter&#8217;s Basilica, the electric candles that one had to <em>light</em>, the paintings of Caravaggio, their visceral violence, the gushing blood, its rotting fruits, the invitation of Bacchus, the perfect teeth of a screaming Medusa, the Montepulciano and the Chianti, posters of a Hokusai exhibit, the mineral white wine I drank inside the ruins of an ancient Roman theatre whose name I do not remember, the Aperol spritzes, the two negronis inside a bar, the view of the Imperial Fora, the gravity that can make anything fall.</p><p><strong>Saudamini Deo, <a href="https://beyondsixrivers.fr/2026/03/31/beware-the-ides-of-march/">Beware the Ides of March</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I stretch my hand out<br>and the quiet sits on my palm<br>like a question:<br>Are you enough?<br>Can you be enough?<br>Are you predator? Or prey?<br>Can you feel the inky wetness of your severed wings?</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/because-she-said-i-must-stop-doomscrolling">Because she said I must stop doomscrolling and write a feel-good poem</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 12]]></title><description><![CDATA[intense incomprehension, the strings of things, apple maggots, plastic words, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-12</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-12</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 22:42:07 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/26689d14-204e-49e9-aaef-2914846eca31_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: intense incomprehension, the strings of things, apple maggots, plastic words, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>Spring begins today. The seasonal gate swings open on its equinox hinge. And I&#8217;m also in-between things : the end of a years-long writing project, on one hand, and a new and unexpected set of social responsibilities, on the other.</p><p>So this is just a diary note, a fugitive transition report. Stray thoughts.</p><p>When you are absorbed and propelled by the magnetic field of an extended poetry project, you are really <em>in</em> that world. Wearing thick horse-blinders donated by Pegasus. So when you emerge, everything looks slightly changed.</p><p>And what have I sought for, all these years, eyes fixed on poetry? Yet maybe this is the wrong way to put it. The ideal, the model, of poetry is <em>out there</em>, in the world; yet the quiddity of <em>poet-qua-poet</em> is constituted by an ongoing relationship, with an emerging process &#8211; that is, between the poet and poems themselves. And over time, sometimes, this relation becomes more symbiotic, more &#8220;second nature&#8221; : &#8220;Time silvers the plow, and the poet&#8217;s voice&#8221; (per Osip Mandelstam).</p><p>When Mandelstam was asked by one of his Soviet media handlers to define &#8220;Acmeism&#8221;, the literary movement which he helped bring to birth, he replied : &#8220;Nostalgia for world culture.&#8221; His remark encapsulates one of the evergreen, effervescent aspects of the poet&#8217;s m&#233;tier : a sense not only of tradition, but also solidarity with fellow workers in the verse-furrows &#8211; all over the world, all through both time and space. It can make you giddy just to think of it.</p><p><strong>Henry Gould, <a href="https://henryghenrik.substack.com/p/message-in-a-battle">Message in a Battle</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have twelve hives of bees. Some are on a farm, at the edge of a field in a long strip of woodland. Amid the scrub there is a small tree which in late Spring is a cloud of blossom. I notice it because it sings: the insects that are feeding on it are so tiny, they can only be heard. They greet the nectar with a high, sweet note &#8211; pure elation. [&#8230;]</p><p>Sean Borodale&#8217;s wonderful <em>Bee Journal</em> should be prescribed reading for all aspiring or armchair apiarists. Everything happens : they swarm, they die, they reinvent themselves, all while he learns to do the hardest thing of all &#8211; nothing. From its Introduction: &#8220;When the wider landscape parches in high summer, this shaded, humid locality divines its insects and flowers; re-builds itself delicately in colour, sugar, water and sunlight&#8221;. He understands the life-force of the colony as a manifestation of Lorca&#8217;s &#8220;duende&#8221; :</p><blockquote><p>All that has dark sounds has <em>duende</em>. Those dark sounds are the mystery, the roots that cling to the mire that we all know, that we all ignore, but from which comes the very substance of art &#8230;</p></blockquote><p><em>Bee Journal</em> came from notebooks he took to the hive : &#8220;inside the increased effort of simultaneously writing and &#8216;keeping&#8217;, I experienced a pressure, a slight emergency of the senses&#8221;. His poet&#8217;s attentiveness allows him into their world. He quickly gave up trying to write while also tending to an open hive, but the poems really do hold what he hopes is &#8220;the poetic pulse of the poem in progress&#8221;. This &#8220;raised alertness&#8221; &#8211; to the radical geography of the bees&#8217; orbit as well as to the tiny intimacies of the bees themselves &#8211; really do capture the experience, including, frequently, &#8220;intense incomprehension&#8221;.</p><p><strong>Lesley Harrison, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/bees-an-equilibrium">Bees: an Equilibrium</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>already spring is the little death of fall:<br>the wind brushes the tulip tree<br>with the back of its hand<br>and a clutch of petals falls,<br>falls, <br>irremediably.</p><p><strong>Dale Favier, <a href="http://koshtra.blogspot.com/2026/03/already-spring.html">Already Spring</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Another reason I love reading poetry in the morning is that, more often than not, reading others&#8217; poems inspires me to write my own.</p><p>I have a &#8220;daily&#8221; poem exchange with a few friends on email this month (we&#8217;re calling it &#8220;rogue&#8221; since we&#8217;re not actually required to write every day&#8212;so yes, we&#8217;re definitely playing fast and loose with the word <em>daily</em> here). But it&#8217;s been a reminder to me that writing has always been the <em>one thing</em> when I&#8217;m doing it, there&#8217;s nothing else I&#8217;d rather be doing. And many times, just by showing up, I end up with a draft of a poem. Other times, nothing&#8212;or a poem that feels like it was written by a feral raccoon who just discovered he has big feelings. But I&#8217;m okay with that, I&#8217;m okay with a not-so-great poem. When it comes to poems, I realize I&#8217;m less attached to outcome and more attached to the idea of play and process.</p><p>But as you know, it&#8217;s a hard mix these days&#8212;to be creative, happy, engaged, <em>and</em> informed without short-circuiting. So I&#8217;ve been trying to keep things simple when at home, I reach for the natural world and books (my two comfort animals in tough times) along with daily <a href="https://www.lotusbiscoff.com/en-us/products/biscoff-sandwich-cookies-0">Biscoff vanilla cream sandwich cookies</a> (sometimes a few or more) and <a href="https://www.peets.com/products/ginger-twist-tea?utm_source=google&amp;utm_medium=cpc&amp;utm_campaign=Tinuiti_PMax_DTC_Evergreen&amp;utm_content=&amp;utm_term=&amp;utm_campaign=23281581250&amp;utm_device=c&amp;utm_content=&amp;utm_term=&amp;utm_keymatch=&amp;utm_adposition=">Mighty Leaf Ginger Twist tea</a> at night (no, I am not a sponsor of either of these products, I just somehow became accidentally devoted to both of them recently&#8212;some of you will remember <a href="https://www.lafermiere.us/">my expensive French yogurt kick</a>). Yes, it might sound a little dull (poetry, cookies, tea, the sky, robins, early spring flowers, etc.), but I&#8217;m recommitting myself to the small luxuries in life.</p><p><strong>Kelli Russell Agodon, <a href="https://kelliagodon.substack.com/p/rogue-poems-and-reasonableunreasonable">Rogue Poems &amp; Reasonable/Unreasonable Amounts of Cookies</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I write to my elected officials, I donate when I can, I hold a sign at rallies, I feel helpless.</p><p>After reading for a few hours, most nights I still lie awake trying to keep my mind from heading back to poet and activist June Jordan&#8217;s question, &#8220;How many gentle people have I helped to kill just by paying my taxes?&#8221;</p><p><strong>Laura Grace Weldon, <a href="https://lauragraceweldon.com/2026/03/19/cow-inspired-calming-practice/">Cow-Inspired Calming Practice</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Every once in a while, you stumble upon something so lovely, so unpretentiously beautiful and quietly profound, that you feel like the lungs of your soul have been pumped with a mighty gasp of Alpine air. <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/This-Poem-that-Heals-Fish/dp/1592700675/?tag=braipick-20">This Is a Poem That Heals Fish</a></em> (<em><a href="http://www.worldcat.org/title/this-is-a-poem-that-heals-fish/oclc/85614782&amp;referer=brief_results">public library</a></em>) is one such vitalizing gasp of loveliness &#8212; a lyrical picture-book that offers a playful and penetrating answer to the question of what a poem is and what it does. And as it does that, it shines a sidewise gleam on the larger question of what we most hunger for in life and how we give shape to those deepest longings.</p><p>Written by the French poet, novelist, and dramatist Jean-Pierre Sime&#243;n, translated into English by <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/tag/enchanted-lion/">Enchanted Lion Books</a> founder Claudia Zoe Bedrick (the feat of translation which the Nobel-winning Polish poet <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/tag/wislawa-szymborska/">Wis&#322;awa Szymborska</a> had in mind when she spoke of &#8220;that rare miracle when a translation stops being a translation and becomes &#8230; a second original&#8221;), and illustrated by the inimitable <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2015/10/14/louis-i-king-of-the-sheep-olivier-tallec/">Olivier Tallec</a>, this poetic and philosophical tale follows young Arthur as he tries to salve his beloved red fish Leon&#8217;s affliction of boredom.</p><blockquote><p>Arthur&#8217;s mommy looks at him.<br>She closes her eyes,<br>she opens her eyes&#8230;</p><p>Then she smiles:</p><p>&#8212; Hurry, give him a poem!</p><p>And she leaves for her tuba lesson.</p></blockquote><p>Puzzled and unsure what a poem is, Arthur goes looking in the pantry, only to hear the noodles sigh that there is no poem there. He searches in the closet and under his bed, but the vacuum cleaner and the dust balls have no poem, either.</p><blockquote><p>Determined, Arthur continues his search.<br>He runs to Lolo&#8217;s bicycle shop.<br>Lolo knows everything, laughs all the time, and is always in love.<br>He is repairing a tire and singing.</p></blockquote><p>So begins the wonderful meta-story of how poetry comes into being as a tapestry of images, metaphors, and magpie borrowings. Each person along the way contributes to Arthur&#8217;s tapestry a different answer, infused with the singular poetic truth of his or her own life.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/03/21/this-is-a-poem-that-heals-fish/">This Is a Poem That Heals Fish: An Almost Unbearably Wonderful Picture-Book About How Poetry Works Its Magic</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>2 &#8211; How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?</strong><br>If I were a liar, I would say it was thanks to the mentorship of [INSERT IMPRESSIVE NAME] and [INSERT PRESTIGIOUS SCHOOL]. The truth is that I squeezed between Jim Morrison lyrics and the skips on <a href="https://www.discogs.com/artist/382316-Dylan-Thomas?srsltid=AfmBOorUiAGoyn4eDoZNBEKlnCzy4riHnZmzEKPxExGMrLTYqYX4jOcs">Dylan Thomas records</a> I took out of the library. How else does someone like me discover poetry? I&#8217;m from the Bronx. Nobody had books in the house.</p><p><strong>3 &#8211; How long does it take to start a writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?</strong><br>Writing is slow for me. Until it speeds up. Until I have something I have something to stretch across the room. Each project is intended as a new experiment unto itself. For /face, I started sampling images and language from Google Patents on facial surveillance technology. My first ten or twenty pieces were nothing anyone cosplaying mid-century Confessionalism would recognize as poetry. That&#8217;s the standard I set for myself. That&#8217;s how I view &#8220;experimentalism.&#8221; I was confused but also encouraged when I heard right back from editors who wanted to publish the material. Of course, unlike in the movies, any acceptance was followed by ten more rejections. Anything I achieved with this book came after this 1-in-10 ratio, which, for me, became a game of how weird I could make the work and which snob magazine I could freak out. That was my &#8220;journey,&#8221; as the kids say. That and a lot of reading and research. Boris Groys, Hito Steyerl, Shoshana Zuboff. They all rode along in the back seat. In the front was Nancy Spero squeezed alongside Don Mee Choi and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha.</p><p><strong>4 &#8211; Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a &#8220;book&#8221; from the very beginning?</strong><br>All poems begin at the bottom of the esophagus, where gastric acids begin breaking down anything I&#8217;ve ingested. Nutrients become energy; the rest, the materials that cannot benefit the body; they become poems. Everything starts with a few lines, then a few more. I cannot work without an idea for a &#8220;project.&#8221; Everything has to be an attack on a larger order, or why am I even bothering?</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/03/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_0789175035.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with William Lessard</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Its origin is unclear: it may or may not have been Oscar Wilde who said a net is just a bunch of holes woven together with strings. He may or may not have been quoting some ancient Asian wisdom. But I like the notion. It&#8217;s been a long time since I&#8217;ve read anything by John Irving, but I loved the books of his that I loved because of how the strings of things in the stories would wander around then come together in the end not in a tidy bow but in a weave, the weft bending to the warp of all the crisscrossed lines, the gaps suddenly making sense. I try sometimes to think about my own life that way, to catch a glimpse of some fabric of it. It&#8217;s hard to see the fabric of one&#8217;s own life, so close are we to the weave, trying to peer through the holes, missing the overall pattern often. I like this poem by my friend Jessica Dubey because of its filaments, and how they dangle and tangle, and how by the end something unexpected is woven, and something is caught in the net.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/03/23/like-silver-dollars-dropped-in-the-deep-end/">like silver dollars dropped in the deep end</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I want to share this essay in Annulet by Ryan Eckes and Laura Jaramillo: <a href="https://annuletpoeticsjournal.com/Ryan-Eckes-and-Laura-Jaramillo-Searching-for-the-Commons">&#8220;Searching for the Commons through Precarity and Crisis: American Poetics since 9/11.&#8221;</a> Both Ryan and Laura are my age but they feel like my elders in the world of poetry and politics, as they&#8217;ve both been tapped into things throughout the entirety of the last few decades (whereas I have been playing catch up for the last 7 years or so). This essay offers a really insightful history of what it was like as a poet on the left through the Bush years, OWS, and beyond. There is also a really astute analysis of how social media and the internet more broadly has impacted us as poets striving for a common connection. It&#8217;s a great essay and one not to miss. (They also happen to give a brief shout out to Dead Mall Press, which is much appreciated.)</p><p><strong>R M Haines, <a href="https://woodenbrain.substack.com/p/einstein-was-a-pisces">Einstein was a Pisces</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Rabble rouser, organizer,<br>bold bright spirit wrapped in awkward<br>flesh and cotton ball softness and<br>carrying the most essential<br>pastels (pink as your cheeks, baby<br>blue like your eyes, and white as grief<br>and graves and talcum powder). You<br>flung your arms up, shouting over<br>signs and crowds and floats wheeling on<br>hidden wheels with black treads. You lead<br>the Pride parade; you celebrate<br>the you others have yet to learn<br>to see&#8212;</p><p><strong>PF Anderson, <a href="https://rosefirerising.wordpress.com/2026/03/23/day-of-visibility/">Day of Visibility</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The past couple days have found me stuck on the latest play script, at the end of Act I, which is about usually where I&#8217;ve been getting stuck. It&#8217;s turning into a mystery, almost, and I am not sure I want it to go in that direction. I am the writer, after all, you would think what I say goes. But then again&#8211;many poem projects have gone in entirely different ways than intended, so maybe I should let the writing wander as it may. I will return in a couple of days and see if it&#8217;s working better or if I can find a way to make it so.</p><p>In the meantime, I have been writing some early bits to a newish project,<em> the bone palace</em>, which was meant to accompany a set of fun fauxtographs I made up a couple years back. The images are proving a ripe and fertile space for building stories around and within them. The project as it starts feels very similar to <em>errata, </em>which was just a little chap of borrowed formats, something which I love doing in the midst of other kinds of projects. But the narrative feels sharper here and less collage-like [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/03/the-bone-palace.html">the bone palace</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On Thursday, I finally submitted the manuscript for my fifth collection, <em>I Saw What I Know.</em> For the past six weeks, I&#8217;ve needed to write a blurb for it &#8211; the short summary which appears on the back cover. Instead of writing it, I wrote an article about blurb writing. In the process of finishing said article, I began researching the process of caring for cat litter trays. ADHD procrastination and paralysis is REAL.</p><p>The thing is, I don&#8217;t have a cat. So I invite you to celebrate with me the miraculous fact of having writing not just this article, but also my fifth collection. [&#8230;]</p><p>If you think that writing a blurb for someone else is hard, try writing your own.</p><p>Seriously, try it. There&#8217;s a lot to be gained from it. Not only in practicing your skills for concise, original writing &#8211; but also, developing a deeper understanding of your own work. If you can&#8217;t explain concisely what you&#8217;ve written; if you can&#8217;t describe what someone may gain from reading it &#8211; maybe you don&#8217;t know your work enough; maybe you don&#8217;t love or believe in it enough. And maybe you can change that.</p><p>You don&#8217;t have to have written a pamphlet or book. If you&#8217;re not working towards publication, or you&#8217;re years away from a completed collection, it doesn&#8217;t matter. Just pull together a bunch of your writing; say 10-50 poems.</p><p>Read them; make notes. Identify your primary concerns, the recurrent topics and themes. State &#8211; at least to yourself &#8211; what your strengths are, how a kind and interested reader might describe your voice. Consider what that reader may take away from the experience of your work.</p><p>Writing about your own work will give you a stronger appreciation of your own voice; an understanding of your techniques, your intention, your focus. The river of poetry has its own currents. It will &#8211; and should &#8211; always take you in unexpected directions &#8211; but at the same time, you have oars, you can build your own craft, you can follow a chart. You get to decide what you are writing about, and how, and why. A blurb is a great way to dip into the process.</p><p>Let yourself be lavish. Get drunk on your own wine.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/pulling-your-own-oars">Pulling your own oars</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The other morning, leaving our Mexico City apartment after reading the news, I had the thought, &#8220;Everything I do is meaningless in the face of all this violence, and in the face of death.&#8221; But then we spent that day in the National Museum of Anthropology, where thousands of ancient objects from the civilizations of Mexico, all made with extreme care, are housed in a magnificent building, also made with care and attention to every detail &#8212; and I came back to myself and my purpose.</p><p>We are living in a time when the concentration of money and power, ruthless economic competition, and the demand for everything being done immediately are forcing the prioritization of speed and efficiency over perfection and care. Carefulness will increasingly be found in individual and small enterprises that exist more and more outside of, and independent from, mass production. In Japan, master craftspeople are revered as &#8220;living treasures&#8221;, but there is a real question of whether our western societies will have the capacity in the future to appreciate and preserve not only what artists, craftspeople, poets, and musicians produce, but the traditions, rooted in care and attention, that are the foundation for these arts.</p><p>For a long time, we&#8217;ve counted on arts organizations and institutions to do this work of preservation, education, and passing on. Not only are those institutions under political and financial assault, but their &#8220;gatekeeping&#8221; has been criticized as exclusionary and discriminatory &#8212; and rightly so. That in itself is another subject.</p><p>The point I want to make here is that living in a very different culture, as I&#8217;ve been doing for these weeks &#8212; one that has had a long history of political disruption, colonialism, violence, discrimination, and economic hardship, and where individuals could not expect much of anything from outside themselves and their communities &#8212; makes certain things clear. The vibrancy of the arts here is the result of a choice: people have taken that responsibility upon themselves because they know that art is intrinsic to life. The work that is shown in the National Museum of Anthropology is almost entirely unattributed: these are extraordinary objects that were made by anonymous master craftspeople. Many of the people who live in Mexico today have spent their lives knowing and valuing those traditions more than they value personal recognition. The indigenous woman sitting in the street selling exquisite needlework take pride in her craft, sells it to make a small living, and smiles when she sees that you appreciate it. The older man who takes my hand and draws me into an impromptu salsa in a city street is filled with an ebullient joy that he freely gives to me. I doubt that either of them has an easy life. But I would argue that both are more in touch with their humanity than many of us.</p><p>The sickness and malaise we are experiencing in the western First World is a disease that comes not only from the top down &#8212; which it surely does &#8212; but because too many of us have lost the conviction that art for art&#8217;s sake is vital for our own spirits, and for our communities. When we, as artists, buy into the capitalist model, thinking that money, fame, titles and rewards are the measures of our self-worth as creators, we have already missed the point and made it far harder for ourselves. One does not have to be a famous poet to write words that matter. Art and music that lift people up can happen when two or three people get together to make some &#8220;house music,&#8221; or dance in a park.</p><p><strong>Beth Adams, <a href="https://cassandrapages.substack.com/p/care">Care</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There&#8217;s been a good sprinkling of words in my week all round because as well as reading I have been writing. One of my favourite ways to write poetry is when there is a compelling feeling of being pulled to set something down. This week my sister was my muse. We had been talking on the phone and after telling me something she hadn&#8217;t told me before she said it would make a good poem if I wanted to write it. I pondered on what she had said on one of my walks and came back with a pretty much fully formed poem. I remembered to leave it to rest overnight as well as read it out loud to check it sounded right before editing it and smoothing its edges. Then I recorded it as a voice note and sent it to her. We both agree that is has something special about it so I am hoping it will find a home in the not-too-distant future.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/03/23/a-daffodilesque-dalek-the-first-mow-and-the-muse/">A DAFFODILESQUE DALEK, THE FIRST MOW, AND THE MUSE</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Rather incongruously, I am a member of the French Rugby Federation (FFR) &#8212; this is because I do all the admin for my middle son&#8217;s rugby club membership &#8212; and as a result I had access to early booking for the last game of the Six Nations tournament, which was played last Saturday night at the Stade de France &#8212; a huge, 80,000-seat stadium in the north of Paris. Thanks to my prompt use of the booking link, I managed to secure for my son and I what turned out to be amazingly good seats, just behind one of the goals, for a very reasonable sum. [&#8230;]</p><p>Pindar&#8217;s victory odes are some of the most sublimely beautiful poems in the entire Western tradition. But they are also, quite sincerely, about sport. We don&#8217;t have a Pindar today, but I was struck by how the spectacle and conduct of the match provided in many ways most of the elements of a traditional epinicion. The match itself was preceded by a very impressive show, featuring two men dressed as medieval knights mounted on horses riding onto the pitch (they carefully covered it up first, presumably to avoid the possibility of the players ending up face-first in a pile of horse manure). I&#8217;m not sure exactly what they were meant to represent, as there was no explanation as far as I could tell, but the pageant was clearly intended to allude to the long history of conflict between France and England &#8212; as an Englishwoman, I thought of Agincourt, but perhaps the French would recall rather the Battle of Hastings.</p><p>Pindar&#8217;s epinicia, similarly, always have a structuring myth linking the present-day victor and his sponsor to the distant past &#8212; generally, Pindar liked if possible to work in Achilles, Hercules or Ajax, presumably as their manly credentials seemed the best fit for athletic victory. But unlike the organisers of the Six Nations spectacle, he had the somewhat harder task of creating in each case a link between a reasonably well-known myth and the specific family, town or island of the victorious athlete and/or his aristocratic sponsor. Partly as a result, Pindar&#8217;s versions of myths are often eccentric or obscure, and he may have invented details to suit his purposes. The style of formal epinicia, which generally avoids direct names and narrative in favour of complex allusions, adds to this effect. So overall, the fact that I wasn&#8217;t quite sure exactly what story this moving and impressive opening show was alluding to was also rather authentic.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/a-pindaric-ode-for-louis-bielle-biarrey">A Pindaric ode for Louis Bielle-Biarrey</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Great imagist poetry is distinguished by its ability to immerse the reader fully in the immediacy of emotion. Amy Lowell&#8217;s sensual warmth, Richard Aldington&#8217;s taut emotional energy, and the deceptively simple yet resonant details of William Carlos Williams all exemplify this tradition. <em>I Am Not Light</em> by Louise Machen (Black Bough Poetry, 2025) demonstrates that same capacity. The collection is arranged in three parts&#8212;<em>Into the Darkness</em>, <em>Origins of Darkness</em>, and <em>Into the Light</em>&#8212;and throughout them Machen&#8217;s urgent, sensuous poems exploit the powerful cultural associations we attach to darkness and light. Darkness appears as a space of turmoil, threat, and uncertainty; light signals growth, clarity, and renewal. Yet in Machen&#8217;s work, the two are not oppositional. They are symbiotic. Darkness becomes a necessary condition of transformation, a landscape to be endured before light can be reached. [&#8230;]</p><p>Louise Machen&#8217;s nomination for the Forward Prize for Best Single Poem feels entirely justified. As Briony Collins notes in her endorsement, there are echoes of Sylvia Plath in these poems, but Machen&#8217;s voice remains unmistakably her own: contemporary, incisive, and deeply resonant. <em>I Am Not Light</em> establishes her as one of the most compelling poets writing today.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/03/21/review-of-i-am-not-light-by-louise-machen/">Review of &#8216;I Am Not Light&#8217; by Louise Machen</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There&#8217;s a <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/folio-forty-five-ottawa-poets-edited-by.html">folio of 45 Ottawa poets</a> up at <em>Periodicities</em>. <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-pearl-pirie-two.html?m=1">2 of my poems</a> are included, &#8220;memento vivis&#8221; and &#8220;a placebo science&#8221; which are ghazal or ghazal adjacent. Don&#8217;t miss <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-michelle.html">Michelle Desbarats</a>&#8216; and <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-sarah-kabamba.html">Sarah Kabamba</a>&#8216;s and <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-tamsyn-farr-two.html">Tamsyn Farr</a>&#8216;s while you&#8217;re there. Ooh, and <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-cameron-anstee.html">Cameron</a> has a book of essays coming out this fall.</p><p>Word from <a href="https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2026/03/forty-five-ottawa-poets-ben-ladouceur.html">David O&#8217;Meara</a>, &#8220;When you&#8217;re starting off, it&#8217;s easier to take writing really seriously while also having a really good time doing it. I want to do whatever I need to, in my writing, in order to be doing those two things simultaneously again. &#8220;This matters&#8221; plus &#8220;This is fun,&#8221; the whole time I&#8217;ve got my notebook open.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/03/23/new-poems-up-2/">New Poems Up</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Reviewers, particularly poetry reviewers, aren&#8217;t usually paid (the commissioning editor themselves might be an unpaid volunteer so this isn&#8217;t a &#8216;pay the writer&#8217; argument). They get a free copy of the book they review. That&#8217;s not to say the reviewer doesn&#8217;t benefit from reviewing. They get an introduction to a book they may not have chosen to read or couldn&#8217;t afford to buy. There&#8217;s value in writing a review: assessing the poems, developing critical skills, learning how to justify an opinion and argue a case. Reviewing is also a way of getting or keeping a reviewer&#8217;s name in print in between publications of their own work where the reviewer is also a practitioner. Occasionally a reviewer may be thanked.</p><p>There should be no reason to unpublish a commissioned review. A review is only commissioned on books that a magazine editor has deemed worthy of a review. A reviewer has read and re-read the book, written and edited the review, the review has been further edited and agreed. After that lengthy process, which gives the editors and reviewer plenty of time to withdraw if there&#8217;s a disagreement about the tenor of a review or the reviewer can&#8217;t edit it to the correct length, before the review is published. The writer or publisher of the book under review may ask for inaccuracies to be corrected, but they cannot dictate what a poetry magazine does or does not publish if the references to the book are accurate. A disagreement about the opinion expressed should not sway a magazine editor to take down a review.</p><p>It is galling to see a review taken down after publication, when there was nothing wrong with the commissioned review. When Gutter magazine took down their commissioned review of Polly Clark&#8217;s &#8220;Afterlife&#8221;, a review good enough to be used as part of a &#8216;book of the month&#8217; feature, alarm bells rang.</p><p>Alarm bells continued to ring as the review was not withdrawn for reasons of quality or even disagreement with opinions and arguments put forward in the review.</p><p>It seems the withdrawal was actioned on the basis of a complaint from a reader (whose name may be known to the magazine editors but has not been revealed publicly) not about the review, not about the contents of the review, not about the book being reviewed, i.e. not for any legitimate reason. The review was taken down because the complainant drew the editors&#8217; attention to social media posts made by the poet whose book was reviewed. While I&#8217;m not discussing what those posts were or the views of the poet, this review was withdrawn after agreement to publish for reasons that had nothing to do with the review.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/03/18/reviewers-deserve-better-than-the-gutter/">Reviewers deserve better than the Gutter</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Power and authority are at stake when we talk about what makes a &#8216;bad&#8217; or a &#8216;good&#8217; poem. This is what animates much of the discourse. Without power and authority, the critical judgement of poetry experts has no answer to the popular appeal of Insta-poems and other money-spinning media forms &#8212; they are reduced to customers reviewing niche products.</p><p>But power and authority is hard-won; genuinely illuminating, convincing evaluations of individual poems and books take time to muster. Meanwhile, there is the constant need to promote interest in those same poems and books, as well as related events.</p><p>So shortcuts are taken. Agreement among a small and insular group is presented as widespread consensus. Authority is extended far beyond its natural purview, as when a poet who is successful and well-liked among his coterie, but limited in range, makes pronouncements on the state of the whole scene. Bad poems need to be invented, and need to vastly outnumber good ones, in order for the authoritative critic to have a function. What&#8217;s more, the criteria must remain somewhat hazy in order to avoid the average reader learning how to consistently apply it themselves. Periodic trenchant denunciations of work that, to the untrained eye, is remarkably similar in character to that which the same critic praises are a smart move.</p><p>By the same token, the real offence committed by those editors and activists who rule out work by avowed political reactionaries, or are overly interested in poets&#8217; claims to membership of an oppressed group is that their criteria are too transparent. They make it too easy to jump through the hoops, and in so doing threaten to mortally wound the power of other editors and critics &#8212; which is wielded on the basis that they possess an exceptional capability when it comes to judging poems.</p><p><strong>Jon Stone, <a href="https://shotscarecrow.substack.com/p/essay-what-is-a-bad-poem-exactly">ESSAY / What is a &#8216;bad&#8217; poem exactly?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>2. In the thick of the monsoon, the poem should hold its breath and sink into standing water. In the deepest murk, lie the choicest words. A poem must be an abalone diver.<br><br>3. Through mango-hued summers, the poem cannot be shadow. Cannot be shade. The poem should climb up a light beam to interrogate the sun. To look into its eyes. To hold itself up to that light. A poem must sweat.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/things-you-should-teach-your-poem">Things you should teach your poem-child before it leaves home</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This morning, I&#8217;m thinking about the downside to surprise&#8212;the sudden stroke that leaves you fatherless, the burst in the dot-com bubble that evaporates wealth you realize was only ever imaginary, the rollover that leaves your twin brother paralyzed from the neck down. . . . During the summer of 1988, my mother went into an operating room for a routine hysterectomy and woke to a diagnosis of ovarian cancer.</p><p>This kind of surprise has a profound effect on character. Often, during the seven years of my mother&#8217;s intermittent treatment, I thought about how hardship turns some of us bitter while others become better versions of themselves. Once during those years, I visited the family farm after my parents had gone dancing. During that season, chemotherapy was having its way with Mother. &#8220;Well,&#8221; she said to me, &#8220;I could stay home on a Saturday night. And be alone with the side effects. Or I can be among friends. I can dance with your father. The music, the company will take my mind off how I feel.&#8221;</p><p>During the years I lived in Austin, my husband Scott and I became friends with the Houston poet Erica Lehrer. I well remember the time I saw Erica get out of her car for a reading and walk toward us with a cane. A decade younger than I, Erica was a vital, healthy presence in the poetry community. <em>She&#8217;s turned an ankle</em>, I thought. <em>Soon she&#8217;ll be tossing that cane</em>. Erica&#8217;s need for a cane, I soon learned, was far more serious than a sprain. She&#8217;d been diagnosed with ataxia, one of three in every hundred-thousand. Also known as Multiple System Atrophy, ataxia is progressive, affecting coordination, affecting speech, affecting everything.</p><p>Once on a visit to Houston, Scott and I stayed with Erica and her husband. By then, Erica was using a wheeled walker. She spoke haltingly, her tongue uncooperative. Still, Erica entertained us. She made us laugh. She found humor in carrying a medical document about her diagnosis&#8212;to save her from being arrested for public drunkenness.</p><p>Yesterday, I pulled Erica&#8217;s poetry collection from my shelves. The title says so much about this remarkable woman: <em>Dancing with Ataxia</em>. The poems are sometimes bluntly honest about the grueling losses exacted by ataxia. But never self-pitying, always alive with the resilience that defined Erica Lehrer.</p><p><strong>David Meischen, <a href="https://davidmeischen.substack.com/p/i-am-more">&#8220;I Am More&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I get as close as I can to Turtle, careful to read their body for signs of unease. Turtle does not move, but stares right at me. Or through me. A heft. A mountain. A gargoyle. A carapace of watery wisdom. There are so many ways to describe and honor Turtle. Staring into the ancient, the ancient stares back. Maybe someday I too will be craggy. Maybe someday I too will have deep rivulets across my skin and in them a language of time well-spent. But right now I am soft. My shoulders are worldless. My language, young and unsure.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/sprout-became-a-woman">Sprout Became a Woman</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My head</p><p>pushes from<br>the mud, the primordial</p><p>churn, seething,<br>thick with salty<br>activity.</p><p>Shit or fish sauce?</p><p>Call<br>it March.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3664">March: A Sooty Skin</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>William Wordsworth famously described poetry as &#8220;strong emotion&#8230;recollected in tranquility,&#8221; and that is how I want to think about&#8212;or think <em>with</em> and <em>through</em>&#8212;this collection of poems by Thomas A. Thomas, a photographer and an extraordinary poet, now the Assistant Managing Editor at <a href="https://moonpathpress.com/">MoonPath Press</a>.</p><p>Because <em>My Heart</em> leads us down the path of a partner&#8217;s diagnosis of Alzheimer&#8217;s Disease, through the painful decline, to loss, I both wanted to read this book, and I very much didn&#8217;t want to read it. Before my own husband was moved into a residential care home, I picked the book up multiple times, but couldn&#8217;t make myself continue. Around the first of this year, however, I told myself it was time, and I took it with me to a local caf&#233;. Once I began, I read it all the way through. Five sections, 29 poems: I thought I could easily gin out a review. Tried. Couldn&#8217;t. A few weeks ago, having read it through again, I found my way in. Narrative arc of disease and death aside, <em>My Heart Is Not Asleep </em>is primarily a love story. So that&#8217;s the book I&#8217;m here to tell you about.</p><p>&#8220;Around Us,&#8221; the second poem in the collection, lights up the two main characters like gods in an ancient Greek drama. They may be on their way to a hard fall, but, reading this poem, I knew I wanted to be there to see it:</p><blockquote><p>A beam of full moonlight falls through the skylight and<br>graces our pillows, our faces, lights up<br>dust motes, like stars turning silently above our bed.</p></blockquote><p>Silver lights reflect &#8220;high knotty pine ceiling / and the knotty pine walls, each knot / you said, a galaxy.&#8221; The poem holds the arc of the whole book, ending with &#8220;eons exploded and long gone dark stars.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/review-of-my-heart-is-not-asleep/">Review of MY HEART IS NOT ASLEEP</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I was 17 or 18 years old, we read in class Milton&#8217;s <em>Paradise Lost</em>. The poem, written in blank verse, retells the biblical Fall of Man &#8212; Satan&#8217;s temptation of Adam and Eve and their expulsion from Eden &#8212; in over ten thousand lines of verse, first published in 1667. Lucifer, cast into the fires of Hell after his failed rebellion against God, resolves to take revenge by corrupting humanity and its innocent residence in paradise. He arrives into the Garden of Eden and, disguised as a seductive serpent, tempts Eve into eating an apple. She bites, then Adam bites into the apple. Their disobedience to never taste the forbidden brings upon the world sin, death, and shame, and they are expelled from Paradise. But Milton reassures his readers: the divine angel Michael reveals that Christ will one day redeem humanity&#8217;s fall.</p><p>Last summer, I went to Giverny. Among the purple, and the pink, and the red, and the blue flowers, in the middle of ice cream shops that sold melon and strawberry <em>parfums</em>, there are rows and rows of apple trees in bloom, with green and red apples hanging off the branches, apples of varying colours rotting on the soil, apples eaten by worms, insects and birds. Codling moths and apple maggots laying eggs on apples, living inside apples, feeding and living their lives inside the flesh of apples. Have you ever seen apple trees in bloom? On a sunny spring day, have you seen fully ripe fruit, a pear or a fig or even litchis, placed right next to each other, full and bright? A few days ago, at the Port Royal farmers&#8217; market, where I like to go sometimes, a man cut a section of a mango that could almost have been as good as an Indian mango.</p><p>If I were to choose between god and an apple, I would always choose an apple. But I am one of the fallen people.</p><p>It&#8217;s the biting of the apple that makes me human.<br><br>It&#8217;s the fall that ungods me.</p><p><strong>Saudamini Deo, <a href="https://beyondsixrivers.fr/2026/03/23/the-fallen-people-interregnum/">The Fallen People: Interregnum</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Read literally, alongside its setting, &#8220;You Are Not Christ&#8221; might be regarded as a kind of prayer for, and to, the people of New Orleans who suffered during the flooding: a simultaneous wish for strength and softness. It is a poem of tremendous compassion, its employment of the second person performing a kind of compassion transfusion in the reader: Imagine this, the poem insists: the moment of your drowning, of the body overruling at last&#8212;as it will&#8212;what we call <em>the mind</em> and by which we mean insight, planning, steadfast belief in futures. What you wish for yourself in this instant, the poem reaching into your chest, itself a sort of &#8220;strange new air,&#8221; is what you&#8217;d wish for anyone alive to these same circumstances.</p><p>I&#8217;ve called this a prayer because it insists on a variety of humility. Both &#8220;wonder&#8221; and &#8220;a need to know&#8221; are presented here as separate from actually living, from the need to simply continue doing so; at the same time, the poem predicts, you will not ask after meaning: What, after all, could be the meaning of drowning? What is meaning to the one who ceases seeking it? So unguarded, or defenceless, you become &#8220;like prey caught in the wolf&#8217;s teeth,&#8221; but here the simile is load-bearing. You&#8217;re not prey, not the lamb&#8212;not some Christ figure suffering a millenia-defining passion&#8212;but what makes Christ possible.</p><p>What can this mean? So we bleat on, Christs against the current . . .</p><p>It&#8217;s been a difficult month, but I&#8217;m still here. Reading this poem now, with the knowledge that a strange new air, of sorts, does fill my lungs, I&#8217;m delighted to follow Laurentiis&#8217;s instruction. If I read it as a prayer for the already departed, for myself I read it as a kind of spell, an incantation for continuance: &#8220;You will not ask / what this means.&#8221; This is the way to be ill, at least for me, I have come to understand. It&#8217;s also, I&#8217;ve begun to suspect, simply the way to be alive. I knew this, in the blithe repose of health, acknowledged it far more than I ever felt it, but now, having run short on the prophylactic illusion of mortal exceptionalism that mostly keeps us sane and swimming, I find I need something else: whatever it is that precedes meaning: that makes it mean.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/you-are-not-christ-by-rickey-laurentiis">&#8220;You Are Not Christ&#8221; by Rickey Laurentiis</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i have been reading up<br>on how to become a ghost.<br>i think i was made to stay<br>past my welcome in a house<br>no longer my own. i was born<br>in the united states which means<br>i was fed a sick promise<br>that everything should arrive to us whole.<br>someone else can fuss with the pieces.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/03/23/3-23-5/">assembly required</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We make such a fuss of the dead. It is as if they&#8217;ve gotten closer to god, have become untouchable, holy, sacred, elevated. They can no longer make mistakes or let us down. It&#8217;s almost of some comfort when they&#8217;re gone, both the good and bad, the tyrant and martyr become stars we gaze upon or curse safe in the knowledge they&#8217;re floating in a far off orbit.</p><p>The living piss and shit and make a mess of things. They will talk out of turn, interrupt us, upset us with sudden opinions we wish they never held. Half the time we wonder what they&#8217;re on about. Sometimes, regrettably, they explain. Worst of all they will show us their poetry. They want us to listen as they read and then, when they&#8217;re done, they&#8217;ll ask for applause or money or love or praise or prizes. A dead poet will do none of these things. A dead poet rises above such vulgarity, a dead poet no longer has success to suffer, has no further failure to relish. Their work is done. Ours, set to continue as we carry them on, perhaps out of duty or pity or for beauty and the eternal.</p><p>I must tell you of the morning I left that house. We &#8211; and I say <em>we</em> because he was there too, the dead poet. I had sensed he&#8217;d been awaiting my arrival, approached me ghostly when I first crossed the threshold. He was cold and unfriendly but gradually he&#8217;d warmed to me. Or maybe I&#8217;d cooled to him, met his temperature, adjusted my thermostats accordingly. This is what you have to do with poets, dead ones especially, this is how we must approach poetry. We need to reconcile with it, become accustomed to it, assimilate with it. It requires effort. We must fully immerse ourselves in it.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n56-the-palace-of-misfortunes">N&#186;56 The palace of misfortunes</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Mat Riches&#8217; poem puts me in mind of Margareta Magnusson&#8217;s 2017 book <a href="https://canongate.co.uk/books/3192-dostadning-the-gentle-art-of-swedish-death-cleaning/">D&#246;st&#228;dning: The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning</a>. The aim of this practice is to go through possessions before death to avoid leaving your family with the huge task of clearing them after you have died. Sadly, the experience of many of my bereaved midlife friends belies this, and they end up burdened with emptying entire houses of a lifetime of things whilst also trying to deal with their grief; something Riches skilfully evokes in this poignant poem. I was startled to find out whilst researching this piece that <a href="http://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/mar/16/margareta-magnusson-swedish-death-cleaning-author-dies-age-92.%20Accessed%2018%20March%202026">Magnusson died very recently aged 92; </a>I assume she left everything tidy.</p><p>As with Anne Stewart&#8217;s poem last week, the title is a &#8216;Ronseal&#8217; title: does what it says on the tin, appropriately enough for a shed poem. It immediately signals either illness or bereavement; &#8220;Dad&#8221; is not able to do this job himself, and no longer needs the things in his shed. The first stanza sets out the Herculean task, and we share the speaker&#8217;s sense of overwhelm as he shows us how: &#8220;Tobacco tins of tacks and screws / cover every surface and shelf.&#8221; (1-2). The departed dad is of that war-born generation which remembers rationing and never throws anything out that might be useful; commendable in today&#8217;s need for sustainability. However, these repurposed tins from the days of loose-leaf tobacco are full of things that have not, in fact, been re-used and now won&#8217;t be. [&#8230;]</p><p>If this is a man cave, the man is missing; we are in the territory of absence as presence. There is life here, but it is the sort that contributes to decay: &#8220;The spiders have been working hard&#8221; (5).</p><p><strong>Suzanna Fitzpatrick, <a href="https://suzannafitzpatrick.substack.com/p/the-deeper-read-11">The Deeper Read 11</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t know about you, but when I read this I found it an incredibly uncomfortable, but joyous experience. I knew from reading previous editions that this wasn&#8217;t going to be a kicking, and look. I knew it was coming because Suzanna asked me, but even so, until it landed in my inbox on Friday morning, I had no idea what she would say. How deep is deep (deep, man..), etc.</p><p>And I think this is about as deep as it&#8217;s possible to get with that poem. As with all good critical writing, I think it teaches the writer themselves something back to them. And Suzanna has really made me see under the hood of my own work. I&#8217;d be lying if I said all of the things that she points out were intentional. I&#8217;d be lying if I said that some of it isn&#8217;t the work of craft and having worked on poems enough now to sort-of-have a sense of what I&#8217;m doing (not always, but sometimes).</p><p><strong>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/03/22/pull-the-uther-one/">Pull the Uther One</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I bought<br>it on impulse, Corydalis solida &#8220;Beth Evans&#8221;&#8212;so<br>pink!&#8212;knowing my friend Beth would smile at how<br>her namesake shows me early every spring the way<br>life comes and comes again despite Beth being years<br>dead. Both of us content that the cultivar name will be<br>lost, shaken loose, once the bees visit my garden.</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="http://chatoyance.blogspot.com/2026/03/cultivar.html">Cultivar</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was very pleased to receive my copy of<a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/shop/p/poems-beautiful-useful"> this poetry pamphlet</a>, published by <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/11888159-jem?utm_source=mentions">Jem</a> and selected (with an introduction) by <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/111379771-victoria?utm_source=mentions">Victoria</a>. [&#8230;] I have left behind me in England all my books of Elizabethan poetry. Bullen&#8217;s <em>Shorter Elizabethan Lyrics</em>, collections of madrigals, that sort of thing. I do have Gardner&#8217;s <em>Oxford Book</em> here, and now a <em>Golden Treasury, </em>and Fowler arrived recently, but not my Ben Jonson, my Cavalier poets. No Donne! One manages, of course. First world problems and all that. Still, this was a very welcome addition to my stocks.</p><p>Naturally, Victoria Moul has made a very fine selection, and with some unfamiliar poems. The idea is that some of these poems are rarely anthologised. At least two of them, <em>Like to the falling of a star</em> by Henry King and <em>Dazzled thus with height of place </em>by Henry Wotton, are in Gardner, but not in Ricks. (Why Ricks excluded them is a mystery to me, though it&#8217;s not his period and it was Gardner&#8217;s.) Some of them are in Fowler too. But there are several poems not always available elsewhere and the overall selection has a good balance of the familiar and the unexpected.</p><p>Victoria says in her introduction that it was taken for granted in the seventeenth century that a poem &#8220;teaches or expresses something that it is helpful to remember as one tries to conduct a decent life.&#8221; This is the theme of the pamphlet. Here, in that spirit, is the Henry King.</p><blockquote><p>Like to the falling of a star,<br>Or as the flights of eagles are,<br>Or like the fresh spring&#8217;s gaudy hue,<br>Or silver drops of morning dew,<br>Or like a wind that chafes the flood,<br>Or bubbles which on water stood:<br>Even such is man, whose borrowed light<br>Is straight called in, and paid to night.<br>The wind blows out, the bubble dies;<br>The spring entombed in autumn lies;<br>The dew dries up, the star is shot;<br>The flight is past, and man forgot.</p></blockquote><p>Hot stuff, and really quite modern. Clive James was writing things like that final couplet in his early days. One can mistake this for mere verse, too simple, too gross to be &#8220;great literature.&#8221; Well, read it again with a real sense of your own mortality. <em>The wind blows out, the bubble dies; The spring entombed in autumn lies</em>&#8212;this is the good stuff.</p><p><strong>Henry Gould, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/poems-beautiful-and-useful">Poems Beautiful and Useful</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Publishing by subscription has a long history, of which the platform that hosts this newsletter is only the most recent example. Once upon a time, publishers would send letters out drumming up interest in a title before committing to print. This continued (and evidently continues) right into the era of commercial publishing, especially for niche or expensive works; Edward Lear was always buttonholing wealthy friends and patrons to support his books of illustrations. There is nothing new under the sun, as the teacher said.</p><p>I&#8217;m working in a tradition, then. I had more recent inspirations, too. Several small publishers I really admire, like Galley Beggar and Peirene Press, both of which mainly deal in fiction, offer annual subscriptions to supporters as complement to a traditional distribution method, though complement isn&#8217;t quite the right word given the <a href="https://samj.substack.com/p/what-does-it-cost-to-produce-a-book">scale of the challenge</a> facing independent publishers these days. The subscription seems well suited to poetry: poetry publishing is scrappy, and slow, and it relies on individual risk-taking to make things happen.</p><p>The model also suited me because I am doing this, for the most part, in that fabled thing called &#8220;spare time&#8221;, so wanted to publish in a way which at least felt sustainable, while also allowing me as much time and momentum as possible to find a readership for each pamphlet&#8212;or at least, to give each one its moment in the sun. That moment is something that, from my own observations, poetry presses often struggle to create. The model also imposes a limit and a rhythm, both of which seem well suited to poetry. Well, we shall find out.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/like-to-the-falling-of-a-star">Like to the falling of a star</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When we sit down to work together, it isn&#8217;t just about placing an image next to a stanza. It is about a &#8220;shared attention,&#8221; temporary alignment of perception, where the boundary between your inner world and another person&#8217;s becomes briefly, thrillingly permeable. It&#8217;s a commitment to looking together until something new emerges. Our latest collaboration, <em><a href="https://redhawkpublications.com/Feverdream-Poems-p806693878">Feverdream</a></em>, grew out of Ren&#233;e&#8217;s poems of grief, illness, and the complex physical and healthcare landscape in Appalachia. In this context, attention, when it is shared, becomes a form of care.</p><p>For the artist and writer looking to embark on a similar journey, we&#8217;ve distilled our process into a practical roadmap for creating a book that is more than the sum of its parts.</p><p><strong>1. Find a Root System (The &#8220;Why&#8221;)</strong></p><p>A collaboration needs a foundation stronger than just &#8220;liking each other&#8217;s style.&#8221; For <em>Feverdream</em>, the root system was <strong>Narrative Medicine and the bodily experience</strong>. Ren&#233;e spent two years writing with patients in a chemotherapy clinic while her own brother underwent treatment, experiences that profoundly shaped both the content and the process of writing these poems. Sally&#8217;s work, centered on the human form, met those poems in a deeply personal space and allowed for word and image to create a reflective intimacy. The body itself is where external and internal meet, and both the art and poems share this embodiment. The body doesn&#8217;t belong fully to either world, which makes it such fertile ground for both poetry and visual art to speak to each other.</p><p><strong><a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/03/22/the-shared-lens-a-practical-guide-to-creative-alchemy-guest-post-by-renee-k-nicholson-sally-brown/">The Shared Lens: A Practical Guide to Creative Alchemy &#8211; guest post by Ren&#233;e K. Nicholson &amp; Sally Brown</a> (Trish Hopkinson)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In my last post, I wrote about habitat loss and language. I considered how language can act to connect us to the increasingly &#8220;lossy&#8221; habitat of the material world. This leads me to consider how language itself, language as a habitat in itself, is also subject to the depredations of the modern world. I do feel that language as a habitat is under threat. It is being taken over by corporate and other geopolitical sources of power.</p><p>In Uwe P&#246;rksen&#8217;s conception, <a href="https://andrewpgsweeny.medium.com/plastic-words-fa8586eb887a">according to Andrew Sweeney</a>, &#8220;plastic words&#8221; are &#8220;words that have become supremely abstract though being stripped from their original context or meaning.&#8221; I can&#8217;t help but imagine a further process whereby microplastics have entered language like they&#8217;ve entered everything else. Language is suffused by capital, technology, commodity. In the contemporary world, it&#8217;s hard to find an outside.</p><p>If feels like, down to its bones, language has become entangled. Of course, language has always been implicated, forged, through power relations. Made from the societies it is part of. But something has changed with virtuality, AI, and the acid rain of the contemporary media panopticon. We&#8217;re soaking in it, Marge.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/against-language-as-the-great-pacific">Against Language as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Depth is the culprit hastening shrinkage,<br>meltwater and the salty layer</p><p>drivers both of change and loss.</p><p>We measure warmth and the salinity,<br>quantify the calving and new fracturing,</p><p>conclude our lack of means to stop<br>makes faster flow and level rise,</p><p>philosophers to think; the scientists, surmise.</p><p>No slow surrender, they to land.<br>No adaptation, for us no plan.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/in-greenland-glaciers-fall">In Greenland, Glaciers Fall</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I studied with a famous poet when I was in college. I took two poetry workshops with her, and it&#8217;s safe to say that her approach to critical reading and revising made me a much better writer. It also made me into an editor, and that led to a long career in journalism. Although I was writing and editing prose about tech, I used skills I had developed in those poetry workshops every day: Close reading, attention to nuance, an ear for rhythm and flow, a sense of structure and drama, an ability to hear what&#8217;s left unsaid or what could be said better.</p><p>But for about ten years after college, I wrote no poetry at all. She was such a sharp critic, and her voice was so powerful and distinctive, that I could not write a single line without hearing her comment on it. Fairly or not, I imagined her voice as a disparaging one, and it discouraged me from continuing to write my own work. Without explicit assignments, I simply couldn&#8217;t get started.</p><p>My way back into writing for myself (poetry and otherwise) started with haiku. I found the form was spare enough, and modest enough, that it could slip past my internal poetry sentries.</p><p>Haiku are extremely short, and the form eschews most of the tools used by modern poets: Metaphor, overt allusion, excessively self-conscious wordplay, direct descriptions of emotions. It is a self-effacing form, Zen in its origins and aspirations. I found I could write haiku about the plum petals in my daughter&#8217;s hair, an orange-brown leaf twirling down next to a Calder sculpture, a flock of crows crossing the space between skyscrapers, or the moon rising over a neighbor&#8217;s house. I might not have been writing great poetry, but these little moments satisfied my need to connect with the world and to express myself. Then I found that the words on the page set up a kind of resonance that started to shake loose the rust and get the poetic wheels turning again.</p><p>That gave me enough of a charge to keep going. I discovered the <em>haibun</em> (a form mixing prose and haiku) and from there started experimenting again with longer poems and essays.</p><p><strong>Dylan Tweney, <a href="https://dylan.tweney.com/finding-your-flow-as-a-writer/">Finding your flow as a writer</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>returning the water<br>from the vase<br>to the flower garden&#8230;</p><p><strong><a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/03/16/waiting-in-the-wings-by-tom-clausen-2/">waiting in the wings by tom clausen</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em><a href="https://www.salmonpoetry.com/details.php?ID=634&amp;a=385">Belfast Twilight &#8211; haiku, senryu and micro-poems</a></em>, Liam Carson, Salmon Poetry, 2025, ISBN: 978-1-915022-96-7, &#8364;12.00</p><p><em><a href="https://redmoonpress.com/product/upward-spiral-haiku-of-tim-murphy/">Upward Spiral &#8211; haiku and senryu</a></em>, Tim Murphy, Red Moon Press, 2025, ISBN: 978-1-958408-73-5, $20.00</p><p>It appears that Irish haiku poets are like busses; they arrive in twos. And while my previous reviews touching on this genre have focused on women poets (think Maeve O&#8217;Sullivan and Rosie Johnston), this time it happens to be two male writers, one based in Ireland, the other in Spain.</p><p>The inclusion of the word &#8216;senryu&#8217; in the subtitles of both collections raises some interesting questions around what the haiku/senryu distinction might mean in the context of urban-dwelling, 21<sup>st</sup> century English-language poets for whom the urban landscape is more present than the natural one and whose world is more defined by human behaviour than the motion of the seasons.</p><p>In Japan, the distinction began to dissolve with the New Rising Haiku movement of the 1930s and 40s, with works like Sanki Sait&#333;&#8217;s airport haiku and his war poems which were derived from news reports rather than direct experience. These poets also tended to dispense with the standard <em>kigo</em> (seasonal identifier words) that typified traditional haiku. And so the lines became blurred. [&#8230;]</p><p>I&#8217;m tempted to link Carson&#8217;s use of assonance to his positioning of his work in a distinctly Irish tradition. It may be fanciful to hear an echo of the Celtic Twilight in the book&#8217;s title (less so, perhaps, given the Jack Yeats poems), but the Irish literary link is most forceful, unsurprisingly perhaps, in a set of five haiku in the Irish language under the title &#8216;S&#233;ideann An Gaoth&#8217; (The Wind Blows). One poem in particular has a very specific and resonant allusion to the Early Irish:</p><blockquote><p>londubh bu&#237;<br>I measc na gcrann<br>s&#233;ideann an gaoth</p><p>yellow blackbird<br>among the trees<br>the wind blows</p><p>(my translation)</p></blockquote><p>It&#8217;s impossible not to be reminded of the widely translated 9<sup>th</sup> century poem often referred to as &#8216;The Blackbird of Belfast Lough&#8217; behind these lines, particularly given the broader Belfast connections in the book:</p><blockquote><p>Int &#233;n bec<br>ro l&#233;ic feit<br>do rinn guip<br>glanbuidi:<br>fo-ceird fa&#237;d<br>&#243;s Loch La&#237;g,<br>lon do chra&#237;b<br>charnbuidi.</p><p>one small bird<br>whose note&#8217;s heard<br>sharply pointed<br>yellowbill</p><p>whose notes fly<br>on Loch Laig<br>blackbird&#8217;s branch<br>yellowfilled</p><p>(again my version)</p></blockquote><p>Along with, perhaps. a hint of the tale of &#8216;<a href="https://celt.ucc.ie/published/T302018.html">Buile Shuibhne&#8217;</a>, the mad birdman of Irish legend. The poem also resonates with Carson&#8217;s English-language &#8216;nature&#8217; haiku, quite closely in this example from &#8216;Island Haiku (&#193;rainn Mh&#243;r)&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>sheets of rain<br>a robin shelters<br>inside a thorny bush</p></blockquote><p><em>Belfast Twilight</em> is a fine collection, full of quiet moments of delight.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://millsbi.substack.com/p/two-irish-haikuists">Two Irish Haikuists</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve had an interest in translating poetry for as long as I can remember. As an undergraduate, I was awarded the B&#8217;nai Zion medal for excellence in Hebrew, largely on the basis of an independent study I did with Professor Robert Hoberman for which I produced translations of biblical, medieval, and contemporary Hebrew poetry. If I am ever able to locate those translations, I will publish them in a future issue of On My Desk Now.</p><p>If I had to trace my interest in translation to a single point of origin, though, it would be to the year in junior high school when I-don&#8217;t-remember-which-rebbe encouraged our class to buy the ArtScroll edition of <em><a href="https://www.artscroll.com/Books/9781578191055.html?ref=richardjnewman.com">Shir Hashirim: The Song of Songs</a></em>, so that we could better understand &#8220;the most misunderstood book in the entire <a href="https://reformjudaism.org/tanach?ref=richardjnewman.com">Tanach</a>.&#8221; Because the ArtScroll translation was allegorical, he explained, it revealed the text&#8217;s true significance in a way that translations based on the text&#8217;s plain meaning did not. I don&#8217;t think I understood at the time what the word allegorical meant, but I was in for a shock when I opened the book. I understood <em>Shir HaShirim</em> to be a book of sometimes quite erotic love poems, the beginning of which is usually <a href="https://faculty.washington.edu/snoegel/PDFs/articles/Song%20of%20Songs%20Translation.pdf?ref=richardjnewman.com">rendered</a> as something like &#8220;May he kiss me with the kisses of his mouth.&#8221; The same verse in the ArtScroll version, however, is translated like this: &#8220;Communicate Your innermost wisdom to me again in loving closeness&#8230;&#8221; Many years later, I would discover a <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/misfit-torah/id1399327341?i=1000599659126&amp;ref=richardjnewman.com">podcast episode</a> in which the host offers a really interesting, philosophical, and very-much-worth-wrestling-with justification for the allegorical translation. At the time, though, my only response to what ArtScroll had done was anger, since the only purpose I could discern for their allegorical approach was to obscure the eroticism of the original. Ever since then, I have been fascinated by what&#8217;s at stake culturally and otherwise in why and how a text gets translated from one language into another.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/translating-korean-poetry/">On My Desk Now: Translating Korean Poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Selecting one Gwendolyn Brooks&#8217; poem is no easy task because of the depth of her work. But, I settle into &#8220;The Bean Eaters,&#8221; one of her most visible poems, mainly for the poem&#8217;s richness as a love poem but also because of its sharp contrast to much of today&#8217;s world. The lines point toward a future that has dissolved aloneness: &#8220;Two who are Mostly Good. / Two who have lived their day&#8221;. They go about their lives, always moving in the same direction. This is one of the secrets to their shared life. They&#8217;ve become accepting of their moving together.<br><br>What&#8217;s gained isn&#8217;t the accumulation of material things &#8211; though their physical world is always present to them &#8211; but the gain is in the actual living. There&#8217;s repetition, surely &#8211; they &#8220;keep putting on their clothes / And putting things away&#8221; &#8211; but the writing shows this more as a natural flow, as an order to their world, rather than actions or fear that have trapped them. There&#8217;s no real glamor in the simple things that surround them, that give them comfort, but Brooks makes clear the lasting value of this life that is theirs. It&#8217;s their world on their terms.<br><br>This is also a beautiful poem about memory, about aging. The &#8220;twinklings and twinges&#8221; that are the real stuff of living a full life &#8211; are significant because they&#8217;re shared. The pair is busy at work &#8211; nurturing their love, taking in the necessary source of life that will allow them to continue. Happiness finds itself in the intimate simplicity of chipware, creaking wood, and tin.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-gwendolyn-brooks-the">Thoughts on&#8230; Gwendolyn Brooks, &#8220;The Bean Eaters&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Tonight, at a literary event at Parnassus with our author Laing Rikkers, I met up with Major and Didi Jackson. I also met a woman who told me she would like to be a poet. I asked the woman whether she had ever studied poetry, and she said no. I asked if she had read much poetry, and she said, &#8220;Robert Frost.&#8221; It&#8217;s a good start. Robert Frost is a man of letters, well-loved for a reason. But becoming a serious poet requires reading, writing, and living with poetry. Going to readings is a part of that journey. I grabbed dinner with Major and Didi after the reading, and I thought about how being in the company of great poets&#8212;having an artistic community&#8212;is also part of the building blocks of a creative life.</p><p>The building blocks of a creative life aren&#8217;t really blocks at all. I like to think that what moves you toward a creative life are nonlinear, wild spaces you wander through that might add up to a creative undertaking. [&#8230;]</p><p>What you don&#8217;t want to do is carry invisible suitcases with opportunities you didn&#8217;t get. I didn&#8217;t go to a good college. I didn&#8217;t have the resources to go to Breadloaf or any other writing conference. I could take stock all day, but it doesn&#8217;t help me write my next book. I&#8217;m working on a different frame of mind when it comes to creating a life that centers on artistic work.</p><p>All the men on my list started the race way ahead of me; that&#8217;s a fact. But if I stop to complain, I&#8217;m not in the race. And it isn&#8217;t a race. For them, maybe it is. They are building a Literary Career.</p><p>I am walking out into the clearing and finding my writing self. That creative self reads, writes, dreams, arches toward sunshine, swims, stretches, trains for greatness, learns from mistakes, is crazy and afraid. In my writing life, I&#8217;m not clawing my way out of the bottom of the well. I&#8217;m walking the clearing, finding my way toward creative work, soul work, publishing work, body work, family life, dream life.</p><p>Expectation is everything. So, young woman who wants to be a writer: Read a lot. Create a writing schedule, and make it flexible enough to adapt when work and caretaking pull your attention. Send out work to literary journals and magazines at least once a quarter. Try to spend some time with other writers or literary professionals. If the people in your life don&#8217;t take your writing seriously, get some people who do.</p><p>Most importantly, don&#8217;t compare yourself to others. Writing is hard enough.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/walking-through-the-clearing-the">Walking Through the Clearing: The Thrum of a Creative Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last night&#8217;s rain still lines the undersides<br>of leaves, and the lamps on the street have not<br>yet gone out. I am always standing in the in-<br>between, one hand folded around a dream, the other<br>raised toward the shape of a decision. My ear<br>turning toward the last place it remembers<br>an animal once stopped for water.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/03/poem-with-a-line-from-linda-gregg/">Poem with a line from Linda Gregg</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>So I have these boxes of postcards and letters I&#8217;ve received decades ago, ticket stubs, hard copy photographs that are so badly out of focus or dark, but there was no option but to keep them as they may have been the only record of an event. My analog past I can&#8217;t bear to throw out. I&#8217;ve been scanning some of them to print in photobooks. I love the accidental finger, the overexposed blanch. That&#8217;s who I was, I barely remember her.</p><p>In the midst of this paperwork bog, I&#8217;m trying to write poetry about happiness and where I find it. Finland has been voted happiest country again and my writing group has decided the theme for our next anthology will be &#8216;happy places&#8217;. So with war everywhere, job insecurity, my kids growing up and a lack of happiness where I am, I&#8217;m looking backwards, trying to remember what happiness looks like.</p><p><strong>Gerry Stewart, <a href="http://thistlewren.blogspot.com/2026/03/wallowing-in-nostalgia-is-better-than.html">Wallowing in nostalgia is better than red tape.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Here in Seattle, though so far it&#8217;s been cold, I love to see the cherry blossoms and daffodils that are the first heralds of spring. Also, more birds popping up. I&#8217;m hoping I can make it back up to Skagit Valley some time in April though my schedule is packed with book clubs, the Poetry night at J. Bookwalter&#8217;s restarting with a feature with Kelli Russell Agodon and her delightful new book from Copper Canyon, <em><a href="https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/books/accidental-devotions-by-kelli-russell-agodon-2/">Accidental Devotions</a></em>, and more medical appointments that tend to come around in my birthday month for some reason. (Does this happen to you too?)</p><p>I really like celebrating National Poetry Month&#8212;it&#8217;s nice for the world (and myself) to put a little more attention on this mostly neglected art form. Do you look forward to cooking something in spring? I love the influx of fresh peas and asparagus, and I love the rituals of Palm Sunday and Easter, which always feels like a celebration of chocolate and pastels (even if you&#8217;re not particularly religious). The myths of rebirth are generally hopeful, aren&#8217;t they? April is also my birthday month&#8212;and though I am getting older, I am thankful that I am still here, even for the hard parts. I am trying to adjust to 1) surviving &#8217;til I was 50 and 2) realizing I am, if you&#8217;ll forgive a pun, no longer a spring chicken. I am adjusting to the shift into elder mode&#8212;along with losing so many friends and family, which seems like a part of aging. I am actually physically in better shape and in less pain than I was ten years ago&#8212;food allergies sorted, out of my wheelchair thanks to my MS diagnosis and subsequent physical therapy focusing on balance, and better able to appreciate the smaller joys of life.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/first-day-of-spring-hawks-and-cherry-blossoms-april-rituals-poetry-month-and-birthdays/">First Day of Spring, Hawks and Cherry Blossoms, April Rituals: Poetry Month and Birthdays</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My Lenten poem-a-week project has been going better than I expected, and I&#8217;m grateful that I&#8217;ve actually been able to produce a draft poem a week as intended. It&#8217;s been freeing to not overly-worry or think too much and just get something written and posted on whatever topic or prompt was occupying my spirit in a given week. But as Holy Week and Easter approaches, I am feeling a sense of needing to slow down and really take time with these last two. They are on heavy topics that I feel extremely ill-equipped to deal with as a poet and a human being, not to mention a somewhat newly-reverted Catholic. Yet they are haunting me, and I feel the need to go deeply into their mysteries. And going deeply into a mystery takes time, silence and attention.</p><p><strong>Kristen McHenry, <a href="https://kristenmchenry.substack.com/p/poem-of-the-week-interlude-catana">Poem of the Week Interlude, Catana Lives!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>So far in this National Year of Reading, I haven&#8217;t bought any new books. At the end of last year, my daughter suggested buying <em>Hamnet</em> (Tinder Press, 2020) for me as a Christmas gift, since she knew the film was coming out but, once I&#8217;d heard the plot involved a child&#8217;s death, I said no. Then, when I saw a trailer for the film, I thought perhaps I should have said yes. Then there were advertisements, trailers, clips, snippets EVERYWHERE and I thought perhaps I should have tried to read the book before seeing the film. After that, the onslaught of film publicity turned me off both the idea of the book and the film, but, THEN, my friend Isy gave me her copy of the book, when I popped in to see her and her new baby. So, I started reading and, without meaning to, I still haven&#8217;t bought a new book. [&#8230;]</p><p>Although never named as William Shakespeare, Agnes, her playwright husband, and their family live in Stratford-upon-Avon (although the playwright has to spend much time in London),in the late 1500s. The book&#8217;s introduction plainly states that it is a work of fiction, so a few esteemed Shakespearian experts who have questioned the accuracy of the story are rather missing the point, in my view.</p><p>It&#8217;s been a long time since I was so moved by a book. What an extraordinary phenomenon reading can be. I still haven&#8217;t seen the film &#8211; I think I need a little distance from the effect the book had on me before I book any tickets.</p><p><strong>Josephine Corcoran, <a href="https://andothernotes.substack.com/p/hamnet-by-maggie-ofarrell">Hamnet by Maggie O&#8217;Farrell</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s World Poetry Day so instead of talking about my favorite famous poets (Lucille Clifton, Mary Oliver, Jericho Brown, Dorianne Laux, Jane Hirschfield &#8211; is there anything that hasn&#8217;t been said?) I thought I&#8217;d share this epistolary poem written for me, something I never dreamed would happen. I&#8217;ve known poet Robert Okaji for many years, after we virtually &#8220;met&#8221; on his poetry blog and mine around about 2010 or so. Robert writes the kind of lyrical, meditative poetry that I could only dream of writing.</p><p>Thank you, Bob, for your years of friendship! Here&#8217;s to many more.</p><p><strong>Letter to Hamrick from the Century of the Invalidated</strong></p><p>Dear Charlotte: The sun here winces daily, stumbles<br>across morning before smudging gray like an old slate<br>scarred with decades of chalk dust and erased messages.<br>I&#8217;m hunting work, and there are days when it feels<br>as if past experiences have been rubbed out, or maybe<br>I can&#8217;t make myself slog through the powdery white<br>crusted blend of ennui and discounting youth. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://charlottehamrick.substack.com/p/a-poet-once-wrote-me-a-poem">A poet once wrote me a poem</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;Dear March &#8212; Come in &#8212;,&#8221; written in its author&#8217;s great creative surge of the early 1860s, feels slighter and lighter than many of the poems by Emily Dickinson (1830&#8211;1886) we&#8217;ve discussed here before. In this poem, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-because-i-could-not-stop?utm_source=publication-search">no carriage bears the speaker toward eternity</a>. No life has &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-my-life-had-stood-a-loaded?utm_source=publication-search">stood a loaded gun</a>.&#8221; The &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-before-the-ice-is-in?utm_source=publication-search">frock I wept in</a>&#8221; never offers itself to be worn here. But then, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-my-life-had-stood-a-loaded?utm_source=publication-search">we knew already that Emily Dickinson liked March</a>, having read only recently her lighthearted &#8220;We Like March,&#8221; which dates from roughly a decade later.</p><p>That poem of the early 1870s turns on Dickinson&#8217;s knowledge of and love for natural philosophy, with its references to violets (which are certainly March&#8217;s purple &#8220;shoes&#8221;), the Adder&#8217;s Tongue fern, the sudden nearness of the sun after the long winter, the ubiquity of mud as the snow melts, and the &#8220;buccaneering&#8221; bluebirds. It is a poem of the out-of-doors, full of the wind and bluster that signal New England&#8217;s return to life.</p><p>Today&#8217;s Poem, by contrast, bustles with a hospitable domesticity, welcoming back the traveler-month after a long absence. March returns like an old school friend, its bluster reduced to mere windedness after a long walk, to be beckoned upstairs for a gossip. In precisely this way the young Dickinson did write to her school friends, with ardent affection, longing always to see them and trade news.</p><p>Her speaker&#8217;s emphatic tone here &#8212; alternately chiding March for staying away too long and turning up without notice, and apologizing in a hostessy manner for not turning the hills purple enough &#8212; is underscored by the poem&#8217;s meter, a variation on her characteristic common or hymn measure. Here, especially in the first stanza, she has cast many of her lines in dimeter, as though to divide the expected tetrameter in half, an effect that suggests a hostess&#8217;s distraction, bustle, and fluster when a guest arrives at a time not precisely appointed.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-dear-march-come-in">Today&#8217;s Poem: Dear March &#8212; Come in &#8212;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#12501;&#12451;&#12483;&#12471;&#12517;&#12450;&#12531;&#12489;&#12481;&#12483;&#12503;&#12473;&#12395;&#22633;&#39080;&#20809;&#12427;&#12288;&#24196;&#30000;&#12402;&#12429;&#12405;&#12415;</p><p><em>fisshu ando chippusu ni shio kaze hikaru</em></p><p>salt<br>on fish and chips<br>the wind shines</p><p>Hirofumi Shoda</p><p>from <em>Haiku Shiki</em> (<em>Haiku Four Seasons</em>), November 2025 Issue, Tokyo Shiki Shuppan, Tokyo</p><p><strong>Fay Aoyagi, <a href="https://fayaoyagi.wordpress.com/2026/03/23/todays-haiku-march-23-2026/">Today&#8217;s Haiku (March 23, 2026)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I don&#8217;t think of this blog as being primarily about hope, but <a href="https://transactionswithbeauty.com/search?q=hope">hope is certainly an undercurrent</a>. Possibly one of <a href="https://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/sustainthegaze?rq=hope">my favourite poems that I&#8217;ve ever posted</a> is &#8220;Hope is Not a Bird, Emily, It&#8217;s a Sewer Rat&#8221; by Caitlin Seida. It of course refers to the<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/42889/hope-is-the-thing-with-feathers-314"> Emily Dickinson</a> poem. In her brilliant book on the writing life, <em><a href="https://www.sofiasamatar.com/books/opacities/">Opacities</a></em>, Sofia Samatar quotes a friend who talks about &#8220;doing an Emily Dickinson&#8221; which is to say, disappearing from the internet, and who knows where else. And isn&#8217;t it tempting?</p><p>But then, also, I think of Simone Weil, and unrelatedly, ageism, or being an artist and writer these days, or being someone of the artist class, and this line by Weil: &#8220;Indeed for other people, in a sense I do not exist. I am the colour of dead leaves, like certain unnoticed insects.&#8221; I think about my goal, after Rumi, to be the one in the room the least in need. (Bad career move, good soul move). And then, I also think about what Anne Bogart says about how &#8220;we have something to learn from the person who has not yet spoken.&#8221; (This in the context of civic conversation, the hope and the notion that everyone should be heard). I think of the line from Elizabeth Gilbert who said, &#8220;no one is thinking about you&#8221; &#8212; that salve. And it&#8217;s true, it&#8217;s really true. What to do with these gifts?</p><p><a href="https://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/caringforyoursoul">I recently quoted </a>Rebecca Solnit on hope and her saying that &#8220;maybe the community is the next hero.&#8221; And while I do believe that this is the answer politically, I, a bundle of contradictions myself, also crave the hermit life. At the same time, I also wish to be seen, heard. (Generally speaking, the eternal writer&#8217;s conundrum/quest &#8212; how to be known and seen but also simultaneously invisible). We want our due and not too late, unlike Jean Rhys, quoted as saying at an award ceremony where she received accolades late in life, late in her career, &#8220;It has come too late.&#8221; In a James Wood essay in <em>The New Yorker</em>, he said of Rhys, &#8220;She lacked hope, but never courage.&#8221; In truth, most of us are unlikely to win any awards.</p><p>Ah well, it&#8217;s courage that&#8217;s the thing. It&#8217;s not time we lack, said Adam Zagajewski, but concentration. Wouldn&#8217;t it be nice to have all in equal measure, hope, courage, concentration.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/rathermit">My Prima Donna Rat Hermit Era</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Go green. Green light, go. Green thumb deep digging in flowered earth. Greenhorn morning wet behind the ears. Green promise. Green renewal. Greenbacks riding cash cows in green-dawn calm. Green hornet. Green goblin. Grass is greener where envy grows, green screen sky edit me a ton more trees. Green frog rap, green moss nap. Green apple. Green peas. Green light, go get me more world peace.</p><p><strong>Rich Ferguson, <a href="https://richrantblog.wordpress.com/2026/03/17/green/">Green</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8216;Rosie Jackson and Friends&#8217; gave a short reading of poems celebrating kindness on Saturday evening at Rook Lane Chapel in Frome. It was the final event in a week-long Festival of Kindness co-ordinated by <a href="https://thegoodheart.uk/">The Good Heart</a>, a volunteer-led community group. The chapel was decorated with local schoolchildren&#8217;s kennings on the theme of kindness.</p><p>From left to right in the photo above, the line-up was Morag Kiziewicz, Stephen Boyce, Tessa Strickland, Rosie Jackson, Ama Bolton, Michelle Diaz, B Anne Adriaens, Rachael Clyne, and hidden behind me is Dawn Gorman, reading for Claire Crowther. We had a wonderfully attentive and responsive audience of about thirty. Rosie selected and sequenced the poems with great sensitivity. The programme included three pieces by the Palestinian American poet Naomi Shihab Nye. Some of the poems featured personal encounters, while others responded to appalling recent events. Morag&#8217;s poems celebrated the kindness of Alex Pretti and Renee Good. One of Rosie&#8217;s poems was addressed to the schoolgirls who were killed during the first wave of air-strikes on Iran. At the end, Rachael led us all in a short Buddhist meditation. [&#8230;]</p><p>Yesterday skylarks were singing above a nearby field. This morning the sky above me is full of the noise of military aircraft. I have heard this sound twice before in the past forty years; the first time, the target was Libya. The second time, it was Iraq. What can fifty minutes of focus on compassion do to counteract the daily horrors of these terrible times? Perhaps it effected a small change in us. Be kind to yourself, dear reader, and do no harm to others.</p><p><strong>Ama Bolton, <a href="https://barleybooks.wordpress.com/2026/03/23/poems-of-kindness/">Poems of Kindness</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 11]]></title><description><![CDATA[cave fish, unnamable muscles, the armpit of the fire, an abandoned glass factory, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-11</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-11</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 23:25:33 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/5ad8d144-f40d-4e79-a995-1559d06c3e9f_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: cave fish, unnamable muscles, the armpit of the fire, an abandoned glass factory, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>My fingers press on these cold keys and shed<br>bits of skin too small to see. The wind presses,<br>too, slips through gaps in the window casings.<br>A busy wind, chilling my hands while ripping the<br>last of the winter abscission hold-outs on down.<br>Leaves shed, dropping off and piling, so slow to<br>dance. The scars on stems.</p><p><strong>Lori Witzel, <a href="http://chatoyance.blogspot.com/2026/03/shed.html">Shed</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As a young BBC business reporter during the first Gulf War in 1991, I was attached to the rolling Radio News service known as &#8216;Scud FM&#8217;, a reference to Iraq&#8217;s powerful Scud missiles. Reporters like me (see the young me in pic) would scuttle down to the rolling Radio 4 studio and throw ourselves in front of a mic to answer the eternal question : what&#8217;s happening on the oil markets?</p><p>I would talk breathlessly about the latest price of Brent Crude and what had sent it up or down, prices at the pump, inflation and interest rates. [&#8230;]</p><p>It is amazing to me how a few words from a news presenter can instil mild feelings of panic in so many of us.</p><p>That&#8217;s true even when the real economic effects of a headline have not been felt yet. We go through the same cycle of emotions, distress at the human disaster of war and muted fright for ourselves. And it is the familiarity, the repetition, that hits our neural buttons &#8211; we have felt it before and we will feel it again.</p><p>When I think calmly about the wider phenomenon of repetition, I see its potential as well as the downside.</p><p>It is sound and echo, expectation and confirmation. If you put it in a poetic context, we gladly use it all the time. It is one of our most important aural (and visual) tools. Think of tools such as villanelle, sestina, pantoum, anaphora and epistrophe.</p><p>It pushes powerful buttons in our minds and makes us listen more carefully. Something repeated is always going to be something significant. It may be a warning.</p><p>In the real world, when history repeats itself, it usually is.</p><p><strong>Lesley Curwen, <a href="http://www.lesleycurwenpoet.com/repetition-and-gulf-wars/">Repetition and Gulf Wars</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The men who killed poetry</p><p>Hated silence . . . Now they have plenty.</p><p>Quoted from Larry Levis, &#8220;Garcia Lorca: A Photograph of the Granada Cemetery, 1966&#8221; in Larry Levis, <em>The Selected Levis | Selected and With an Afterword by David St. John</em>, Rev. Edition (Pitt Poetry Series, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2000, 2003), pp. 62-63</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/the-sunday-quote-44b">The Sunday Quote</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Sharp crack startles the room<br>vegetation maps forgotten<br>we regard each other</p><p>And then the fighter jet howl<br>and Tehran<br>suddenly seems next door</p><p><strong>Chris Clarke, <a href="https://lettersfromthedesert.substack.com/p/letter-from-the-desert-ajo">Letter From the Desert: Ajo</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I keep returning to May Sarton&#8217;s description of the &#8220;poignant evening light,&#8221; and the strange shape of<em> poignancy</em> when pronounced &#8212; how it goes from the stillness of <em>poignant</em> to the shimmer of that added &#8220;<em>ancy</em>&#8221;, a sound that reminds me of a city called Nancy in Alsace-Lorraine.</p><p>My first glimpse of bears rutting occurred in a park in Nancy, not far from the lycee named after Chopin where I spent part of my seventh grade year unlearning the stability of language.</p><p>Today, the adjective &#8220;poignant&#8221; means &#8220;evoking a keenly felt sense of emotion, especially of bittersweet sadness or regret.&#8221; But the archaic meaning of this word &#8212; &#8220;sharp or pungent in taste or smell&#8221; &#8212; also appears regularly in poems.</p><p>And there is the prick of it as well . . .</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://alinastefanescu.substack.com/p/poignant-in-a-poem-by-may-sarton">&#8220;Poignant&#8221; in a poem by May Sarton</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It is no surprise:<br>Dove flies,</p><p>Startled<br>By an approaching human.</p><p>Light, smooth as a pebble<br>Minus the few feathers discarded in fright &#8212;</p><p><strong>Luciana Francis, <a href="https://lucianafrancis.substack.com/p/dove">Dove</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Eight of us met in Bron&#8217;s print studio at the Dove on Saturday to critique new work and work-in-progress for our upcoming exhibition at <a href="https://www.acearts.co.uk/">ACEarts</a> in Somerton, featuring new work by the nine active members of Artists&#8217; Book Club Dove, and a selection from guest artist Fiona Hingston. If you&#8217;re in the area, do come to meet the artists on Saturday 21st April 11am to 1pm. [&#8230;]</p><p>where nothing happens<br>the women worry<br>the men play golf</p><p>two colours going<br>down one side and up the other<br>a third is the overlap</p><p>this is the Grand Canyon<br>put it on white<br>put it on black</p><p><strong>Ama Bolton, <a href="https://barleybooks.wordpress.com/2026/03/15/abcd-march-2026/">ABCD March 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I spent the weekend before last with my brother Adrian at his home in Bath, which is the longest period of time we&#8217;ve spent together for donkey&#8217;s years and was really lovely. I then caught a bus which travelled through the former mining areas of Somerset around Radstock and Midsomer Norton, before going through the Mendips, with Glastonbury Tor on the horizon, and descending to Wells, the (self-proclaimed) smallest city in England. Wells has a lovely centre &#8211; mainly but not only the beautiful Gothic cathedral and the adjoining, fully-moated Bishop&#8217;s Palace. [&#8230;]</p><p>Ama Bolton and her group of like-minded folk, the Fountain Poets, were very welcoming, and read &#8211; and, in Rachael Clyne&#8217;s case, sang &#8211; some fine pieces. I read from both my collections plus a couple of new poems too. Ama has kindly invited me back for another reading next March, so I&#8217;d better write lots more poems in the next 11 and a half months. I must add the not-quite-random fact that both Ama and I have had poems published about dental hygienists!</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/03/11/beetle-in-a-box/">Beetle in a box</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When Kim and I set up Shaw &amp; Moore, both of us were in the final stages of our next collections, and neither of us were convinced that we weren&#8217;t just seeking distraction from the monumental tasks of drafting, ordering, editing, setting out, proofreading and the hundred other vital jobs involved in finishing a book.</p><p>We probably were, but it&#8217;s worked out well all the same. We intended to share our journeys towards completion and publication, whilst reflecting on our lives as poets and parents and friends, our various enthusiasms, the challenges we face as poets with ADHD.</p><p>Inevitably, the Substack has evolved and expanded over the last two years to encompass many shiny, sharp or fascinating things which have distracted us along the way. As my therapist says, it&#8217;s not that I lack attention &#8211; it&#8217;s that I have too MUCH of it. I am constantly distracted by the world.</p><p>Kim&#8217;s new book &#8220;The House of Broken Things&#8221; is finished, and it&#8217;s due out on 23<sup>rd</sup> April. You can pre-order it <a href="https://www.hachette.co.uk/titles/kim-moore/the-house-of-broken-things/9781472160478/">here</a>, or you could come to the afternoon launch in the Wainsgate Chapel on the hills above Hebden Bridge on 3<sup>rd</sup> May, where she&#8217;ll be supported with readings from me, Amanda Dalton, Carola Luther and Malika Booker. There&#8217;ll also be live music and cake &#8211; tickets available <a href="https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/wainsgate/kim-moore/e-ovqyqv">here</a>.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/you-were-the-forest-and-you-were">You were the forest and you were my mother</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Facebook, Twitter, Blue Sky, Instagram, TikTok, Substack&#8230;Which feel useful to you instead of like distractions, or worse, something that makes you feel worse, that drains you? I am contemplating this as I am trying to decide where to stay, which to cut, where to spend energy. As you can probably tell, I&#8217;ve been blogging for a long time, and I don&#8217;t really want to stop now. This is where I feel most comfortable.</p><p>I was thinking about how I follow writers, artists and musicians&#8212;like I learned about the Aimee Mann concert from a post of hers on Instagram and the last piece of art I got I learned about from an artist&#8217;s Instagram post as well. I hear about books from my writer friends mostly on Facebook&#8212;but books from authors I don&#8217;t know&#8212;it&#8217;s harder to pin down where I hear about them. The next time I have a new book, I&#8217;m not even sure what social media network will be working, not run by a supervillain, or where writers and readers congregate. I do know that I keep in touch with friends and family on various platforms&#8212;even LinkedIn sometimes (yes, I do have an old profile there). It shouldn&#8217;t be hard to cancel one social media or another, but somehow, I just keep hanging in there, posting once in a while.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/surprise-snow-aimee-mann-and-daffodils-in-mt-vernon-and-social-media-musings/">Surprise Snow, Aimee Mann and Daffodils in Mt Vernon, and Social Media Musings</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>in a zen temple<br>near Arashiyma, an old man<br>dragged neat lines down soft gravel</p><p>nothing else stirred<br>cloud and bird and leaf and eye and breath<br>paused to watch<br>though later, each one would swear<br>that they had seen something different</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/stuck-on-a-hospital-bed-at-fifty">Stuck on a hospital bed at fifty-six, mortality mixing with the saline in my IV, I wondered if writing poetry would be a good use of the time I had left</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I gazed upon several astounding pieces, one after another encased in a glowing, golden light, a rotunda filled with Surrealist alchemy. My she-roes on full display, the intensity and intricacy of each painting and photograph I beheld with new eyes, though I&#8217;d seen a few of the <a href="https://nationalmuseumofmexicanart.org/events/the-magic-of-remedios-varo">Varo pieces up close</a> at the <a href="https://nationalmuseumofmexicanart.org/">National Museum of Mexican Art in Pilsen in Chicago</a> many years prior.</p><p>And yet, one solitary painting stole my heart, captured it, and left me thinking for the rest of my journey: &#8220;The Inner City&#8221; by abstract expressionist / Surrealist, Alice Rahon.</p><p>Rahon (another Gemini) was a French-born Mexican poet and artist who used the technique of <em>sgraffito</em> (scratching into canvas or metal) in her work. Like Frida, Rahon suffered a serious childhood accident which put her in casts and affected the rest of her life: one of the injuries was a fracture in the right hip, which forced her to recuperate lying down for long periods of time (like Frida). Rahon was invited, with two other artists / writers, to visit Mexico by Andre Breton and Frida. (Rahon was the first female to be published in <em>Editions Surr&#233;alistes</em> in Paris in 1936; as well, she and Frida had become fast friends).</p><p>One of Alice&#8217;s poetry books, <em>&#192; m&#234;me la terre</em> (On The Ground), featured a poem in which a woman <em>&#8220;removes her face / safe from the traps of mirrors&#8221;.</em> And another line, almost describing the painting (done years later): <em>&#8220;Like the ember with blue down / in the armpit of the fire / that speaks in sparks&#8221;</em>.</p><p><strong>Lina Ramona Vitkauskas, <a href="https://linaramonavitkauskas.substack.com/p/inner-synchro-cities">Inner synchro-cities.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Canadian winter is not the only reason we like to come to Mexico City in March. We love being here when the city&#8217;s iconic &#8220;purple trees&#8221;, the jacarandas, are in bloom. For northerners like us, the very idea of a purple-flowering full-size tree is astonishing, and enchanting.</p><p><strong>Beth Adams, <a href="https://cassandrapages.substack.com/p/jacaranda">Jacaranda</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em><strong>HOPKINSON: There&#8217;s something surreal and completely sad about seeing a poem for only a second and then having it wiped away by technology. I think I&#8217;m crying and excited at the same time. What emotions do you hope participants will experience?</strong></em></p><p>MEDSKER: Haha! I hope that people feel startled, then sad, then excited. It&#8217;s an exercise in being present. Something I&#8217;ve struggled with every day of my life. Ugh!</p><p><em><strong>HOPKINSON: Why poetry?</strong></em></p><p>MEDSKER: Poetry is sort of the way I think now. Condensing a slew of complex feelings and observations into as tight a space as possible. Their economy lends itself to accompanying a photo on a smartphone.</p><p>Composing the photos is the big feat for me. I&#8217;ve always wanted to be adept with visual art. Hopefully this will hone my eye!</p><p><em><strong>HOPKINSON: This could be seen as commentary on the whole concept of social media, the lack of tangibility, the short attention span of humans, or the fleeting connection of life to art&#8211;is it any of these things?</strong></em></p><p>MEDSKER: Absolutely. It&#8217;s a direct comment on the digital glut we live in. I don&#8217;t know about you, but I get overloaded with info very quickly. And it just turns my mind into a fragmented mess. It&#8217;s comforting, in a weird way, to know that these poems and pictures can be experienced but not held on to. I think that&#8217;s the real key&#8230; that these are meant to be experienced, not consumed. And there&#8217;s a difference between reading that statement and actually experiencing it in real time.</p><p>There&#8217;s this assumption that people have, I think, that we can stave off death if we work hard enough, care enough, consume enough&#8230; I hope this project helps people to be more contemplative about the fleeting nature of experience.</p><p>I have been doing a lot of pictures of flowers and wildlife. Sometimes I&#8217;ll throw a curveball like a thick metal chain on a gate or something. An old brick apartment blocks in the Bronx. The photos are often just something I think looks interesting and has a tangential relation to the words. Hopefully the juxtapositions are interesting to people.</p><p>I am always on the lookout for something to snap, and then I come up with the poem on the fly. I don&#8217;t like to fret too much about the lines. It&#8217;s a direct conversation between me and one other person, so I like to keep it intuitive.</p><p><strong>Trish Hopkinson, <a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/03/14/disappearing-poems-on-instagram-interview-with-josh-medsker/">Disappearing Poems on Instagram &#8211; Interview with Josh Medsker</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Each of the poets involved in the project, which was designed by Gill Connors, was sent a poem as part of a chain and asked to write a poem in response to it. I remember being excited when I saw that a poem had arrived in my inbox. I purposefully did not open the email until I had time to be at my writing desk with a dedicated time to think and write because I was keen to capture my response as cleanly as possible.</p><p>Firstly, I read the poem on the page in the same way that I read all poems that I am meeting for the first time. Then to increase my interaction and feel for the poem I read it out loud to myself. My usual way of starting the drafting of a poem when I know I am going to write is to use a fountain pen and a notebook. On this occasion I jotted down the parts of the received poem that resonated with me most strongly and let my mind take these thoughts for a walk. I found myself focussed on plate spinning, things imagined, and the passing of time. An idea began to emerge around the comments related to the t-shirt and the fact I had invented a persona that was beautifully fantastical.</p><p>Once I have ideas for a poem, I like to swap to typing into a word document so I can chop and change words and lines easily as the poem takes shape. Forming the whole on a clean page helps me think. I used this method to form a solid draft before rereading the poem I had received to find out if I could sense a link. I decided that I could, and that the evolution of a new poem from one read was happening naturally and in that sense, it was good to just go with it. After spending a little more time drafting and editing my work and reading it aloud, I left it alone overnight.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/03/16/stunt-girl/">STUNT GIRL</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As there is habitat loss in the world, so my sense of the habitat of my body feels reduced. Fragmented. The points of contact feel diminished. I&#8217;m virtual, a ghost floating over place, even as I understand how my body is written on by its environment. That what my body is is a result of its entanglement, its symbiosis with the ubiquitous network of materials and forces it lives in.</p><p>I look to language to help me understand. By putting pressure on the language I have access to, I hope to gain insight into how I am entangled in environment. I use language for points of contact with the world, points of interpretation for that contact. Speaking or reading my way into a more aware connection with the world. My habitat is being lost, so I attempt to rebuild it by finding a home in the words that help me relate to it. Jakob von Uexk&#252;ll&#8217;s Umwelt becomes Umwort. The environment constructed through an organism&#8217;s awareness of words.</p><p><strong>Gary Barwin, <a href="https://garybarwin.substack.com/p/language-as-habitat-as-ecotone">Language as habitat, as ecotone,</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>According to Lawrence Beaston in <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A54668858/AONE?u=nysl_oweb&amp;sid=googleScholar&amp;xid=c00a44a1&amp;ref=richardjnewman.com">Talking To a Silent God: Donne&#8217;s Holy Sonnets and The Via Negativa</a>, the Holy Sonnets, which Donne wrote between 1609 and 1610, render a spiritual struggle that many contemporary readers find troubling. For these readers, Beaston asserts, the &#8220;note of despair&#8221; the poems consistently strike is &#8220;out of keeping&#8221; with Donne&#8217;s position not just as an Anglican priest, but also as the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_of_St_Paul%27s?ref=richardjnewman.com">Dean of St. Paul&#8217;s Cathedral</a>. Given the spiritual leadership Donne was expected to provide, Beaston goes on, these readers expect the Holy Sonnets to arrive at some version of &#8220;spiritual health.&#8221; Since the poems explicitly do not do that, he argues, since they actively resist such a reading, to find them wanting on this account is to fail read them on their own terms.</p><p>Instead, Beaston proposes a reading that places the poems in the &#8220;long tradition of Christian mysticism,&#8221; known as the via negativa, which &#8220;insists upon&#8230;the vast difference&#8221; between God and humans not as a reason for despair, but as evidence that God &#8220;work[s] to effect the salvation of his believers even in their experience of his silence, his apparent absence.&#8221; In this view, Donne&#8217;s speaker becomes a &#8220;penitent individual&#8230;beseeching God for some spiritual grace,&#8221; despite the fact that he receives &#8220;no apparent response;&#8221; and God&#8217;s silence becomes not an occasion for the speaker&#8217;s &#8220;despair,&#8221; but rather the poet&#8217;s way of representing God&#8217;s &#8220;radical otherness&#8221;&#8212;the impossibility of rendering God&#8217;s presence in words. Read in this context, the homosexual violence the speaker calls down upon himself, metaphorical though it may be, becomes a final, desperate act of abject surrender, offered in full knowledge that God will neither accept nor reject it; and the speaker should be understood as being fine with that, in the sense that God&#8217;s response is not his goal. Having arrived at the point where he can surrender himself in this way is.</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/the-power-we-pretend-not-to-see-4/">The Power We Pretend Not To See &#8211; 4</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Cruel, needless death: arms, legs, dismembered<br>Bodies, all blasted in a heavy cloud of dirt<br>And blood. The wounded horses we could shoot,<br>But for the human beings we had nothing.<br>This was the enemy that we would fight.<br>We made our camp, and after darkness fell,<br>By lamplight our commanding officer said<br><em>Heads down, my boys, spirits high, you&#8217;ve trained for this.</em><br><em>We&#8217;re now at war. When you shoot, shoot to kill.</em><br>We stood, and grabbed our packs, and marched into the night.</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/prelude-to-a-storm">Prelude to a Storm</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The latest title by <a href="https://www.instagram.com/__o__________________/">Montreal-born Olivia Tapiero</a> [<a href="https://verseottawa.ca/en/event/riverbed2026">performing virtually next week as part of VERSeFest</a>] is <em><a href="https://nightboat.org/book/nothing-at-all/">Nothing at All</a></em> (New York NY: Nightboat Books, 2026), translated into English by <a href="https://www.kitschluter.com/">Kit Schluter</a>, and published with a Foreword by <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/anne-boyer">Anne Boyer</a>. <em>Nothing at All</em> is a collection that Boyer describes as &#8220;a vital, accruing, distributed process.&#8221; &#8220;The threat precedes me. The <em>chkoumoune</em>,&#8221; Tapiero writes, via Schluter&#8217;s translation, mid-way through the collection, &#8220;the <em>shour</em>, which my grandmother pronounces <em>zhor</em> when she tells me about the spells the crumpled spirits impose on those women who attract the evil eye. One morning, in a village where the wind drives people mad, her mother wakes her up screaming, forbidding her to look in the mirror: the <em>zhor </em>has disfigured her, her childlike features have drained from the right side of her face.&#8221; <em>Nothing at All</em> reads as an expansive lyric gesture of shadow and liquid, relaying story and trauma across an expansive suite of fragments composed via an accumulation of prose poems, prose poem sections, writing of endings and beginnings; writing history and its devastations, accumulations; its ripples, and its waves. Set in sections of self-contained but interconnected prose sections&#8212;&#8220;Black Hole,&#8221; &#8220;Now You Say Nothing,&#8221; &#8220;Letter,&#8221; &#8220;Here I Am, a Dull Transplant,&#8221; &#8220;Zhor&#8221; and &#8220;The Unthinkable Orifice&#8221;&#8212;Tapiero&#8217;s precise, prose abstracts on and around war and memory, family story and upheavals read as echoes of works by <a href="https://graziamagazine.com/me/articles/etel-adnan/">the late Etel Adnan</a> (1925-2021) [<a href="https://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2020/10/etel-adnan-shifting-silence.html">see my review of her most recent here</a>] or even <a href="https://litmuspress.org/contributor/nathanael/">Canadian expat Nathana&#235;l</a>, asking, precisely, what one inherits through such a history, and one so deeply present.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/03/olivia-tapiero-nothing-at-all-trans-kit.html">Olivia Tapiero, Nothing at All (trans. Kit Schluter</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Peter Dent&#8217;s Previous consists of five titled short prose poem sequences, each of five numbered sections of three lines of text. The poems are made up primarily of oblique observations of the world in a language that is simultaneously hermetic and transparent, or flickering between those two states. Here&#8217;s an example, the fourth part of the opening piece, &#8216;States of Undress&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>No fraternizing with those at the top who keep mouth-to-<br>mouth records in high duty alloy files marked LATER.<br>Think freely. Sleep it off in the comfort of your own bed.</p></blockquote><p>No one sentence necessarily leads to the next, and yet, taken as a whole, they cohere as a series of near-impossible imperatives; &#8216;think freely&#8217; is as reasonable an instruction as &#8216;don&#8217;t think of an elephant&#8217;, for instance. But the overall effect is not unlike, say, a condensed version of 1984.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://millsbi.substack.com/p/two-peter-dent-pamphlets">Two Peter Dent Pamphlets</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My debut collection (Black Bough Poetry, 2025) explores an era of change through the speaker&#8217;s relationships with people and the world. The symbolic juxtaposition of light and dark runs through these poems to highlight the contradictory nature of our experiences and subsequent transformations at different stages of life. It suggests that darkness is a necessary, if not temporary, state as we face grief, doubt and despair &#8211; one that will eventually give way to hope, freedom and a light that shines through personal growth.</p><p>The title poem, <em>I Am Not Light</em>, serves as a thematic hinge as the final piece in the first section of this three-part collection. This poem began as an observation of a pair of curtains that had faded through exposure to sunlight. This image and the first line of the poem sat with me as I ruminated upon the ideas of physical and emotional transformation through loss. The &#8220;sun-bleached&#8221; curtains became a metaphor to explore aging, memory, and the gradual alterations of identity, ultimately suggesting that fading does not erase value but creates a more complex sense of self.</p><p><strong><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/03/14/drop-in-by-louise-machen/">Drop-in by Louise Machen</a> (Nigel Kent)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Let us turn first to that evergreen truth: the only time poetry ever makes the news is when poets fight. It&#8217;s never because someone&#8217;s written a great poem, or an unusually terrible poem, or a poem which has upset the authorities enough for them to bite back. (We could try writing something they couldn&#8217;t get out of their heads; <em>that</em> would annoy them. Aye, sorry; crazy idea.) No: it&#8217;s always &#8216;poets at war&#8217;. You may have noticed a couple of recent news stories involving two journals, <em>Gutter</em> and <em>Aftershock</em>, both of which cancelled work when they later discovered its author or subject held opinions that were offensive to them.</p><p>It&#8217;s all a great shame. There have been positive signs over the last couple of years that our fractious little community is slowly coming back together after a period of unprecedented and often horrible division. Many of its architects, however, remain in positions of some administrative influence. As peace slowly breaks out, we can expect to see them directing some rearguard action.</p><p>It&#8217;s almost comical, for those of us old enough to remember how it all started: a good faith attempt to correct for biases in poetry publishing that had obtained for as long as anyone could remember. For countless decades in the UK, these had operated primarily and most egregiously against women; poetry had also shut out the provinces, the working class and ethnic minorities. By the 90s, things had markedly improved. But from the start of the millennium, this project was subsumed by wave after wave of sociocultural, demographic, technological and economic change. These great changes brought with them new political priorities, but also a raft of peer-group rules and incentive schemes which older artists often found impossible to parse. We watched as our well-intentioned project changed from one of redress to progressivism, from remedial balance to ideological correction.</p><p>In the case of poetry, this involved the revision of what was meant by literary merit. Some folk began to tell themselves a different story about the value they found in certain poems. Their critical attention shifted from the skillfulness of the poem to the authenticity of its performance; this was a sign that their cultural attention was shifting from the poem to the poet. It led, in the end, to the creation of two different camps, with each reading poetry &#8211; and, eventually, defining &#8216;the poem&#8217; &#8211; in very different ways. You could attempt to belong to both, but not without a lot of mental contortion. [&#8230;]</p><p>It takes very little time to alter the meaning of words. They go to wherever their value concentrates. A &#8216;good poem&#8217; once meant a poem which demonstrated something like &#8216;the skilful manipulation of symbols within a word-game whose rules were broadly agreed&#8217;. Now I&#8217;ll often hear folk use it to mean &#8216;the work of a good poet&#8217;; and in &#8216;good poet&#8217; I know they mean &#8216;the kind of person I find admirable, or feel I should&#8217;.</p><p><strong>Don Paterson, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/poets-are-in-the-news-again">Poets are in the News Again</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How<br>is it a flaw to be moved by the world,<br>to be undone by what was felled</p><p>or disfigured, torn from its bed?<br>May we be tender through the frost<br>that comes to kill everything,</p><p>the scrubbing after the stain that<br>reddened the walls and toppled<br>the chairs to the floor.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/03/the-winter-garden/">The Winter Garden</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I first began my study of saijiki, I found it difficult to operate within two calendars at once. The classical haiku calendar, which uses the solstices and equinoxes as the midpoints of the seasons, made more sense in relation to my lived experience. However, the Gregorian calendar guides the country in which I live. Sometimes, it is deeply frustrating to see people celebrating &#8220;the first day of spring&#8221; when spring has been evident for weeks. I get irrationally annoyed that <em>The Old Farmer&#8217;s Almanac </em>&#8211; an inherently agricultural text! &#8211; eschews the preindustrial boundaries of the seasons and adopts the Gregorian seasonal boundaries. However, my exposure to different religious traditions helped me understand that all over the world, people adhere to different calendars. I&#8217;ve of course learned about the Jewish liturgical calendar; life in St. Louis has also exposed me to the Catholic liturgical year, as well as the Orthodox Christian year. In my own personal studies, I&#8217;ve learned about Hindu and Buddhist calendars as well. Most people with a specific religious or cultural identity navigate their specific calendar along with the Gregorian one. There&#8217;s no reason why a haiku poet can&#8217;t do that as well.</p><p>Likewise, my understanding of season words and what they mean cannot be limited to my experiences living in the Midwest and the American South my entire life. I have to recognize that my experience of summer will never be the same as the experience of someone living in Iceland. The world is too big to contain any individual&#8217;s limited knowledge of seasons. In fact, it&#8217;s too big to contain any one saijiki&#8217;s attempts to categorize the seasons. That doesn&#8217;t mean we shouldn&#8217;t study saijiki. Rather, we have the saijiki as a foundation that <em>guides </em>our experience, but doesn&#8217;t dictate it. After all, even the strictest saijiki won&#8217;t refuse to let poets write about the moon in the spring.</p><p>As I wrap up this post, I&#8217;m reminded of this enduring haiku from Shiki:</p><blockquote><p>for me going<br>for you staying&#8212;<br>two autumns</p></blockquote><p>This haiku points to the individual experiences of two friends who will spend autumn in different regions. Today, it has me thinking about how there are in fact innumerable autumns (and winters and springs and summers). That is not to say that we should take a purely individualistic approach to the seasons, but rather that we should recognize the incredible variety within collective experience.</p><p><strong>Allyson Whipple, <a href="https://allysonwhipple.com/2026/03/10/innumerable-autumns/">Innumerable Autumns</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Here&#8217;s something I drafted two weeks ago. A seasonal poem with a hint of frustration and a little relief:</p><p>Late February<br><br>And I&#8217;m awaiting<br>the buzzards&#8217; return.<br>Each year<br>they migrate just<br>two or three months<br>then reappear<br>on their snag perches<br>and on updrafts,<br>wings outstretched<br>to embrace<br>the sky.<br>I can&#8217;t say I miss them<br>in winter<br>yet am glad<br>of their return<br>which signals<br>a tiny season<br>one wedge in winter&#8217;s grip<br>that says<br>it is just warm enough<br>for decay&#8217;s odors<br>to reach turkey vultures&#8217;<br>nasal cavities.<br>Soon there will be<br>skunk cabbage<br>and skunks will awaken.<br>Here, spring commences<br>with leaf-mold stink<br>and buzzards.<br>Reader,<br>try to be grateful.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/03/16/ides-ideas/">Ides, ideas</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The Oregon poet Hazel Hall (1886&#8211;1924), paralyzed at age 12 following an episode of scarlet fever, left school after the fifth grade to educate herself at home. Like other bright girls in literary history, left to manage themselves in a house full of books (<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-upon-my-son-samuel?utm_source=publication-search">Anne Bradstreet</a>, for example, comes to mind), she read voraciously. It&#8217;s no surprise that as such Modernist poets as <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-hyla-brook?utm_source=publication-search">Robert Frost</a> and <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-the-death-of-autumn?utm_source=publication-search">Edna St. Vincent Millay</a> began their ascendency, in the 1910s and 20s, Hall not only read them but responded to their influence with poems of her own.</p><p>In the course of her relatively short life and poetic career, which included three books of poetry &#8212; <em><a href="https://archive.org/details/curtains00hall/page/n7/mode/2up">Curtains</a> </em>in 1921, <em><a href="https://books.google.com/books?vid=UCAL:$B330941">Walkers</a> </em>in 1923, and the posthumous <em><a href="https://openlibrary.org/works/OL22126362W/Cry_of_time?edition=key%3A/books/OL6720300M">Cry of Time</a></em>, which her sister compiled and published in 1928 &#8212; she gained a reputation as &#8220;Oregon&#8217;s <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-because-i-could-not-stop?utm_source=publication-search">Emily Dickinson</a>.&#8221; Today Hall shares (with <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/27539/the-farm-on-the-great-plains">William Stafford</a>) the name for the Oregon Book Award for poetry.</p><p>Today&#8217;s Poem, &#8220;Two Sewing,&#8221; takes the severity of spring weather as its overt subject, though its real concern is its own music. Its couplet pairs with their tight rhymes create one level of pattern, in tension with a metrical pattern of predominantly tetrameter and trimeter lines. The poem&#8217;s sounds become as mesmerizing as those of the wind and rain it describes.</p><p>In particular, the repeated &#8220;In, in, in&#8221; of lines 5 and 22 strikes in much the same register as Tennyson&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-break-break-break?utm_source=publication-search">Break, break, break</a>.&#8221; Its three monosyllabic stressed feet, set off by commas whose enforced pauses suggest the missing unstressed syllables in those feet, drive home the intensity of the actions of spring wind and rain. But what&#8217;s also fascinating in this lyric is the conceit of sewing, which presents the often destructive vagaries of weather in the springtime as actually constructive, engaged in putting the world back together, stitch by stitch, &#8220;for all the springs of futurity.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-two-sewing">Today&#8217;s Poem: Two Sewing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I didn&#8217;t know this, but when news of his death reached London, around this time, in March but of 1821, thirty-four newspapers published announcements of his death. Thirty-four. Most were only brief notices, just a few lines, but typically they described him as &#8220;John Keats, the poet&#8221; Not <em>a</em> poet but <em>the</em> poet. <em>The</em> poet.</p><p>When I first arrived at Keats-Shelley House, and I say this to you in confidence, I felt a presence. I&#8217;m not going to get all woo-woo with you and I&#8217;m quite sure I brought a certain energy there myself, conjured something in that space having become intimately acquainted with <em>the</em> poet over these last months, I most likely manifested my own projection of him.</p><p>Of course there was expectation, stepping inside that house, stepping inside <em>his</em> house, moving through <em>the</em> poet&#8217;s rooms, well, you&#8217;d want to feel something too wouldn&#8217;t you? And just as, if you&#8217;re receptive enough, you can feel moved reading a poem or hearing music or witnessing drama in theatre or film, so it was there, elevated from the page, a vibration, an atmosphere, the essence of poetry. Only without words.</p><p>That first evening, after they&#8217;d closed the museum, when they&#8217;d locked all the doors, after the crowds had drifted away from the Piazza, there was the kind of silence you might imagine being or not being heard two hundred years ago. And I felt it, a sense that I&#8217;d interrupted something, had intruded, arrived without invite. The coldness of London stirring in the ancient heart of Rome.</p><p>&#8220;This is my patch pal, my manor, my gaff&#8221; the spirit might have said and yet it wasn&#8217;t entirely unwelcoming, more it was trying to assert dominion over the territory, not chasing me out simply deciding whether I might be accepted there, to share the air, bunk in his crib, couch in his cell.</p><p>I know this feeling well. This, this is what it is like being a writer, what it is like doing the poetry, among snobs and toffs, in the presence of gatekeepers and taste testers, parvenus and pretenders. They will jostle and muscle and budge but they wont throw you out. Neither will they let you in. The best advice I ever received about getting on in this business was, &#8220;Just keep reminding them that you&#8217;re not going away.&#8221; And so, in order to make claim on the space, I undid my laces, removed my boots, walked bare foot across the night tiles, those same clay tiles that have carried centuries of feet and l felt, if not a connection then a stronger closeness to it, to him, to the poet.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n55-signals-sent-from-the-poets-house">N&#186;55 Signals sent from the poet&#8217;s house</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em><a href="https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/the-island-in-the-sound-1361">The Island in the Sound</a> </em>(Bloodaxe, 2024) is Niall Campbell&#8217;s third full collection, though the first of his that I&#8217;ve owned. Campbell is a fairly high profile young-ish/early middle-aged Scottish poet who&#8217;s done the sort of things you&#8217;d expect for an established poet of his age in the UK: his first collection won the Edwin Morgan Poetry Award and his second was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection. Back in 2011, he won an <a href="https://societyofauthors.org/prizes/the-soa-awards/eric-gregory-awards/">Eric Gregory</a> award, the traditional post-university prize for the up-and-coming UK poet. (You have to be under thirty.) More recently, he took over as editor of <em><a href="https://poetrylondon.co.uk/">Poetry London</a></em> and his approach to the magazine persuaded me to re-subscribe. [&#8230;]</p><p>I enjoyed the lightly-borne but unapologetic <em>literariness </em>of this collection, with poems referring or alluding to Gerard Manley Hopkins, W. S. Graham, Jules Laforgue, William Blake, Borges, Hart Crane, Robert Browning, Seamus Heaney, Shakespeare and the Persian poet Farid ud-din Attar. There&#8217;s a real sense of a range of experience and reference, reflected in a variety of form that emerges naturally from the &#8220;world&#8221; of the collection &#8212; without that sense that you sometimes get that a poet is making a careful attempt to show us they can do more than one thing.</p><p>Naturally I liked some of these poems less than others, and I could have done with a few fewer pieces self-consciously &#8216;about&#8217; poetry itself. I disliked, for instance, the arch and internet-meme style title &#8216;Three Folk-tale Characters Who Are Definitely Not Metaphors for the Poem&#8217;, but I liked the three poems themselves. They reminded me a bit of similar short sequences of folk-tale-type poems in recent collections I&#8217;ve read by Rory Waterman (<em>Come Here to This Gate</em>) and Reagan Upshaw (<em>In the Panhandle</em>), in both cases presented &#8216;straight&#8217;. If a fine poet can&#8217;t tell a fairy story, who can? I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s any need to add defensive scare-quotes.</p><p>I appreciated also the sense of a real range of addressees in Campbell&#8217;s book &#8212; I think this is a kind of corollary of the range of literary reference. Sometimes a collection contains lots of essentially similar poems dedicated or addressed to a range of people and there doesn&#8217;t seem that much connection between the style and form of the poem and the addressee. Here, though, there&#8217;s a real sense of speaking in different ways to different people. A moving and understated series of verse epistles, &#8216;Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage&#8217; run throughout the collection (tantalisingly, numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8, so not, presumably, quite all of the sequence). Written in rather loosely metrical lines, these are some of the most conversational poems in the book.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/two-good-poetry-books">Two good poetry books</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>The Tattoo Collector &#8211; Tim Tim Cheng (Nine Arches Press)</strong></p><p>&#8220;Your train passes a valley &#8211;<br>Mountains around you<br>are unnameable muscles.<br>Your insides<br>shift like sand<br>as animals go ashore.&#8221;</p><p>I&#8217;d had this book on my &#8216;to read&#8217; list for over a year and I&#8217;m so glad I finally got it for Christmas. Tim Tim is a poet of real skill and deftness. She plays a lot with erasure and other forms where the poem is found from within another text. This is a great way of dismantling and undercutting received narratives, and has now inspired me to try similar things in my own work. I enjoy the precision of Tim Tim&#8217;s work, even where she is working within and across multiple languages &#8211; the clarity of thought is always there.</p><p><strong>Victoria Spires, <a href="https://victoriaspires.substack.com/p/some-things-ive-read-recently-part">Some things I&#8217;ve read recently &#8211; Part 2</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I realized at some point during this convention that it&#8217;s 20 years since I attended my first AWP, in Texas. I didn&#8217;t know anyone in 2006 and approached AWP less artistically than critically: how are the readings and panels framed, and what literary values do those formats express? How do writers represent their affiliations through their performance styles and self-presentations, scare quotes and square coats? I&#8217;d been learning how to look and sound like a literature professor, and my attendance, after all, constituted research (I analyzed the conference, alongside other ways poetry manifests in public, in a 2008 scholarly book, <em><a href="https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9780801474422/voicing-american-poetry/">Voicing American Poetry: Sound and Performance from the 1920s to the Present</a></em>).</p><p>The 2006 AWP panels, while closely resembling those at scholarly conferences in format, seemed scattershot in quality. The scholar in me was shocked by how little background work some presenters seemed to do preparing for them. AWP panels are better now, yet I attend fewer of them. I&#8217;m interested in many of the topics. I&#8217;m just running around in my writer hat: connecting with old and new friends over lunch or tea, doing signings and off-site readings, checking out the Book Fair.</p><p>In 2026, I can report on only one AWP panel that wasn&#8217;t my own. Early on, I lost my hand-written list of what I planned to attend, along with my favorite water bottle, thus ramping myself up quickly to Maximal AWP Disorientation, a condition that eventually takes down many conference-goers. I forgot the time of one panel I&#8217;d been determined to make; I got shut out of another, &#8220;Poetry and the Sacred&#8221; (room at capacity).</p><p>The panel I did squeeze into, though, was <em>funny </em>as well as thoughtful. (I couldn&#8217;t see if they were wearing thematically appropriate outfits, since the room was full and I sat way in the back.) &#8220;Alternative Nation, or Whatever: Gen X Perspectives on the Writing Life&#8221; reminded me about the wars, epidemics, economic crises, and toxic prejudices of the late twentieth century AND the mixtapes, miniseries, and problematic literary smashes (<em>Flowers in the Attic, </em>anyone?). Tara Betts talked about reading as a pleasure and a freedom&#8211;and how hard that reality can be to translate to her students now. Most presenters addressed the stereotypes of slacker, wiseass nihilist, and the &#8220;loser with pointless integrity&#8221; (that&#8217;s a quote from Matthew Zapruder&#8217;s poem <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/152077/generation-x">&#8220;Generation X,&#8221;</a> discussed by B. K. Fischer). Paisley Rekdal described the literary culture she entered as a Gen Xer: creative writing workshops, mostly taught and enrolled by white people, characterized literary subjectivity and political engagement as naive, anti-intellectual, and anti-aesthetic (a position espoused VERY strongly in the scholarly world, too, where only the avant-garde among contemporary writers seemed to be breaking into the canon). Rekdal cited Cathy Park Hong&#8217;s influential critique of this attitude in <a href="https://shc.stanford.edu/arcade/interventions/delusions-whiteness-avant-garde">&#8220;Delusions of Whiteness in the Avant-Garde&#8221;</a>. (I flashed back to the modernism conferences where male Language poets in leather jackets held court in the hotel bar.) Gen X writers, according to Rekdal, went on to break down some of those attitudes and open a lot of doors&#8211;but remarked that our generation is also responsible for the current accommodationist ethos in universities. I&#8217;d like to hear a whole keynote by Paisley Rekdal one day. As I might have put it in the 80s, she&#8217;s wicked smart.</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/03/12/square-coats-awp-shenandoah/">Square coats: AWP &amp; Shenandoah</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>everyone has their own private capitalism<br>like a daughter in their coffee cup.<br>a hand beneath a pillow. the self without<br>any lungs. the little hunger that eats the dark.<br>mine is a gone flavor. something marketed<br>with shiny teeth &amp; iridescent packages.<br>mystery flavor the color of cave fish.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/03/12/3-12-5/">limited edition flavor</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Do you ever wake up wondering how to live? I don&#8217;t mean in the face of terror and imminent death, as so many around the world are facing in this war torn world, I mean just the daily ordinariness of getting up and getting on with things, whatever those things are. I look around and wonder if there&#8217;s something I&#8217;m supposed to be doing, something that I don&#8217;t know about or have forgotten. And why. I wonder: Is despair a reasonable response to some days&#8217; unfoldings, or is hope the only way to go? Is gratitude just a way of distracting from doing the vacuuming? When is trying to make something happen worth doing and when is it folly? And do you only know when you&#8217;ve either succeeded or failed? When is desire just a failure of gratitude and when is it a useful engine for change? And when is effecting change a useful effort and when should you just sit still and breathe for a while? And when have you been breathing and sitting still for too long like a scared rabbit and you should just go make a run for it? These are things I wonder some days. Dysphoria, c&#8217;est moi, as a natural state of being, some days. More days than I care to admit to. So, sometimes, poems can provide some momentary stay against all that. I said &#8220;momentary.&#8221; There&#8217;s only so much poetry can do. Here&#8217;s a little prayer from P&#225;draig &#211; Tuama, from his book <em>Kitchen Hymns</em>, from Copper Canyon Press.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/03/16/when-the-wren-wakes-ill-ask/">When the wren wakes I&#8217;ll ask</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Li-Young Lee is a strong poet of family &#8211; creating throughout his works an atmosphere of home that is vivid and inviting &#8211; even when he conjures up the small terrors familial relationships can display. The image of father looms in several of his best poems. In &#8220;Eating Together,&#8221; Lee focuses on the absence of father, or, more precisely, on the family space the father once occupied.</p><p>The poem, which melds the tenderness of family with the ache of loss, begins with the rich smells of a shared meal. I like the attention to detail here: &#8220;slivers of ginger, / two sprigs of green onion, and sesame oil.&#8221; The &#8220;we&#8221; of line four gives the family a hallowed moment &#8211; this is the clearest descriptive I can write for how I react to these lines &#8211; a moment made warm by their gathering around the table for the meal that is surely a good-bye to the dead father.</p><p>The physical motions of the mother, probably addressing her own grief, recall the recent past, tasting</p><p>&#8220;the sweetest meat of the head,<br>holding it between her fingers<br>deftly, the way my father did<br>weeks ago.&#8221;</p><p>Human action in most of Lee&#8217;s works, certainly in this poem, takes on an almost sacred presence. This meal is such a beautiful setting, made even more sharp and direct by the use of few words &#8211; and it&#8217;s perhaps the brevity, with nothing wasted, that shapes the poem&#8217;s impact on the reader &#8211; definitely this reader.</p><p>In the closing lines, however, the warm scene surrenders to the cold inevitability of loss. Lee finishes the poem with a powerful simile for death: &#8220;a snow-covered road / winding through pines.&#8221; The loss is real and is felt in the depths of the silent, snowy road &#8211; a strong poetic visual that recalls the isolated but compelling winter images by the artist Hiroshige Ando. It&#8217;s the final line I can&#8217;t escape &#8211; a road with no travelers <em>but</em> &#8220;lonely for no one.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-li-young-lee-eating-together">Thoughts on&#8230; Li-Young Lee, &#8220;Eating Together&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Swaddle them in manuscript.<br>Mold them with the soft indent<br>of pen, of ink, jet-black as their hair.</p><p>Your characters will be their playmates,<br>your stories their dreams, woven<br>for them like any toy a mother weaves<br>from scrap yarn, remnant cloth.</p><p>When they taste simile and metaphor<br>they will be glad to have a literary mother,<br>glad for the sweet drip of language<br>over lips and tongue.</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/literary-mama">Literary Mama</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is an idea that more people write poetry than read it. Often, this argument is made by people who edit poetry magazines. <a href="https://samleith.substack.com/p/poems-unread-mary-beards-homework">Most recently, Sam Leith has made this argument</a>, in response to this Note worrying that the <a href="https://substack.com/@alexanderfayne/note/c-222308303?utm_source=notes-share-action&amp;r=1g4uc">Venn diagram of people who read and who write poetry is a circle</a>.</p><p>To a certain extent, this is just the sort of exaggeration one expects on the internet. But it is important to note that the idea is false. <a href="https://www.arts.gov/stories/blog/2023/new-survey-reports-size-poetrys-audience-streaming-included?utm_source=chatgpt.com">According to NEA data, something like 9-12% of American adults read poetry</a>. That is some thirty or forty million people. <a href="https://www.thebookseller.com/bestsellers/shall-i-compare-thee-to-2024-poetry-sales-start-to-slip-but-still-sing">In the UK last year, over a million books of poetry were sold</a>.</p><p>Now, maybe these numbers have changed from earlier times, but do we think they are very much higher than in the past? There is simply no way that these millions of people are sending poems to magazines. That is not what the editors&#8217; anecdotes suggest. They are seeing the multiple submissions, the prolific minority, the enthusiastic &#8220;Sunday poets&#8221;, but they are not seeing the silent readers, who don&#8217;t talk much about their reading, let alone write about it, who don&#8217;t go to readings or workshops.</p><p>Theirs is an understandable point of view. Beleaguered editors are inundated with submissions from people who do not subscribe to the magazine, but all the people reading Poetry Foundation or Poetry Archive, pulling down an old favourite from the shelf, discovering a new poem as they scroll&#8212;they don&#8217;t need or want poetry magazines. (Maybe they should, though: <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/poetry-magazines-three-spring-issues?utm_source=publication-search">Victoria Moul reviews some options if you are interested&#8230;</a>)</p><p>A lot of poetry magazines, we must be honest, are full of poems that not all poetry readers want to read, either because they will read them in books and anthologies (or online) later on, or because there is never going to be much of an audience for the work. These magazines are part of a winnowing process, in which many readers will not, understandably, wish to take part.</p><p>It is reasonable to think that we must have flourishing poetry magazines of the old-fashioned sort, but lots of poets publish online&#8212;some of <a href="https://substack.com/@shermanalexie">them</a> here on <a href="https://thesonneteer.substack.com/">Substack</a>!&#8212;and they do just fine.</p><p>There are still plenty more readers than writers of poetry, they just may not be reading what the editors wish them to read.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/do-more-people-write-poetry-than">Do more people write poetry than read it?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>favourite corner<br>the cat takes ownership <br>of the sun</p><p><strong>Jim Young <a href="http://haikueye.blogspot.com/2026/03/blog-post_28.html">[no title]</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I woke in the middle of the night with the germ of this poem circling inside my head. I got up and sketched the bare bones in the light of a street lamp.</p><p>HOW TO CORRUPT YOUR COUNTRY</p><ul><li><p>start with the teachers. Make them mouth your new lies. Fashion the curriculum until it mirrors your twisted logic and hate is triumphant</p></li><li><p>control the media. This goes without saying. Pass laws that make truth telling illegal.</p></li><li><p>silence all who dare to disagree. Show trials can be effective, as can framing the innocent. If this fails fall back on the death squads.</p></li><li><p>have neighbour inform on neighbour, brother on sister. Offer incentives to ensure that none will know who they can trust.</p></li><li><p>once all this is achieved, begin to purge those closest to you. The corruption you have condoned will provide real evidence.</p></li><li><p>try to sleep at night, if you can.</p></li></ul><p>It is an angry poem. How many times have individuals sought to destroy democracy? Probably since we invented democracies. This is a work in progress. I worry it is too hectoring, far too much tell and not enough show. Plus it is essentially a list poem and it is difficult to pull off a list poem without it sounding simply a list!</p><p><strong>Paul Tobin, <a href="http://magpiebridge.blogspot.com/2026/03/how-to-corrupt-your-own-country.html">HOW TO CORRUPT YOUR OWN COUNTRY</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I got an MFA in Writing years before I went to rabbinical school. (<a href="https://www.bennington.edu/academics/graduate-programs/mfa-writing">Thanks, Bennington</a>.) Writing is my other vocation, and a lot of my identity is wrapped up in that. I know that rabbis are exhausted &#8212; the last several years have been a Lot. I know not everyone has time or capacity to develop the literary skills I hold dear. And yet hearing that some (many?) of my colleagues turned to AI for sermon help filled me with uncomfortable feelings.</p><p>So I sat with that. Why does this bother me so much? Here are the seven answers I&#8217;ve landed on. [&#8230;]</p><p>AI is good for large-scale data processing, and for things like searching medical scans or DNA code for markers of disease. AI translation tools can be useful in medical settings, especially rural ones (and especially in conjunction with live human translators who can offer nuance and context.) AI is good for automating repetitive tasks. And some of these things are probably worth AI&#8217;s current environmental cost, though I still think we need to figure out how to exact less of a price from the earth.</p><p>But writing, painting, poetry, composing&#8230;? Not a chance.</p><p>Using AI to create art (and in case this needs to be said, I see poetry, sermons, and divrei Torah as art forms) bothers me both because we risk the atrophying of our artistry and because creating art is something human beings can do. An AI can mimic the product of a human heart, but it is fundamentally not the human heart. I fear that something spiritual is lost <em>in us</em> when we outsource our creative capacity in that way.</p><p>I wouldn&#8217;t ask an AI to help me write my poetry. Or to write a love letter, because what makes a love letter matter is not the information therein but the stumbling, imperfect, human expression of its author&#8217;s heart. And that&#8217;s also why I wouldn&#8217;t ask an AI to write (or even to help me write) a d&#8217;var Torah or a sermon.</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/03/10/the-words-of-my-mouth-and-the-meditations-of-my-heart-or-why-i-refuse-ai/">The words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart (or: why I refuse AI)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This past week, I managed two nights sleeping on the cold floor of the Pittsburgh Airport. I am a pro at airport sleeping. One flight was at 6 a.m., so it wasn&#8217;t worth getting to a hotel. As I settled in for the night, I remembered getting up in the night at the Farm, all the kids who used to wet their beds. I did not because I did not drink any water. The kids who got thirsty would wet the bed because they were lonely and cold. I found myself in that same cold in the airport, sleeping in my clothes with my golden coat draped over me.</p><p>Earlier, as I wandered through the airport, I got word that there was a thing about a cover. I needed to talk with an author about a cover change, and the production team was feeling exhausted because they had already tried out so many covers. What to do next! I listened. I registered. I called the authors. I solved the cover. To me, that&#8217;s a tiny problem. Yes, we must have a great cover, but of course, we will.</p><p>The big problems that keep me up at night, whether I&#8217;m on the floor or in a bed, are raising funds to keep publishing poetry, and fundraising in general. I want to keep our poetry program alive. Find new board members. Build the editorial circle. Pay the bills. I want the authors to love their covers as well, but keeping the machine going is the wheel on which I turn and turn.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/the-story-of-the-summit-finding-my">The Story of the Summit: Finding My Footing in Risk</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wanted a break from schmoozing and talking to strangers at the writing conference. But that did not happen. He introduced himself as Thomas and I learned that he is a mythology professor at a university in Ohio, so of course he liked my response to the writing prompt from that morning in which I spontaneously took my legs off my body, planted them in the woods, rendering my torso a trunk writhing with cicadas and in wonder of watching my legs grow amongst the trees as the years go by.</p><p>The four feet of dark, gray space between my childhood home and the neighbor&#8217;s house. The abandoned glass factory near the Allegheny River and its grimy floor covered in ledgers, the handwriting within them almost impossible to decipher. The Allegheny River and its pits of gurgling mud and green riverside oases. The wooded edge of anyone&#8217;s backyard, away from the crowd of the party, where I have seen red fox, mice, and of course the birds. The forbidden, dangerous landscape of railroad tracks. The dark tapering world of my childhood home&#8217;s closet, well beyond the hanging coats, the sound of people looking for me as they go up the creaking steps above my head. All my life I have been drawn to the lonely, dark, once-was places. Away from the adults. Away from my peers. Knee-deep and stuck in mud. Entering abandoned mine shafts like a reverse birth. Decades-old exhaust grit lining the part in my hair and crunching between my teeth as I walked hunched-over in abandoned turnpike tunnel ventilation shafts. All my life, I&#8217;ve felt out-of-place and alien to nearly every person around me, even my closest friends. All my life, I&#8217;ve laughed at and belittled myself around them so that I wouldn&#8217;t have to explain myself.</p><p>Earlier that morning, in front of an audience of just under 100 people, a celebrated poet called writing for one&#8217;s self <em>precious</em>. I hadn&#8217;t heard that word in a negative connotation since my MFA program about 15 years ago. You don&#8217;t want for your writing to be <em>precious</em>. It is <em>precious</em> to say that you only write for yourself when you actually mean that you fear rejection from an audience. Listening to this poet, I allowed my mind to groan and roll its eyes. I am guilty of just <em>writing for myself</em>. It is something I have done nearly all my life. Right? I allowed what he said to steep in my mind as I sat through the morning&#8217;s next panel discussion. I thought of an interview I once listened to with the writer Ocean Vuong as the guest. He talked about his books being &#8220;sent down the river,&#8221; meaning that once the book is out of his hands and in the public, the book takes on a life of its own. A life he cannot control. I thought of my own writing and how when I release it into the river, it just spins in circles and bobs back and forth from shore to shore, always within reach of a long net that I carry in my hands.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/i-cant-put-my-teeth-together-and">I Can&#8217;t Put My Teeth Together And I&#8217;m Seeing Stars</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>when you say,<br><em>Give me silence,<br>purify my sour heart &#8211;</em></p><p>I prepare yellow gills of liminal poison,<br>brush damp earth from caps<br>scented of hoar and musk,<br>slice then grind under mortar and pestle<br>emetic fungi, season with butter and salt.</p><p>[&#8230;]</p><p>This poem was inspired by the 2017 film <em><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5776858/">Phantom Thread</a>, </em>written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson and<em> </em>starring Daniel Day-Lewis. If you&#8217;ve never seen <em>Phantom Thread</em>, it&#8217;s a dark and twisted story of a haute couture dressmaker played by Day-Lewis whose structured life is upended by a chance meeting with a waitress played by Vicky Krieps. Her ability to perfectly remember and serve his large and detailed breakfast order intrigues him and is the spark that begins her role as muse, model, and lover. Their relationship gradually turns to the dark side with scenes of fevered outbursts and mutually toxic behavior that flirts with death:</p><p><em>&#8220;I want you flat on your back. Helpless, tender, open, with only me to help.&#8221;</em></p><p>If this is a love story, it&#8217;s one of masochistic obsession that will keep you mesmerized, if you&#8217;re in the right mood for it, as it does have long stretches of silence and drawn-out scenes. There are no nude or explicit scenes because none are needed. There&#8217;s also lots of gorgeous 1950s fashion and interiors. A good movie to watch on a chilly, stormy day or on a too hot, blindingly sunny summer day. Milder days are for outside living; nature&#8217;s breath on your skin and dark thoughts behind cobwebs in your mind.</p><p><strong>Charlotte Hamrick, <a href="https://charlottehamrick.substack.com/p/roots-and-rituals">Roots and Rituals</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Our apricot trees are blossoming, <br>always the first. Next the greengages. <br>Then the cherries. In the Alborz mountains <br>behind Tehran the cherry trees blossom</p><p>around Nowruz, the Persian new year &#8211; <br>a time of joy, gratitude, and fresh starts, <br>of visiting families and celebrating nature.</p><p>Is this where we can begin to find hope, <br>in the things that tie us together, not <br>drive us apart? Branches of blossom,<br>the shared miracle of their fragile scent.</p><p><strong>Lynne Rees, <a href="http://www.lynnerees.com/2026/03/poem-ordinary-miracles.html">Poem ~ Ordinary Miracles</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>snowflake melts.<br>path&#8217;s completed.<br>somewhere darkness flowers.</p><p><strong>Grant Hackett <a href="https://lostwaytothesky.blogspot.com/2026/03/snowflake-melts_32.html">[no title]</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 10]]></title><description><![CDATA[picnicking on ice, clock-time vs. earth-time, the enormity of the world's grief, the sound of a fountain, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-10</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-10</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2026 23:02:02 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/53b408b2-d669-4a33-9b30-0328c2a547f2_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: picnicking on ice, clock-time vs. earth-time, the enormity of the world&#8217;s grief, the sound of a fountain, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m sitting here, still in bed because it is my birthday and on your birthday you get to work from your bed. It&#8217;s a misty morning in North Yorkshire but the sun is breaking through.</p><p>Spring is arriving.</p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/dawn-and-dusk-chorus-write-along">Dawn and Dusk Chorus Write Along Sessions</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This lake surface is flat-with-rising-places. These are mini alpine mountains, where expanding ice has pushed itself into Mont Blanc-resonant peaks to alleviate the pressure that comes with expansion. There are fissures too and in some places, there are small portholes to the next layers down, and these are mysterious with interlacing crystals and thin pastry layer accumulations.</p><p>We sat, P, L, and I, and talked of rootedness and our lives (which, I&#8217;ve just thought, add up to a small-large 188 years). We ate and drank, looking outwards. It was peaceful, and there was a white silence as backdrop to these connections.</p><p>And all the while the sun warmed us without the interruption of a single cloud.</p><p><strong>Liz Lefroy, <a href="https://someonesmumsays.blogspot.com/2026/03/i-picnic-on-ice.html">I Picnic On Ice</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;April is the cruellest month&#8221; is the first line of TS Eliot&#8217;s Wasteland, which has always puzzled me. April is bluebells and swallows and hares, the dawn chorus, waking in a downpour of song. April is life returning, showy and cheerful and loud after the white silence of winter, the muted February gloom: &#8220;Lilacs/ out of the dead land&#8221;.</p><p>Which is, I think, the speaker&#8217;s problem &#8211; he prefers the silence, the soft, quiet protection of snow. Especially when the snow hides wreckage and ruin &#8211; Eliot wrote the poem in 1921, recovering from a breakdown whilst Europe reeled in the aftermath of the first World War. And yes, the March insistence of crocus and daffodil can seem at odds with world events, but oh my God, how welcome is that March sun, warm, soft, golden; the first buds on the willow, like tiny paws? So much so that my third collection, &#8220;Flood&#8221;, contains a response to Eliot&#8217;s famous line &#8211; you&#8217;ll find it at the end of this article.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/the-cruellest-month-is-over">The Cruellest Month is over!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is no one left to sing to so I<br>sing to the water: From where do you spring and<br>how will you slake me?<br>How long must I return<br>with jar and tattered rope, bearing<br>the dry sockets of my bones?</p><p><strong>Kristen McHenry, <a href="https://kristenmchenry.substack.com/p/lenten-poem-a-week-project-week-4">Lenten Poem-a-Week Project: Week 4</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;Time is a river that sweeps me along, but I am a river,&#8221; Borges <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2016/09/19/a-new-refutation-of-time-borges/">wrote</a>. &#8220;Time is a fire that consumes me, but I am the fire.&#8221;</p><p>Most of us are not Borges. Most of us are drowning in bewilderment at <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2017/02/21/nina-simone-time/">where the time goes</a>, burning with the urgency of being alive while <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2022/10/17/henry-james-the-beast-in-the-jungle/">waiting to start living</a>, wandering the labyrinth of life with wayward presence, wishing that <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/01/02/begin-again/">time ran differently</a> as the cult of productivity turns each minute into a blade pressed against the vein of our transience.</p><p>And all the while, our time is nested within our times &#8212; the epoch we are living through together, born into it with no more choice in the matter than the body and brain and family we have been born into. In his <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2016/11/11/james-baldwin-shakespeare-language-poetry/">magnificent essay on Shakespeare</a>, James Baldwin countered the commonplace lament of every epoch: &#8220;It is said that his time was easier than ours, but I doubt it &#8212; no time can be easy if one is living through it.&#8221; A century before him &#8212; a century of unrest and transformation &#8212; Emerson issued the ultimate antilamentation: &#8220;This time, like all times, is a very good one, if we but know what to do with it.&#8221; [&#8230;]</p><p>If time is the fundamental problem of human life and poetry is our most precise technology for parsing the aching astonishment of being alive, then time is the prime subject of poetry. Neruda knew this &#8212; time is the subterranean current coursing beneath his vast and varied body of work, the substrate upon which all of his <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2025/11/19/neruda-si-tu-me-olvidas/">stunning love poems</a> and his <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2015/05/28/keeping-quiet-sylvia-boorstein-reads-pablo-neruda/">meditations on the inner life</a> grow. He reverenced the stones for how they have &#8220;touched time,&#8221; reverenced the minute for how it is &#8220;bound to join the river of time that bears us,&#8221; reverenced &#8220;the inexhaustible springs of time,&#8221; longed for &#8220;a time complete as an ocean,&#8221; then made that ocean with his poetry.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/03/03/neruda-time/">Pablo Neruda on How to Hold Time</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have a bit of time here and there to do the activities that nourish me: reading and a variety of creative work. I have time to see friends. My family members are in good shape.</p><p>We are bombarded, day after day, with stories of women who have not been so lucky, reminding us that we still have work to do.</p><p>I&#8217;m thinking of the multitude of poems that I&#8217;ve written about gender and history and all of those intersections. Here&#8217;s a poem that I wrote years ago that says a lot about the life of a certain class of women in modern, capitalistic countries. It&#8217;s part of my chapbook, <em>Life in the Holocene Extinction</em>.</p><p><strong>The Hollow Women</strong></p><p>We are the hollow women,<br>the ones with carved muscles,<br>the ones run ragged by calendars<br>and other apps that promised<br>us mastery of that cruel slavedriver, time. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/03/a-poem-for-international-womens-day.html">A Poem for International Women&#8217;s Day</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Time accumulates and erodes as we spread ourselves thin over work, people who don&#8217;t deserve our energy, constant complaints, addictions, and pettiness. Those who step out of <em>Kronos</em> (clock-time) and into <em>Kairos</em> (earth-time) may find that time slows and stills like a warm, shallow sea. Here, when you pay the currency of your limited attention, you will feel how the sun shines down on your face. With your valuable attention, you will notice that the waters are warm and the creatures, they just do their business of making the first pathways on this earth. Please do them no harm. And look at those clouds. Look at how they come undone in their becoming. Soon enough, as always, and forevermore, something big will happen, with or without you. It is all a continuous happening. A continuous genesis of building a becoming and initiating an ending. All of us. Every one. And all the ones after.</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/orogeny">Orogeny</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>broken, broken world<br>or is it me<br>seeing cracks on still water<br>seeing wounds instead of flowers<br>seeing blood where sunset<br>should drip behind the ears of trees</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/broken">Broken</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I keep seeing discussion online about how artists and writers function in a world that is, if not completely falling apart in front of us, in danger of toppling. On one hand, you have those who find the terrors of everyday living have a dampening effect on productivity (even for fun things), a lack of concentration, and a lack of purpose. On the other hand, and this I see too in myself, the drive to keep on going. To keep making and loving and creating something beautiful or interesting in a world that not only doesn&#8217;t seem to want it, but fights its very existence. Either through distraction or making things like art less likely in the struggle to survive (metaphorically or actually.)</p><p>And yet, art can be sustaining. It can often be the only thing which seems bearable. It may feel like playing the cello while the ship sinks or straightening the beds while the world is on fire, But it is also, in some ways, an act of persistence and resistance.</p><p>I&#8217;ve been channeling my energies into the press. Into poems and plays. Into art experiments that have lesser to more degrees of success. These things are surely harder than they would be not under duress, and yet I do them in spite of a world that seems unbearably cruel and deeply stupid. I suppose that is all we can do&#8230;</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/03/creative-life-amid-doomscroll.html">creative life amid the doomscroll</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Maggie talks about poems as a stone we carry in our pockets. I&#8217;ve had this one in my pocket a lot lately. <a href="https://www.poetrybooks.co.uk/blogs/news/poem-a-day-everything-is-going-to-be-all-right?srsltid=AfmBOoqfOIT42twZoWRwULyFYQiLvs2o_QCvbD-RXpLMYA5RilP53V7n">It&#8217;s a poem by Derek Mahon</a>. He writes:</p><blockquote><p>There will be dying, there will be dying,<br>but there is no need to go into that.</p></blockquote><p>I love that line because it doesn&#8217;t shy away from the suffering. It names it directly. Loss is real. It&#8217;s always been real. But Mahon doesn&#8217;t let that truth swallow the whole poem. He refuses to.</p><p>I tend to do the opposite. I take the hardest thing I know and carry it into every room. I rehearse it. I turn it over until it fills the whole day. You might do something similar. Most people I talk to do.</p><p>But we are not able to solve the entire human condition before lunch. (Probably not even by dinner.)</p><p><strong>Eric Zimmer, <a href="https://maggiesmith.substack.com/p/guest-pep-talk">Guest Pep Talk</a> (Maggie Smith)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The one hundred sixty girls<br>won&#8217;t be watching the long-armed</p><p>yellow-bodied machines scooping<br>the dirt from between white lines</p><p>that lessons in geometry would show<br>make rectangles from imperfect ground,</p><p>or how the diggers know just how big<br>to make the depth and width of every hole,</p><p>or even why the digging must go on<br>once time for talks has ended and <em>azan</em></p><p>&#8212; the call to prayer &#8212; has come too late.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/who-counts">Who Counts</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Updating Descartes: I travel so I can talk to strangers. Updating Descartes again: I travel so I can reality-check the words of writers&#8217; against the wisdom of Uber drivers. Using that as a measure, AWP was stupendous!</p><p>No wonder we pay drivers to sit in their cars for twenty, thirty minutes, through traffic snarls and horrifically inflated rates. One driver, slung back in his seat of his Toyota Corolla, reeled off a lovely phrase about not recognizing what privilege is when we have it. That line could stand in any poem, I said, as I&#8217;d been sitting through a lot of poetry readings. He told me his line was borrowed; I added that we pick up a lot of folk wisdom through pop songs, rap, movies. He upped me: through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle and Marcus Aurelius.</p><p>Getting into another Uber, I asked the driver how he was. &#8220;Any day I&#8217;m still alive is a good day.&#8221; What an opening line, even if we&#8217;ve heard it before. I got to hear about Mamma in rural South Carolina, his 94-year-old mother-in-law, the whole array of sisters down there, the food and beverage that comes with visitors, the testifying, the cigarettes and coffee that fortify the old lady. He was beaming the whole time.</p><p>When I told the first driver about an award-winning book of poetry written about conversations written by a taxi driver, he was incredulous. &#8220;Are you telling me that book won awards?&#8221; Indeed. &#8220;Bor-ing,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I&#8217;d shut that in a second.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3659">Uber Drivers at AWP</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;d like to so say a huge thank you to Stephen Claughton and Mark Randles for having Matthew [Stewart] and me in St Albans to read at <a href="https://verpoets.wixsite.com/verpoets/news">Ver Poets</a>. if you look now, we are at the top of the news page. It was an early kick off (I think to avoid crowd trouble, and not to avoid me having a few liveness/straighteners beforehand &#8211; Thank you for that suggestion, Matthew Paul)&#8230;I think it was probably the earliest I&#8217;ve read, but very civilised. Lovely to read in a library, and to a warm crowd. We both had two slots, one at 20 mins and one of ten, which was a nice way to do things.</p><p>Matthew leant into his two collections, including some of the wine poems form Knives. I leant into CtD, including some that rarely get read like Tea Hut. I also tried out some newer poems&#8230;including a longer one (for me) that I think acts as a complement to Clearing Dad&#8217;s Shed (in a way). Not sure if it&#8217;s not too long for a reading, but we live and learn.</p><p>We also had an open mic, including a poem from <a href="https://litrefsreviews.blogspot.com/">Tim Love</a> who&#8217;d made the journey up (Thanks Tim). I did take notes about the readers, but they seem to have got very wet in my bag on the way home, so alas they are illegible&#8230;Nay, more illegible given my handwriting. Sorry folks, but I enjoyed you all.</p><p><strong>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/03/08/and-roast-of-all-thank-you-to-you-for-coming/">And roast of all, thank you to you for coming</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It might be an obvious thing to say but as far as poetry is concerned&#8230; well, my poetry&#8230; truth is an awkward subject. Every poem I write has what I believe to be a truth at its core. If I sense that anything I&#8217;ve written is dishonest, or in some way fails to tell the truth I intend it to tell, I chuck it out.</p><p>That said, the truth in poetry is often hidden behind masks, stray voices, even downright lies. A reader might have to search for it (if you can be bothered). The key, I suppose, is to write something that people feel they want to explore and discover what the particular truth might be.</p><p>That&#8217;s part of the attraction of poetry for me. OK, I can lie and deceive. Take the Ezra Pound&#8217;s Trombone poem I wrote a while back about visiting a museum in Genoa and seeing the legendary man&#8217;s trombone in a glass case. It was a piece of fun if you took it at face value but the truth, not too hard to see, was in our need for a quest, in the way we need to find things that feel of value to us, to honour people we might (even begrudgingly) admire. At no point when I was writing did it occur to me that somebody might be so excited by it that they would want to travel to Genoa on an actual quest to find the trombone. When the person contacted me to ask for the name and address of the museum I sheepishly had to admit I&#8217;d made it up, I&#8217;d never been to Genoa and as far as I knew there was no trombone&#8230;</p><p>Diane Wakoski had a similar experience when a radio interviewer gently asked her for the background to her poem Some Brilliant Sky from 1972 which begins &#8216;David was my brother/ and killed himself/ by the sea&#8217;. The interviewer was probing for the effect the death of her brother had on her &#8211; and on her poetry. She had to admit she&#8217;d made the poem up and she had no brother. The so-called &#8216;facts&#8217; of the poem aren&#8217;t the point. They&#8217;re the tool which the poet is using to tell their truth.</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/03/04/truth-in-poetry-well-you-have-to-look-for-it-and-even-then/">TRUTH IN POETRY? WELL, YOU HAVE TO LOOK FOR IT&#8230;AND EVEN THEN&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Eavan Boland, one of the most important voices in Irish literature, was as strong a presence in poetry as one can read. Her gift of craft is evident in every poem. Her use of language, blending the historical, mythical, and the personal, is beautiful and startling &#8211; adept at drawing in the reader.</p><p>The speaker&#8217;s voice in &#8220;A Woman Painted on a Leaf&#8221; is muscular and convincing in creating a moving, lingering ambiance for the piece. The work is the closing poem in Boland&#8217;s brilliant collection, <em>In a Time of Violence</em> (W.W. Norton, 1994), and serves as a perfect glance across the acute observation of the human condition that precedes it. A consideration of a poetry that is a manifesto:</p><p>&#8220;This is not death. It is the terrible<br>suspension of life.<br>I want a poem<br>I can grow old in. I want a poem I can die in.&#8221;</p><p>Boland forces the reader to consider the world and culture &#8211; like the &#8220;hammered gold and gold enameling&#8221; in Yeats&#8217; &#8220;Sailing to Byzantium&#8221; &#8211; that left these <em>fine lines</em> of art among the &#8220;curios and silver / in the pureness of wintry light&#8221;. The narrator&#8217;s voice in Boland&#8217;s poem is declaring the &#8220;terrible&#8221; act of any attempt to confine or limit women to any state short of <em>real</em>.</p><p>This is the holy grail of all poetic endeavors &#8211; a poetry that defies time, place, and history. A poetry that lets us live in the grandeur <em>and</em> in the tedium, and &#8211; yes &#8211; lets us die.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/thoughts-on-eavan-boland-a-woman">Thoughts on&#8230; Eavan Boland, &#8220;A Woman Painted on a Leaf&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Some of the most enduring poetry in the English tradition draws on classical myth, literature, and folklore. Daniel Hinds&#8217; <em>New and Famous Phrases</em> (Broken Sleep Books, 2025) participates in this lineage with remarkable originality. Although deeply informed by literary history, Hinds never imitates; instead, he revitalises inherited forms and narratives through a voice that feels strikingly fresh, imaginative, and contemporary. His encyclopaedic knowledge of language and literature serves not as ornamentation but as the foundation for ambitious poems that operate simultaneously as homage, dialogue, and innovation.</p><p><em>The Siren Star</em> offers a clear example of Hinds&#8217; distinctive approach. By echoing the seven&#8209;day structure of the Book of Genesis, the poem presents a cosmological reversal: a creation story rewritten as an account of extinction. Each day charts a further step toward the end of human life, beginning with the death of an astronaut and the suicide of another, who &#8220;Downed tools / Unlatched the white umbilical cord,&#8221; a moment that suggests both the inevitability of mortality and the futility of technological mastery in the face of cosmic forces. As the poem progresses, the erosion of human presence becomes stark&#8212;by the fifth day &#8220;there were no seeing men left,&#8221; and by the sixth, &#8220;no women.&#8221; These apocalyptic developments unfold within an unmistakably contemporary world, one populated by children with telescopes purchased by affluent parents and dominated by &#8220;concrete Cities.&#8221;</p><p>It is in the seventh day, however, that Hinds turns decisively to myth. The final human encounters &#8220;three copper women,&#8221; figures who recall the ominous sisters of Greek mythology but are reimagined as &#8220;citizens of the sun,&#8221; their bodies marked by &#8220;three black holes at their necks.&#8221; This fusion of classical symbolism with astrophysical imagery evokes the terrifying grandeur of a dying star pulling Earth into its expanded orbit. The title&#8217;s reference to the sun as a &#8220;siren&#8221; encapsulates this duality of allure and annihilation. The poem culminates in the haunting image of extinction described as a kiss: &#8220;She lifts his heavy glass mask / And makes first contact with her lips.&#8221; The moment is at once intimate, inevitable, and profoundly unsettling.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/03/07/review-of-new-famous-phrases-by-daniel-hinds/">Review of &#8216;New Famous Phrases&#8217; by Daniel Hinds</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Maybe this is about darkening pink things, and the power of raspberry jam to evoke involuntary memories. Maybe it&#8217;s all in the imprint. One could say the unexpected photograph is a segue into thinking about how poetry moves, or how the distance between the poem&#8217;s opening line and the poem&#8217;s closing can narrow into a specific yet unexpected place. Maybe I need the ellipses of William Heyen&#8217;s &#8220;The Berries&#8221; to wound their way through me.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://alinastefanescu.substack.com/p/imprints-in-absence-and-a-motif-in">Imprints in absence&#8230; and a motif in raspberry.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Darkness pervades each couplet&#8212;the atmosphere of fable, of fairy tale&#8212;each compact narrative moving inevitably toward the word <em>home</em>, each repetition of this single-word refrain adding resonance to the narrator&#8217;s ambivalence about the very meaning of home.</p><p>The third couplet features ravens. Given the company this ghazal is keeping&#8212;Robert Frost, Emily Dickinson&#8212;this reader feels the presence of Poe, subtly established in the previous couplet: &#8220;A leaden shadow is tethered to the heart.&#8221;</p><p><strong>David Meischen, <a href="https://davidmeischen.substack.com/p/no-porch-light-on">No Porch Light On</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;Something In Nothing&#8221; uses fairytales, often dismissed as children&#8217;s stories, to explore their original purpose: as warnings of the darker side of humanity, as the title poem suggests,</p><p>&#8220;All the world revolves in it<br>and it is no more than a grain of sand.<br>For that is all I have &#8211;<br>a story that is something in nothing.&#8221;</p><p>That&#8217;s what the best stories are: a handful of characters, a few words that conjure an entire imaginary world. How many daydreaming children have been told they are &#8216;wasting time&#8217; when they were creating a rich inner world and trying to make sense of something that was strange to them or finding safety in a world that felt dangerous.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/03/04/something-in-nothing-zoe-brooks-indigo-dreams-publishing-book-review/">&#8220;Something In Nothing&#8221; Zoe Brooks (Indigo Dreams Publishing) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Henry Gould&#8217;s work has always been suffused with Christian hope and love, but here it&#8217;s becoming ever more urgently the surface of the poetry. There are moments when the writing takes on the quality of prayer, as in these lines from the end of &#8217;17 Fahrenheit&#8217;:</p><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s taken me forever, to reckon the price<br>of ancient JUBILEE. Beyond my ken.<br><em>God is divine kindness : we must be kind,<br>cease making war against our kind&#8230; and then<br>restore our sunlit planet &#8211; for they praise</em>!<br>So chants your silver turtledove, O smiling Moon.</p></blockquote><p>Gould&#8217;s physical location in Minneapolis has long been central to his work, and this has become even more the case since the ICE invasion. Mayflower Table, a single poem in 22 numbered sections, is at heart a response to this situation, with part 12 dedicated &#8216;i.m. Renee Nicole Good&#8217; and 17 &#8216;to the people of Minneapolis&#8217;. 12 ends with lines that restate Gould&#8217;s ongoing belief in the potential of America:</p><blockquote><p>Sulfurous tyrants grieve us &#8211; but we shall not fear:<br>for<em> we the people are created equal </em>&#8211; in the mind of God.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/03/09/two-pamphlets-by-henry-gould-a-review/">Two Pamphlets by Henry Gould: A Review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>The Rose </em>is the fifth collection from the wonderful American poet Ariana Reines. In the UK, Penguin are publishing it and I was lucky enough to get an advance copy. This is what I like to call a desert island book &#8211; a book that you could take with you if you knew you were going to be stranded on a desert island for twenty years because there are enough layers and ideas to keep you going for a long time. It&#8217;s a book that interrogates and reinvents our ideas and preconceptions around female desire, power and submission and argues for the possibility that sometimes there is no easy or single answer.</p><p>The figure of Medea (who in the most famous version of the myth murdered her own children after being abandoned by her husband Jason for a new wife) haunts this book in a sequence of poems with the title Medea &#8211; none of which tell her story, or at least not in a linear way. The Medea in <em>The Rose </em>is utterly contemporary and mythic. In the first poem called &#8216;Medea&#8217; of the many that run through the collection, she says &#8220;I&#8217;ll find another woman / Somewhere inside me /I&#8217;ll humble myself / I&#8217;ll try&#8221;. There is a beautiful recording of one of the later &#8216;Medea&#8217; poems on <a href="https://poets.org/poem/rose">poems.org</a> where Ariana explains &#8216;I kept asking myself what it would mean to be the worst woman in the world.&#8217; I loved this poem for the way it lists all the good things that must be forgotten in order to both endure violence and to carry it out.</p><p>One of my favourite poems is &#8216;Hellmouth&#8217; with its repeated insistence that we must build a secret room inside ourselves. The first iteration of this has such a surefooted line break &#8216;If you fail to build in yourself a secret /Room&#8217;. We must build secrets in ourselves and secret rooms. Later in the poem she writes &#8216;The little / Room in the middle / Of me. Where I see / What I can&#8217;t say&#8217;.</p><p>Many years ago, I had &#8216;A Room of One&#8217;s Own&#8217; tattooed on my arm &#8211; inspired by Virginia Woolf&#8217;s essay of course &#8211; I longed for a physical room of my own that would be my writing room, but I also wanted to have a room inside myself, a place that nobody else could touch, that could not be controlled or known or owned.</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/february-reading-diary">February Reading Diary</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last week we were away for five days, and just before leaving I picked up a few books to take with me, almost at random, including Margaret Drabble&#8217;s <em>The Middle Years </em>(very enjoyable) and C. H. Sisson&#8217;s <em>English Poetry 1900-1950: An Assessment </em>(first published 1971). Sisson is always a bracing and engaging read and I was struck by this paragraph from his first chapter, on the 1890s:</p><blockquote><p>Lionel Johnson, Ernest Dowson, John Davidson and Yeats himself were workmen of importance by any standards which would be reasonable in a history of fifty years, and their technical practice was important, in varying degrees, for the writers who followed them. The vague and notorious aura of the period matters less.</p></blockquote><p>None of Johnson&#8217;s poems are included in any of the anthologies of English verse I had to hand, and if anyone mentions him now, they generally do so for just those &#8216;vague and notorious&#8217; reasons to which alludes, and which he then dismisses. Johnson was a sensitive Englishman who wished he was Irish, was taught by Walter Pater at Oxford, became early on an insomniac and an alcoholic, converted to Catholicism, &#8216;notoriously&#8217; introduced his friend, Oscar Wilde, to Lord Alfred Douglas, and then died suddenly of a stroke brought on by excessive drinking, aged only 35, in 1902. A more wholeheartedly 1890s biography is hard to imagine. Nina Antonia&#8217;s 2018 edition of Johnson&#8217;s selected writings (which I haven&#8217;t read, though the free sample of the introductory biography looks quite fun) is accordingly titled to hit as many of the &#8216;vague and notorious&#8217; targets of high decadence as possible: <em>Incurable: The Haunted Writings of Lionel Johnson, the Decadent Era&#8217;s Dark Angel. </em>The <a href="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Incurable-Haunted-Writings-Decadent-Attractor/dp/1907222626/ref=sr_1_1?crid=YBZID4IR5O41&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.a2hh1bfNjmxL8h1_xZdw5a-mNTX6VQpTlGRn4B5SZXC7KkpATAE3Ip8LpRCNawTOPMCyDXtaxusgfL6tljhcQRVpj0dtSbLyeBIk5RNLFqo0YtaShWdL7hyV-ne9_tp9IKtDLuztOgTKPW2F8Y3BY-QLLKkTsBJ3NrvGTzJv4273GWixbqZIaL8QW6QZ9h0sp_eLrydUthKB4vO47Rs5zbTmfGJDEwE1NC_ufCdssG4.X95SJ7-C8AJgNNTSKKFGMzW1YVQV2KCiSWRreU0Tmf0&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=lionel+johnson&amp;qid=1772700210&amp;sprefix=lionel+%2Caps%2C458&amp;sr=8-1">Amazon summary</a> makes Johnson sound, frankly, unbearable.</p><p>A vague sense of all this had in the past rather put me off Johnson. But I was interested by Sisson&#8217;s focus, not on any of the seedy drama of decadence, but on his &#8216;technical practice&#8217;. What makes Johnson&#8217;s poetry of interest in a technical sense for the literary historian?</p><p>So this week I sat down and read Johnson&#8217;s complete verse, and found rather a different poetic personality from what I had expected.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/the-saddest-of-all-kings-reading">The saddest of all kings: reading Lionel Johnson</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A recent read I have thoroughly relished is this memoir by my friend Sally Evans.</p><p>I first met Sally when she invited me to read at her 70th birthday party in Dunblane. Many poets were invited, and the idea was that there would be short reading slots for invited poets, so plenty of variety. It was one of the best parties! The food was fantastic, as was the company. Sally offered me a day of bookbinding lessons with Ian King, and that was my first visit to their incredible bookshop on the Main Street in Callander. So I knew very little of Sally&#8217;s earlier life, how she came to be a bookseller, how she met Ian, apart from the fact they had Grindles in Edinburgh, a very well known second hand bookshop, and had &#8216;retired&#8217; to Callander. So it was fascinating to hear about her earlier life, her work as a librarian, how she came to meet Ian, and how they started their business.</p><p>Sally is a very generous person, and this comes across in her writing, as well as her annual Poetry Weekend hosted in Callander, to which many of us flocked year on year, finding the most attentive poetry audience and best book-buyers, as we all supported each other. For me, it was an extension of the 70th birthday party, and many of the same people attended. They were all good poets. When I first went to StAnza in 2014, invited to bring The Lightfoot Letters up by then director Eleanor Livingstone, I had felt rather shy. However, I soon found the streets and the venues were full of people I knew from knowing Sally. (in that way it resembles Whitby Folk Week). People like Judith Taylor, the late Sheila Templeton, late Brian Johnstone, Elizabeth Rimmer, as well as friends from home. Sally is generous about the people who come into the shop, dealing with irritating customers firmly but politely.</p><p><strong>Angela Topping, <a href="https://angelatopping.wordpress.com/2026/03/07/driving-in-the-book-lane-a-memoir-by-sally-evans/">Driving in the Book Lane, a memoir by Sally Evans</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>You authored a unique collection of haiku and illustrations, titled </strong><em><strong><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/203076281-faunistics">Faunistics</a></strong></em><strong>. Would you be willing to tell us more about this book and the inspiration behind it?</strong></p><p><em>Faunistics</em> was my way back into haiku, essentially. I&#8217;d had a brief foray in my early twenties but hadn&#8217;t quite mastered it and then I got sidetracked with other things. Fast forward to my mid-thirties, and I&#8217;d been through a very long period of not being able to write and/or writing trash. I&#8217;d always had this goal of publishing a collection of haiku, and had an old manuscript, which I forced myself to dig out, redraft, and publish. As a result, I ended up completely immersed in the haiku community and soon learned to write it properly. The more I wrote, the more embarrassing my old haiku became and most of the original haiku were discarded. The ones that were any good were related to animals, so I made that my focus. I began grouping them by animal type to get a roughly equal amount of each, then grouping them as per their native continents, if not where their population is the highest. Within these continental groups, I divided them up into countries, so that the book is ordered like a page-by-page worldwide safari. I&#8217;ve always loved writing about nature. So, this was a good excuse for a deep dive. I think maybe one haiku from my original manuscript survived, but even that was redrafted.</p><p><strong>You also co-authored an interesting book with <a href="https://haikupoetinterviews.wordpress.com/2024/04/21/hifsa-ashraf/">Hifsa Ashraf</a> titled </strong><em><strong><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/223275993-infinity-strings?from_search=true&amp;from_srp=true&amp;qid=ipZN13Ek53&amp;rank=1">Infinity Strings</a></strong></em><strong>, which explores much of humanity&#8217;s attachment to modern culture, space, and technology. What did you enjoy the most about working on this project? What inspired you and Hifsa Ashraf to write this book together? What did you learn from the experience of writing collaboratively?</strong></p><p>A big part of haikai is collaboration. I&#8217;d written with a few haiku poets at that time who I&#8217;d connected with online. With Hifsa, we started writing on spontaneous subjects. Then, I introduced her to the <a href="https://www.graceguts.com/essays/an-introduction-to-tan-renga">tan-renga</a> and I recall her getting really excited about the form. We tried our hand at something more experimental in terms of subject and liked the result, and so it snowballed into a potential sequence, then a potential pamphlet, at which point we felt we might as well take it to collection-length. We became obsessed with how far we could go down the rabbit hole and push the collection to its limits. <em>Infinity Strings</em> is the polar opposite to <em>Faunistics</em>. I think it&#8217;s fair to say it&#8217;s an outlier amongst both our repertoires. It has its own personality entirely, and every now and then we meet someone brave enough to follow its disconcerting path.</p><p><strong>Jacob D. Salzer, <a href="https://haikupoetinterviews.wordpress.com/2026/03/08/r-c-thomas-richard/">R.C. Thomas (Richard)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>1 &#8211; How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?</strong></p><p><strong>Uche: </strong>My first book, <em>Dark through the Delta</em>, was inspired by oil exploitation in the Niger Delta and the environmental devastation that followed. Writing that book convinced me of literature&#8217;s power to spotlight various forms of plunder of both human and nonhuman worlds. My most recent book, <em>We Survived Until We Could Live</em>, is different, in tone and theme. It&#8217;s less ecological and much more intimate and explores postwar memory, historical and family traumas, domestic violence, grief, healing, and love. In some way, both books are still very much about devastation. While <em>Dark through the Delta</em> examines the devastation caused by an oil behemoth and its effects on both human and nonhuman life, <em>We Survived Until We Could Live</em> reveals the devastation of war and its toll on human lives and relationships. I think this book is my most ambitious and certainly my most vulnerable. I couldn&#8217;t have written it without the generous support of the entire team at the University of Calgary Press.</p><p><strong>2 &#8211; How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?</strong></p><p><strong>Uche: </strong>I came to poetry by accident, in my late uncle&#8217;s house &#8211; a biochemist, but an avid reader of literature. He had a storage full of books, including British and Roman poets and playwrights. One day, I went to the storage to get something and stumbled upon a small book, Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>Sonnets</em>. I opened it almost at random, and the rhyme scheme, its imagery, and its lyric intensity captivated me. It&#8217;s funny, because before that, I&#8217;d never been particularly interested in literature at high school. That Shakespearean moment, or rather, encounter, is what really started me writing poetry.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/03/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_01427315085.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Uchechukwu Peter Umezurike</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i come wrapped in<br>plastic. tear here. tear here. the tongue<br>is stuck in the gutter. i fish it out.<br>i don&#8217;t bother scolding it anymore.<br>instead we go into the kitchen<br>in search of salt.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/03/07/3-7-5/">cheese pull</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I had an interesting experience recently trying to write a braided essay, that is, an essay that intersperses subject matter such that each thread sheds some light on the others. I had it as an open file on my desktop for two weeks or so, and when thoughts occurred to me on any of the threads, I jotted them down. After a while I braided the whole thing, snipped out some stuff, was kind of happy with it, but thought it might be confusing or confused. Trusted Reader took a look and didn&#8217;t like the illogic of it all, so reordered it into more of a sandwich than a braid, and I realized two things. One was that the braid itself lent, to me, interesting energy to the piece, and two, that, all in all, the energy was undeserved, as I really hadn&#8217;t logically said much at all. So, I&#8217;m walking away from it, wiser, but still like the approach I took, and maybe could use a few bits and pieces again. This is writing work: Look around, think stuff, try stuff, let it sit, revise, wait, snip, relook, get a different perspective, turn it upside down, ask yourself what you think you&#8217;re up to, repeat.</p><p>I hate the precious idea of a &#8220;muse.&#8221; Ideas may float like waves of pollen or surge up like the snags of skunk cabbage, they&#8217;re not sprinkled on you like fairy dust by some fucking lady in a diaphonous gown. You have to be alert, maybe on the hunt like a mushroom tracker, or a garbage picker looking for discarded treasures. You have to squint your eyes, rest your mind, look to one side of the dim stars. You have to listen through the din for a faint peep. And then&#8230;and THEN&#8230;you have to figure out how to make something of it. And then make it.</p><p>The muses were the daughters of the head god dude and memory. (Which is actually kind of interesting, memory as a mother of muse.) But mythology is just a bunch of made up stories. And those ancient Greeks were just more misogynists who made up female gods but kept real flesh and blood women well under control. So I say to hell with the idea of &#8220;the muse.&#8221; And yes to the inspiration of being a body-in-the-world, flailing about. And a restless, doubt-filled, querulous, messy, glorious mind.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/03/09/still-i-listen-i-search/">Still, I listen. I search</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Against the backdrop of Emersonian philosophy, albeit from the vantage point of thirty years&#8217; hindsight, Today&#8217;s Poem, written around 1867, becomes, like nature itself, an extended metaphor. It offers a description of the various behaviors of water, but its true burden, like the true burden of nature itself, is to analogize the human mind in all its constructive and destructive potential.</p><p>Its twelve trimeter lines begin to resolve, by line 3, into rhymed couplets, only to dissolve again &#8212; or to mimic the widening ripples in the surface of the water &#8212; by way of an envelope quatrain at the end. In the course of these twelve lines, water, that fundamental element, accumulates sapient qualities, for good or for ill. It begins in understanding. Ask the water what it knows about &#8220;civilization,&#8221; and presumably it will tell you, if you have ears to hear. Its physical qualities are dispatched in the first rhyming couplet; yes, yes, it can make you wet and cold, but &#8220;prettily&#8221; and &#8220;wittily.&#8221; It doesn&#8217;t <em>mean </em>you any harm. In fact, it&#8217;s downright cheerful. At least, it&#8217;s neither &#8220;disconcerted&#8221; nor &#8220;broken-hearted,&#8221; as the second rhymed couplet, in pleasing feminine rhymes, has it.<br><br>Its natural state, in other words, is to be good and ordered toward &#8220;joy,&#8221; as the third rhymed couplet emphasizes via its repetition of that word. But water&#8217;s capacity to &#8220;deck&#8221; and &#8220;double&#8221; joy is bound up &#8212; as the next rhyme suggests &#8212; with its destructive potential if &#8220;ill-used.&#8221; Its power can tilt both ways. Its beauty should not reassure; &#8220;elegantly,&#8221; with &#8220;a look of golden pleasure,&#8221; it may sweep everything you love away. And in the face of the water, as the poem tacitly implies, being of a piece with the mind of Ralph Waldo Emerson, the human beholder may find a mirror for the state of his own soul.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-water">Today&#8217;s Poem: Water</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Keats was born on the fringes of the city, at Moorgate, spending early years in present day Hoxton, but his school in leafy Enfield and his grandmother&#8217;s home in Edmonton close the River Lea provided a rural idyl flush with bubbling springs and swimming pools. Think also of the Fontana della Barcaccia in Rome&#8217;s Piazza di Spagna, the sound of its waters soothing the poet on his deathbed and offering the source for his epitaph. From his room, restored in Keats-Shelley House, I do not hear the sound of the fountain. By day it is drowned by the bustle and mutter of tourists flooding the piazza. By night, where I am staying, in the room above where he died, it comes, gently and I sense all is well.</p><p>I take a shower, wash the journey from me. In the square glasses are being filled and raised, toasts to health are given, drink is taken. We are familiar with the first part of the motto, &#8220;In vino veritas,&#8221; but less aquatinted with the second, &#8220;in aqua sanitas.&#8221; While in wine truth may be revealed, in water we find salubrity and I, I have come to seek clarity, to pursue restoration through poetry, to wash the drudgery from me.</p><p>I rise early, before the crowds come, before the police whistles sound out in the piazza. I walk a little, ascend the Spanish Steps, alight on one of the landings, lifted but not yet arrived, rising from the civic, between the public and the sacred.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n54-a-postcard-from-rome">N&#186;54 A postcard from Rome&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>the breadth <br>of a water breath<br>a sky breath<br>a mountain breath of<br>a shore line&#8217;s breadth<br>it was all there<br>held in a held breath</p><p><strong>Jim Young, <a href="http://baitthelines.blogspot.com/2026/03/on-looking-at-mountain-lake.html">on looking at a mountain lake</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A so-called FB friend (who will remain anonymous, so no fishing!) told me to my face the other day that my promotion of my books was far better than the poetry inside them, implying that I was less of a poet for getting my stuff out there. I can fully understand why a poet might feel uncomfortable about promoting their work, but I can&#8217;t comprehend how this might then lead to their denigrating other poets who do so.</p><p>I was stunned by his words, though I recovered sufficiently to reply that his attitude was representative of the worst of U.K poetry. Which reminds me. Anyone up for a signed copy?! If so, just drop me an email. The address is in my blogger profile&#8230;</p><p><strong>Matthew Stewart, <a href="http://roguestrands.blogspot.com/2026/03/less-of-poet.html">Less of a poet&#8230;?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I was very pleased to see my poem <em>Canada is as far away as bibles are </em>on <em>After</em>. Many thanks to Editor Mark Antony Owen. You can read the poem <a href="https://www.afterpoetry.com/poem/mar-03-2026-fokkina-mcdonnell">here</a>.</p><p><em>After</em> publishes ekphrastic poems and my poem was inspired by T<em>he Avid Reader, 1949</em>. Rodney Graham (1949 &#8211; 2022) was a visual artist, painter, and musician. He made the lightbox in 2011.</p><p>&#8216;<em>We see the middle-aged man / carrying a hat, smoking a pipe, / because Graham inhabits him.&#8217;</em></p><p><em>The Avid Reader, 1949</em> was one of the works on display at Voorlinden Museum, Wassenaar, the Netherlands in the major exhibition of Graham&#8217;s work titled <em>That&#8217;s Not Me</em>. An ironic title as Graham appears in all the works &#8211; as a builder having a smoke, a lighthouse keeper, historical figure.</p><p>Voorlinden is a fabulous museum &#8211; more about it some other time.</p><p>I was struck by the attention to detail and the scale of the works. The woman is &#8216;<em>his wife, swing coat, high heels, walks past on the right.&#8217;</em></p><p><strong>Fokkina McDonnell, <a href="https://acaciapublications.co.uk/2026/03/08/canada-is-as-far-away-as-bibles-are/">Canada is as far away as bibles are</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I collect phrases I like, ones that I hear or read in books. The trouble is I usually do nothing with them. The other day though, I decided to use one that has been knocking about for some time as a writing exercise. I do not remember where the phrase <em>the unpopular provincial museum</em> came from but it sparked this. [&#8230;]</p><p>This one it is claimed won a Bronze,<br>another a cap for his country,<br>here it is secure, pinned to the wall,<br>for the few who visit to see.<br>It all adds up to a feeling<br>that nothing has ever happened here,<br>which given the times we live in,<br>adds to its attractiveness<br>and makes it a desirable and safe place to live.</p><p><strong>Paul Tobin, <a href="http://magpiebridge.blogspot.com/2026/03/the-great-and-good.html">THE GREAT AND THE GOOD</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>After that, we visited the Museum of Things Left in Cars Overnight&#8212;</p><p>books, random receipts with poems written on the back.</p><p>Smells of vinyl and dust preserved under glass.</p><p>The Museum of Instructions Without Context was far too confusing,</p><p>and we got totally turned around in the Museum Without Exit Signs.</p><p>A stranger on the street recommended we visit the Museum of Objects That Remember You&#8212;</p><p>a chair that recalls your weight, a mirror that reflects an earlier version of your face,</p><p>a key that insists it belongs to you.</p><p><strong>Rich Ferguson, <a href="https://richrantblog.wordpress.com/2026/03/07/ill-always-remember-the-day/">I&#8217;ll Always Remember The Day</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My trip to Baltimore for the AWP Conference Book Fair didn&#8217;t happen; my immune system decided otherwise, with a resurgence of a nasty respiratory virus and a flare of fibromyalgia. I guess I can look on the positive side and say I saved a lot of money, right? Plus I can purchase most of those poetry collections online, I suppose. Still, there really is nothing like browsing through thousands of luscious books for something that grabs me, that takes the top of my head off, to paraphrase Ms. Dickinson. Through social media platforms, I can see colleagues-in-literature making connections and meeting one another face-to-face, which is what conferences are for. Another year, maybe.</p><p>And after days of necessary spring rain, drizzle, and fog, the long-awaited thaw eradicated most of our snow. Crocuses bloomed, and bees came out to visit the snowdrops.</p><p>I felt much better today and was able to take a walk in the mild sun, listening to robins, mourning doves, song sparrows, woodpeckers, redwing blackbirds, bluebirds, house finches, Carolina chickadees, American crows, Canada geese, mockingbirds, cardinals, bluejays, masses of starlings&#8230;I watched the high-flown antics of redtail hawks and turkey vultures.</p><p>In other regions of the world today, people listen and watch for fighter jets, torpedoes, drones. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uiczD5xPXs">There but for fortune may go you or I (Phil Ochs</a>). Meanwhile I remain grateful for feeling slightly better as the days lengthen into spring. It&#8217;s March&#8211;we could still get snow! But the spring peepers sense the warmer temperature and trilled a bit last evening while the great horned owl was hooting. Here&#8217;s a poem I wrote in 2012 about DST. [&#8230;]</p><p>I am glad for the extra hour<br>among long shadows as my dog<br>chases a woodchuck, as the wood-<br>pecker pounds in metrical progressions:<br>trochee, trochee, spondee. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/03/08/13565/">Snowdrops</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Despite the misleading cherry blossoms at the top of the post, we&#8217;re supposed to have cold rain AND snow this week, so spring seems like a false hope at this point, a thing which will never arrive. Winter Blues are a real thing for me in November, February, and yes, March. I wish for some dry warm days to shake up my physical miseries (colds never seem to be made better by cold wet weather, I notice). I missed AWP and saw all the happy pics on Facebook and sighed to myself. I don&#8217;t go every year&#8212;I don&#8217;t have the means, as a non-academic, to do it, even if I wanted to. But the news has also been so miserable, the weather, the fact that we&#8217;re planning a trip home to visit a very sick family member&#8230;it&#8217;s hard to just snap back to my usual cheerful self. I wrote a few poems about how I felt about America. Will these poems change anything? Probably not, but sometimes you need to write them anyway.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/time-changes-and-winter-blues-with-cherry-blossoms-academic-women-in-pop-culture-vladmir/">Time Changes and Winter Blues with Cherry Blossoms, Academic Women in Pop Culture: Vladmir</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We didn&#8217;t really plan this, you know. We began, and indeed still persist as, &#8216;Thrums Chums&#8217; (blame Glenday) &#8211; an informal workshop organised around little more than that we are all old pals, and all more-or-less in driving distance of a kitchen table in Kirriemuir, Angus. For your geocultural orientation: immediately behind us is the cemetery where JM Barrie lies buried with Peter Pan; just behind that, the frozen storm-surge of the mighty Cairngorms. From kailyard to eternity.</p><p>The advantage of our being friends first is that we don&#8217;t feel the need to agree on everything, or indeed anything. We&#8217;ve no common political stance or aesthetic. None of us give a toss for ideological compliance, and we would rather run on trust. Differences are good. Besides, what we have in common is far more important: poetry, for some reason, has placed itself at the centre of our lives.</p><p>As North Sea Poets (with the indispensable help of Miriam Huxley, our wonderful administrator), we&#8217;ve sought to extend that circle of friendship and share what collective expertise we&#8217;re accumulated in our many years of avoiding the right margin &#8211; whether as poets, tutors, workshop leaders, essayists on Substack, or just as fellow readers. Despite what London or Edinburgh or NYC might tell you, poetry has no centre. Not even Kirriemuir. It&#8217;s wherever you&#8217;re reading this. The best gift of the digital age is that being remote needn&#8217;t mean feeling remote. Now we can all gather in the same place, and yet still be anywhere. While I bang on and on about metonymy.</p><p><strong>Don Paterson, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/a-year-of-north-sea-poets">A Year of North Sea Poets</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Although I try to stay connected with my readers, I haven&#8217;t written you in close to three months. The truth is, with all the upheaval in the world these days, it has been hard to know what to say.</p><p>On the one hand, I know I&#8217;m not obligated to say anything about the news&#8212;no one really expects artists and poets to analyze the political events of the day. Somehow the <em>New York Times</em> still hasn&#8217;t phoned for my take on the war in Iran! On the other hand, it seems oblivious at best to chatter about my creative projects and my happy little life while the regime is locking up children and murdering US citizens in broad daylight.</p><p>How to navigate these dystopian times? I know many of us attend protests.* We&#8217;ve got our reps on speed dial. We donate to help people in Gaza, Ukraine, Minnesota. We stay informed as best we can without drowning in the horrors of the day. Yet faced with the shocking cruelty and corruption of this administration, it never feels like enough.</p><p>Still, I take heart from these words by Rabbi Rami Shapiro, interpreting a part of the Talmud: &#8220;Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world&#8217;s grief . . . You are not expected to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it.&#8221;</p><p>Under an administration that stokes fear and hatred of &#8220;the other,&#8221; I believe that connection, creative expression, and celebration are all forms of this work. Whether it&#8217;s taking in a beach sunset, writing a poem or petting a stranger&#8217;s dog, joy is an act of resistance.</p><p>copper-tinged waves<br>trying to fit the ocean<br>into my camera</p><p><strong>Annette Makino, <a href="https://www.makinostudios.com/blog/2026/3/how-to-move-through-a-broken-world3">How to move through a broken world?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Without</p><p>having known what it&#8217;s like to fumble <br>through darkness, would the pearl-</p><p>light of morning feel less of an <br>astonishment? Bodies that bore</p><p>a hundred hurts, that carved of <br>themselves an offering. A warbler</p><p>balances on the tip of a branch, <br>its weight barely enough to break it.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/03/on-blessing/">On Blessing</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 9]]></title><description><![CDATA[death stuck in traffic, puritans vs. mermaids, an inflamed labyrinth, rain falling on asphalt, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-9</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-9</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2026 22:49:24 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/96151eed-e970-4716-869f-b628d11316bf_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: death stuck in traffic, puritans vs. mermaids, an inflamed labyrinth, rain falling on asphalt, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>Today I prayed upon waking<br>in weak morning light, on this<br>ordinary day, unkempt<br>in flannel and cotton.<br>Peace descended<br>like a still, insensible animal<br>laid on my lap, a strange<br>species I don&#8217;t know how to take care of.</p><p><strong>Kristen McHenry, <a href="https://kristenmchenry.substack.com/p/lenten-poem-a-week-project-week-3">Lenten Poem-a-Week Project: Week 3</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>To quote T. Swift:</p><p>&#8220; <em>All my mornings are Mondays stuck in an endless February.</em>&#8221;</p><p>But things are happening amidst a world in utter chaos and absurdity, a place where I and I imagine other creatives are holding on white-knuckled to artmaking and routines and fighting the urge to run away into the woods forever. I saw someone quoted the other day that it was important to go on making art and devoting time to creativity, that besides the things like protesting, making calls, writing letters, could be one of the most important things you do. Also a documentation for prosperity.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="https://kristybowen.substack.com/p/february-paper-boat">February Paper Boat</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve also been wedging my foot in the door poetically while thinking, like Plath, that there are so damn many of us trying to push up through the earth. The poets are using Canva to design posts summarizing their busy AWP schedules: me too. The poets are announcing their publishing milestones via social media and MailChimp: me too. <em><a href="https://tupelopress.org/bookstore/p/mycocosmic">Mycocosmic</a> </em>was published a year ago this week and the &#8220;book birthday&#8221; post/ newsletter has become a standard publicity genre. That&#8217;s fine, poets deserve any little morsel they can scrape out of the attention economy, but it&#8217;s hard to do the work lightly. First and foremost: the US is in the middle of an illegal war because a reckless pedophile president needs to distract people. Even without apocalypse (are we ever?), it would be a tonal balancing act: here&#8217;s me putting a very slight twist on a &#8220;content&#8221; clich&#233;. Now here I am asking you to pay attention to my book in a way that needs to be a little wry and humble, because no one likes a pushy writer. Then there&#8217;s the tech: good lord, I&#8217;ve spent hours trying to format a simple email, is MailChimp going to make me upgrade to paid now?! Curses.</p><p><strong>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/03/01/so-many-of-us/">So many of us!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have been home in Hastings, looking after my mum and my kid sister. It&#8217;s been a tough winter. I&#8217;ve been making soup and feeling time plays tricks, how fast it all catches up with all of us. My lovely mum will be ok, but she gave us a scare. My lovely sister is more than ok, she has got all the sticky toffees and caramel promises out of me she can in mum&#8217;s absence. I&#8217;m now back at my desk madly trying to catch up with books and admin and stuff. It&#8217;s a juggle navigating this time of life, this big scary world, this terrible age of distraction, and all this patriarchal fuckery.</p><p>Take a deep breath. Here&#8217;s a walk along the beach and something from the archives. A love letter to Hastings and those 1980s teenage years. The poem &#8216;Under The Pier&#8217; was originally written for a walking tour of Hastings, where you would have poetry playing in headphones at different historical and tourists spots in the Hastings area. &#8216;Under The Pier&#8217; was also the title poem of a pamphlet published by Nasty Little press in 2011. Then later in 2016 this poem featured on the LIVEwire album, a solo performance poetry album, released with Nymphs &amp; Thugs and <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/17275760-matt-abbott?utm_source=mentions">Matt Abbott</a> &#8211; The <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/salenagodden/p/under-the-pier">video</a> was shot on location in Hastings, East Sussex in 2016, the video was filmed, directed, and edited by Jordon Scott Kennedy of Idle Work Factory, and it accompanies audio of a live performance of the poem recorded at the BBC Radio Theatre.</p><p>Time is such a trickster, somehow this all feels like last week, and also so long ago now. Ten years have passed, so much water has passed under the pier. I&#8217;m gonna see my friends soon, excited to do a show with <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/17275760-matt-abbott?utm_source=mentions">Matt Abbott</a> and Toria Garbutt next week, so, if you are up in Yorkshire and local, I&#8217;m at Barnsley Book Festival on March 2nd, please come, details below, it will be lovely to see everyone again.</p><p><strong>Salena Godden, <a href="https://salenagodden.substack.com/p/under-the-pier">Under The Pier</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em><a href="https://archipelagobooks.org/book/acrobat/?ref=richardjnewman.com">Acrobat</a></em>, by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nabaneeta_Dev_Sen?ref=richardjnewman.com">Nabaneeta Dev Sen</a>, translated from the Bengali by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandana_Sen?ref=richardjnewman.com">Nandana Dev Sen</a>:</p><blockquote><p>Poetry flies away as well,<br>if you let go of the thread&#8212;<br>it flutters in space like a lost kite.<br>The poet floats in an infinite void, desolate,<br>like a spacecraft disconnected from earth,<br>with no destination.</p></blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve chosen these six lines from a poem called &#8220;And Yet, Life,&#8221; which appears towards the end of this volume&#8212;a collection spanning a sixty year career&#8212;because their subtext, the idea that poetry is that which connects the poet to the world, is the thread around which my experience as a reader cohered. Read carefully, each poem in the book reveals itself as something that needed to be written, not because the world required it, but because the poet&#8217;s consciousness and conscience did. &#8220;This Child,&#8221; for example, which opens with the line &#8220;One day this child too will die,&#8221; confronts a question with which children by their very presence ask of their parents: Why did you bring me into this world. Dev Sen&#8217;s speaker, &#8220;Choking with fear, with ignorance,&#8221; tells us this question will make her &#8220;run away/to a dark cave, numb and empty&#8221; because she has no satisfactory answer to give. In &#8220;Growing-up Lesson,&#8221; she addresses a boy who fears the requirements of manhood&#8212;the most interesting line in the poem, to me, is &#8220;Are you terrified of plucking virginity?&#8221;&#8212;and then offers, as (a perhaps ironic) alternative, the kind of strength and maturity and analogous manhood that can be found in the use of words. In some ways those different but related spheres of concern&#8212;that of a parent responsible for a child&#8217;s life and that of a woman turning a critical eye on patriarchal gender roles&#8212;are the poles between which all the poems in the volume move. In her moving introduction to the volume, Nandana Dev Sen, the poet&#8217;s daughter and translator, offers a quote from her mother that I think speaks to what makes this book worth reading as more than just an interesting volume of poetry in translation: &#8220;I speak of poetry as being central to woman&#8217;s freedom. Yes, I am partial, I cannot be and do not wish to be objective&#8230;&#8221;</p><p><strong>Richard Jeffrey Newman, <a href="https://www.richardjnewman.com/four-by-four-52/">Four by Four #52</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And then the siren gets closer. There&#8217;s nowhere for<br>the ambulance to go. Cars inch to one side as if the<br>road is stretchable. As if the vehicle is marshmallow.<br>Someone jumps off a Suzuki and waves his hands about,<br>directing the melee. The paramedic shakes his head.<br>The lane clears. Like a break in the clouds. The<br>ambulance rushes ahead to the next signal. Death<br>stuck in traffic. Life wanting a better place to die.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/monday-traps">Monday traps</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I recently spoke with David J. Bauman on the<a href="https://www.inthreepoems.com/2516618/episodes/18750272-unrivered-in-three-poems-with-donna-vorreyer"> In Three Poems Podcast</a> about Jehanne Dubrow&#8217;s book <em><a href="https://www.unmpress.com/9780826368645/the-wounded-line/">The Wounded Line,</a> </em>how having a &#8220;container&#8221; (in poetry, a form, like the sonnet) can be helpful when approaching the difficult subject, though it may not stay in that form in the end. And it&#8217;s not just the difficult subject that benefits from limits. Other constraints can push language in previously unmapped directions.</p><p>Here are a few constraints to try:</p><ul><li><p><em>syllabic limitation (for the poem or the line)</em></p></li><li><p><em>sound limitation (i.e., an alliterative or anagrammic word bank)</em></p></li><li><p><em>nonce forms (creating your own rules you must follow)</em></p></li><li><p><em><a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/process-vs-product">grammatical patterns (check this post for an explanation</a>)</em></p></li></ul><p>When I put constraints on myself, I often discover something: a pleasing color palette or a surreal feeling in a collage. A juxtaposition of words or a rhythm of language that are not in my usual wheelhouse. And allowing those limits to sing in their own way opens up so many possibilities, much more so than a prompt that might ask me to write &#8220;however I want&#8221; or &#8220;explore&#8221; a topic. In this way, constraint leads to an expansiveness of thought.</p><p>In this way, the limit becomes the sky.</p><p><strong>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/the-limit-is-the-sky">The Limit is the Sky</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Again, I was surprised and encouraged. I&#8217;d never seen anyone else write like this. I decided to keep going. I wrote pieces where each word started with the next letter of the alphabet, where specific letters could be lined up to make other stanzas, poem codes where each <em>nth</em> word of a poem could be combined to make a new poem, and poetry using music notation letters that could be played on a piano. Some of these are forms that, as of now, AI writing tools can&#8217;t even replicate.</p><p>I wrote hundreds of symmetrical poems and kept discovering new forms all because of that first day that I tried something impossible and didn&#8217;t give up on it until it was finished. These new &#8220;impossible&#8221; forms opened up new publishing opportunities for me. Dozens of the poems have been published in various magazines, and I won an award and was interviewed for one of them.</p><p>Not only that, but my writing style overall has improved. Writing anything else seems easy in comparison to these &#8220;impossible&#8221; forms.</p><p>I heard recently that in some professions, even more important than consistency, is <em>persistency. </em>A refusal to accept &#8216;no&#8217; as an answer. If you believe in your work, don&#8217;t give up on it, even if&#8212;<em>especially </em>if&#8212;people think it&#8217;s crazy or impossible. Sometimes, as the Wright Brothers found out, stubbornness pays off.</p><p><strong>Joshua Kepfer, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/try-impossible-things">Try Impossible Things</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>She sits on the cliff watching the water.<br>He is a rounded head buoyant in the centre.</p><p>Something on the air tumbled by the wind<br>interrupts him;<br>eyes and nostrils flick open<br>revealing stone-black depths.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/03/02/breathing-the-scented-air/">SEAL AT ANGEL BAY</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s a chemo week, so when I say I&#8217;m tired: I&#8217;m really tired. In the spirit of &#8220;letting myself be tired,&#8221; as those zany docs like to suggest, this week I&#8217;m sharing a poem that first appeared in <em><a href="https://missourireview.com/article/poetry-vanessa-stauffer/">The Missouri Review</a></em>. Its companions are paywalled, but you academic types can get to them via JSTOR if you&#8217;re interested. (If you&#8217;re an editor, you can get to the whole looking-for-a-home manuscript through <a href="https://vanessastauffer.com/contact/">me</a>.)</p><p>I don&#8217;t remember much about the writing of this poem and have never felt compelled to keep anything resembling archives, but my email oracle reveals that I foisted it on my favourite first reader in June of 2018, which sounds about right. I was thinking about power, about who constructs the narrative, about who is left out and why and what a piss-off it is. I&#8217;d wager I&#8217;d recently read Emily Wilson&#8217;s translation of <em>The Odyssey</em>: Scheria is where the shipwrecked Odysseus is discovered by the youthful princess Nausicaa, who helps the wanderer on his way.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/scheria">&#8220;Scheria&#8221;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Dear ***** , Arrived last night, on the anniversary of the funeral, when (and do stop me if I&#8217;ve told you this story before) in 1821, a small cort&#232;ge made its way through these very streets at dawn from Piazza di Spagna to the Cimitero Acattolico in Rome where the mortal remains of &#8216;the young English poet&#8217; John Keats were interred. Yesterday the sun shone, &#8220;for the first time in months,&#8221; according to a local. I&#8217;m quite sure he was exaggerating but his friends seemed to agree, draining their espressos, adjusting their shades in expectation of better weather ahead.</p><p>Today it&#8217;s cloudy, overcast, just as it was when Johnny K first arrived. I thought I might be overdressed, coat, jumper, hat, still wrapped for a long London winter. I&#8217;m told it&#8217;s warmer there now I&#8217;ve left. I&#8217;ve brought the colder weather with me it seems. The sun comes out when I leave, goes in when I arrive. I pull my collars up, think of John, on these steps, out here, on one of his better days, wondering if he&#8217;d make it through, last until the better weather came. He brought the clouds with him too. I wonder if he ever considered if it had all been worth it, if he should have stayed home, done the decent thing, got a proper job, been a doctor, married Fanny, raised some kids, slipped quietly into obscurity.</p><p>The Piazza is full of tourists. They are all out filming each other, all trying to manoeuvre to a spot where they&#8217;ll just get a shot of themselves on the steps and no one else in the frame. None of them are successful, they are all in each other&#8217;s photos while posing for their own. Later they&#8217;ll all star on each other&#8217;s social media feeds. Some pictures will get one hundred &#8216;likes&#8217;, one may go viral, others will get no reaction at all but they will all look the same, more or less, just people standing around in a crowd, being bland and simultaneously incomprehensibly unique.</p><p>I begin to move around the steps just to see how many pictures I can appear in, how many videos I can star in. I don&#8217;t do anything daft, I&#8217;m not photo bombing, I&#8217;m doing background work, just filling in, milling around, trying to be as natural as I can. I take it seriously. It&#8217;s like writing, it&#8217;s like finding that line, trying it out a dozen times until it feels authentic, until it floats unnoticeably just above the ordinary. That&#8217;s what I&#8217;m doing here. This is what I decide I&#8217;ve spent a lifetime doing: floating unnoticeably just above the ordinary.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n53-in-a-region-of-mists">N&#186;53 In a region of mists&#8230;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last night, I wrote this Facebook post: &#8220;In my younger days, I wanted to be a reporter. In my older days, I am so grateful to have a job where I don&#8217;t need to stay up for the State of the Union address, although when I teach &#8220;Antigone&#8221; tomorrow, I may wish that I could make more specific references to the speech. Nah, it&#8217;s probably better to keep that class conversation more general: what do we do when our moral/religious beliefs are in conflict with what our earthly rulers want us to do?&#8221;</p><p>I didn&#8217;t need to make a conscious choice. By 9 p.m., when the pageant started, I was already asleep. Instead of watching the State of the Union address, we watched <em>A Fish Called Wanda</em>. [&#8230;]</p><p>This morning, my brain returned to the State of the Union address and my Facebook post. I also thought about my department chair asking me if I had ever taught a journalism class. I wrote about it in <a href="https://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/01/living-dream.html">this blog post</a>: &#8220;Before she assigned me the Journalism class, my department chair reached out to me by way of e-mail to see if I&#8217;d be open to teaching it. Here&#8217;s what I wrote back: &#8216;I am open to that, although I haven&#8217;t taught it. But long ago, in my Newberry College undergrad days, I was an essential part of the student newspaper. We went looking for hot stories, a la Woodward and Bernstein. We never found them, but we had fun just the same.&#8217;&#8221;</p><p>This morning, I&#8217;ve been trying to write a poem that combines threads of my Facebook post and threads from my blog post. I still need a third stanza, so I&#8217;ll let my subconscious brain keep working on it while I get ready for my working-for-pay day, the teaching of &#8220;Antigone.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/02/what-we-watched-when-we-didnt-watch.html">What We Watched When We Didn&#8217;t Watch the State of the Union Address</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I didn&#8217;t set out to write this. I began this piece with the rainless days of 2025 so that I could tell you how they brought a hedgehog to my door, skinny and dehydrated; how I took him to a local sanctuary who nursed him back to health. I intended to tell you how the &#8220;Full of Joy Animal Sanctuary&#8221; runs on entirely on donations, how I decided to help by running a fundraising poetry workshop to celebrate the more-than-human lives which surround us. On Sunday, 36 participants showed up, raising half of the cost of an incubator for hedgehogs and other small animals &#8211; so I decided then to run another online workshop on March 28<sup>th</sup>, from 10-12.30: <a href="https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/1983733794179?aff=oddtdtcreator">click here. </a>In the meantime, &#8220;Full of Joy&#8221; told me that Lizzie Holden who attended the workshop, had contacted them to pay the rest of the cost. This means that whatever we raise in this second workshop will go towards a second incubator, where owls and hawks and rabbits and other sick creatures can be nursed. I hope some of you can join us.</p><p>Instead of the piece I&#8217;d planned, on hot days and hedgehogs &#8211; and the saving power of poetry, which gives us the means to save small animals, to express ourselves, to understand the world around and inside us, to imagine a different relationship with nature, to bring us together &#8211; I wrote this piece on walking through tough weather, and depression, and my regular return to despair. Sometimes the words lead you where you most need to go, and you have to follow them.</p><p>I find my meaning in landscape. Every day I walk, and it&#8217;s very hard, and rainy, and dark. I am so tired. Some days I simply don&#8217;t want to take another step. I want the path to stop. But then there is lichen, that incredible symbiosis of fungus and algae, through which life first crept on its belly onto the land. Then there is scarlet elfcup, and the drowned Ophelia of sphagnum cuspidatum, and the blackbird resuming its song &#8211; and yesterday, the first curlew. And there is always my Niamh, my first light, bright star, my green.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/rain-rain-rain">Rain, rain, snow</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Dear god, I renamed one of my current 9 books at editing phase. Continued editing it, then started editing the old version so they diverge. An overlap of poems but changed edits, deletions and additions. I can convert to text files (more versions, goodie) then run through File Merge app to see where changes are.</p><p>Is it still a headache if there&#8217;s a solution?</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/02/26/forked/">I am Forked</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am nervous about writing this post because I also think there is a lot of stigma around ADHD. In fact, when I rang the doctors to have an initial conversation, he actually said to me &#8216;Well, you&#8217;ve done very well for someone with ADHD if you have a doctorate and you are working at a university&#8217;. I was so taken aback by this that I said nothing, but of course people who are neurodivergent can &#8216;do well&#8217; (whatever that means) especially if we are lucky enough to have a job which allows us to hyperfocus on something we love.</p><p>I am starting to understand that my ADHD brain has allowed me to achieve so much even whilst it makes things it is not interested in (chores, housework, paying bills, booking doctors appointments, losing things etc) very difficult. My brain, which cannot rest is the reason (I now understand) why so many of the ideas I come up with (16 Days of Activism, January Writing Hours) have this endurance element to them. It&#8217;s painful for me to sit still, so I come up with projects that mean I never stop. My brain also means I can hyperfocus all day and forget to eat &#8211; a useful trick when you are trying to complete a book manuscript for a deadline.</p><p>I wish I could have explained to that doctor that I achieved my doctorate because I found a methodology that was perfect for my particular type of neurodiversity, that I found a structure for the PhD that embraced the quirkiness of the way I think and allowed me to connect everything in a non-linear fashion. I should have told him that people with ADHD are brilliant and creative and resourceful and resilient &#8211; but at the time, I didn&#8217;t feel like any of those things. I felt like I was drowning and he&#8217;d just put his foot on my head!</p><p>Despite all this, I think getting the diagnosis has been a largely positive one. I have moved past that numbness and sadness and am starting to process and make sense not just of the past, but also my lived daily experience now.</p><p><strong>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/what-is-an-overshare-anyway">What is an overshare anyway?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Early March, below zero, but blue at least, and the long winter loosing in drips and a rouging of the forsythia. Difficult days of promise and betrayal, of hope and despair, large and small. I cannot get out of my own way, nor see around the muddle in my head. My brain is noisy and clanging. But the sun is leaking through the trees, and small birds move in the thicket. I know what I don&#8217;t know, but that does not make me brave. I try to stay present but spin out into what-ifs. Time is water in my hands, but the skin on the back of my hands is dry. I think of the word slake. An edgy word, knife-ish, as if the end of thirst is painful. But there seems no end to thirst.</p><p>Here is a poem by Lawrence Wray full of sound, and something achey, like thirst but not quite, like promise but with the possibility of its opposite inside.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/03/02/i-listen-for-fraught-accords-between-soil-and-stalks/">I listen for fraught accords between soil and stalks</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today&#8217;s Poem is an eighteenth-century curiosity by the now-obscure English poet Stephen Duck (1705&#8211;1756). Classified as a &#8220;natural&#8221; or untutored genius, Duck, son of a poor and obscure Wiltshire family, had left his charity school at thirteen to begin a life of field labor. A self-directed reader and self-taught poet, he came to the notice and patronage first of a prebendary of Winchester Cathedral, then of Queen Caroline (1683&#8211;1737), wife of George II, who employed Duck as librarian for Merlin&#8217;s Cave, her folly at Richmond Park. Both Pope and Swift knew Stephen Duck, liked him personally for his sincere piety, and &#8212; when he was rumored to be in the running as the next poet laureate &#8212; savaged him in print for his rhymes. [&#8230;]</p><p>Taking holy orders after the death of his royal patron, Duck accepted a series of clerical positions, burying the second of his wives and marrying a third. He continued to write poems. Everywhere he went, as always, he was popular. In 1756 he died by drowning, an apparent suicide, the man whose name had been whispered as a possible poet laureate, only because everybody liked him.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-on-mites-to-a-lady">Today&#8217;s Poem: On Mites (To a Lady)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Like the Romantic poets before me, I believe in the primacy of the Imagination to poetry. You won&#8217;t find many everyday or slice of life poems in my debut collection <em>New Famous Phrases</em>. Instead, I deal primarily in myth, in fable, in fairytale, folklore, foretelling, and the fantastic, which for me is where poetry is at its most powerful. This poem, &#8216;Death by Earth&#8217;, is part of the wider aquatic and siren mythology that runs throughout the collection, in poems like &#8216;The Pact of Water&#8217;, an origin myth for humanity&#8217;s relationship with nature, &#8216;The Crying of the Gulls&#8217;, a revenge tale of the natural world upon the human, &#8216;Cryptid (The Myster of Water)&#8217;, a poem about mystery, curiosity, and what we do when we find an answer, via the Loch Ness Monster, and &#8216;Lady of the Rock&#8217;, &#8216;The Sea Chain&#8217;, &#8216;Siren&#8217;s Throat&#8217;, and &#8216;Scraps to Daub a Siren&#8217;s Lips&#8217;, which portray the varying fortunes of their speakers in their goddess quests towards the isle of the sirens, and the reasons for their failures to reach this apotheosis.</p><p>I wrote my undergraduate dissertation about an aspect of the goddess quest in Ted Hughes&#8217;s work. It is this goddess quest that forms a framework for my poetics, and it is something you&#8217;re going to see me return to throughout my poetry, as I navigate how to reach this storied isle. &#8216;Death by Earth&#8217; draws on the ideas of Robert Graves and Ted Hughes about the transition from a matriarchal goddess to a patriarchal god, hence the epigraph &#8216;the stages of his age and youth&#8217;, plucked from T. S. Eliot&#8217;s poem, which I use to evoke the history of mankind (and I use this gendered term deliberately here, given the events of the poem). Or, as I like to more succinctly introduce this poem during readings: puritans vs. mermaids.</p><p><strong><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/02/28/drop-in-by-daniel-hinds/">Drop-in by Daniel Hinds</a> (Nigel Kent)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;With My Back To The World&#8221; was sparked by an ekphrastic prompt that sent Victoria Chang to explore Agnes Martin&#8217;s art and write about them. Martin once told an interviewer, &#8220;&#8230;when I first made a grid I happened to be thinking of the innocence of trees and then this grid came into my mind and I thought it represented innocence, and I still do, and so I painted it and then I was satisfied.&#8221; Her art, pencil drawings and paintings, are of grids and stripes often in muted colours. That might suggest regulation, rather than freedom, an imposition of straight lines on a naturally curved world. However, in Chang&#8217;s poems, those grids become a way of drawing focus, turning a spotlight onto one small part of a bigger whole. [&#8230;]</p><p>An artist or poet may try to guide a viewer/reader, but ultimately have no control about how a piece is perceived. One person may briefly glance and see a grid, another reads suffering into that grid, someone feeling isolated may only see parallel lines that never meet. Chang is inviting readers to participate in her exploration, to see not the paint or the words but the beauty of the structure and what it might represent.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/02/25/with-my-back-to-the-world-victoria-chang-corsair-poetry-book-review/">&#8220;With My Back To The World&#8221; Victoria Chang (Corsair Poetry) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Clarity-Light-Meditations-Jesse-Baker/dp/B0F9S8SFVT">Clarity and Light by Jesse Baker</a><br>I&#8217;ve been reading this book of devotional poetry in the mornings &#8211; a smooth transition between bible study and poetry writing. &#8220;Devotional&#8221; poetry sounds flowery, but these poems are earnest and relatable. Jesse is a pastor whose poems arise out of his biblical study and sermon writing process (which you can read about fully in <a href="https://rabbitroompoetry.substack.com/p/poetic-pastoring-using-poetry-in">this Rabbit Room article</a> by the author &#8211; but an excerpt I cannot resist including:</p><blockquote><p><em>Poetry has helped my sermon writing; but, it has also helped me to experience the whole of the spiritual life as a patient, attentive, and prayerful experience of God and his Scriptures. With that poetic foundation, when I preach, I hope sermons have the same effect on listeners that a poem has on readers, that it is seen as an open door inviting people into an exploration of both the text and the God revealed in the text. I also hope the whole of our worship becomes, not simply a chance to learn, but an opportunity for the church to embody their spiritual lives prayerfully and poetically, that they in turn become living poems through which the world encounters the Maker of all things. &#8211; Jesse Baker</em></p></blockquote><p>The collection is organized chronologically, so you could keep it alongside your bible readings and tuck in to the aligning poems (though most poems include a scripture excerpt as an epigraph, so you could read it on its own and understand the context just fine).</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/listening-so-hard-to-an-audiobook">Listening so hard to an audiobook I almost ran out of gas but Thankfully Did Not</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The world has its unacknowledged legislators &#8211; now more than ever &#8211; but poetry is the wrong place to look. &#8216;Unacknowledged&#8217; is still on the money, though. When an AI researcher recently quit his high-powered Silicon Valley job, the BBC reported that he&#8217;d decided to &#8216;look to pursue writing and studying poetry, and move back to the UK to &#8220;<em>become invisible</em>&#8221;.&#8217; The poetry WhatsApps lit up with the predictably self-castigating glee of the nichist: <em>Poetry? in Britain? That should do the job, aye.</em></p><p>We might imagine the quitter chose poetry as the instinctive inverse of AI. Silicon Valley is everything Parnassus Foothill isn&#8217;t: modish, cutting-edge, drowning in capital. When people imagine the meeting of the two, they picture some Bay Area tech bro realising there&#8217;s a gap in the market to sweep away all the lazy, complacent poets. That is, what people mostly expect the poetry x AI crossover to involve &#8211; getting ChatGPT to write poems about how we&#8217;re all numb inside now because of capital, woke and melamine &#8211; is in fact the least interesting possible avenue of exploration.</p><p>But there are lots of ways the analogical interchange between poetry and AI can be rich, fruitful. Here&#8217;s one: the unprecedented tidal wave of investment genAI is receiving is strongly incentivising a whole bunch of maths nerds to think about natural language for the first time, and in so doing presenting strange and novel perspectives which, it seems to me, the poets are currently sleeping on. Why not make use of these odd new materials suddenly washing up on our shorelines? Poetry&#8217;s slinking, adaptive omnivorousness has long been one of the reasons it&#8217;s never needed to be cutting edge, never needed to drown in capital. It possesses a kind of pre-emptive and instinctual access to the new modes of thinking and feeling which any change in linguistic convention necessarily entails.</p><p>And linguistic change is coming. For around 200,000 years, if you came across a sentence, then you knew it had been produced by a human. That changed around 2019. Some believe that the discursive tipping point &#8211; at which AI began to produce more new commentary than humans do &#8211; <a href="https://graphite.io/five-percent/more-articles-are-now-created-by-ai-than-humans">came in late 2025</a>. Ways of differentiating machine from human text are becoming paramount.</p><p><strong>Joey Connolly, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/metrics-machine-tooling-a-new-human">Metrics: Machine-Tooling a New Human Poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Birds can learn to fly without studying physics, but poets, it seems, cannot write iambic pentameter on instinct alone. This conventional wisdom accounts for the experts offering to teach the rules of meter, in their many books, <em>The Ode Less Traveled</em>, <em><a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/all-the-funs-in-how-you-say-a-thing">All the Fun&#8217;s in How You Say a Thing</a></em>, and so on, with helpful examples, and exercises whose solutions are not (alas) always in the back of the book. The puzzle is that the rules in those books are <em>wrong&#8212;</em>not entirely wrong, nor entirely useless, but wrong in many details, and wrong in the abstract, wrong in the theoretical framework they employ&#8212;yet still the poets who study them often end up writing good verse that scans. What&#8217;s going on?</p><p>The linguists, who have made the study of language, and of poetic meter, into a science, have an answer. While some people learn to scan verse using &#8220;rules&#8221; they read in a book, others are able to tell&#8212;and more reliably&#8212;whether a line is metrical without such training. These others are no elite priests; even children learn to sing nursery rhymes. The training for this ability is the <em>experience </em>of metric verse, that is, reading a lot of it, and grokking, inarticulately, what separates it from prose, and (God forbid) non-metric &#8220;free&#8221; verse. Then one may use the <em>true rules</em> of meter to sort those categories, but here the rules are not available to us in consciousness; we <em>do </em>go by feel. We know the rules the way native but naive and untutored speakers of a language know that language&#8217;s rules of grammar.</p><p>Are the linguists right about this? Who are they to tell the poets and literary theorists that they misunderstand a core subject of their own discipline? One answer is that they have, or claim to have,</p><blockquote><p>uncovered subtle properties of meter which are so detailed as to be unlikely to be accidental, and also so obscure as to be unlikely to be conscious.</p></blockquote><p>If there are indeed generalizations about iambic pentameter that Shakespeare never violated, but which no one wrote down before 1977, or even had the <em>vocabulary</em> to write down before the 1960s, then yes those generalizations are <em>rules </em>of the meter, and Shakespeare was <em>following them</em>, but he was not<em> </em>doing so <em>consciously</em>. Ask him about them (oh, to ask him a question!), and he won&#8217;t recognize them.</p><p><strong>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/iambic-pentameter-as-chicken-sexing">Iambic Pentameter as Chicken Sexing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Here goes a backasswards way of trying to get poetry published, pitching it out on Substack. To my lovely fellow poets thinking &#8216;What the..?, Submit like everyone else, there&#8217;s a queue, you fuck..&#8217; I get it.</p><p>But hear me out. One problem I have is that what I&#8217;ve written here is a heroic crown of sonnets, or sonnet redoubl&#233;, which is too short for all but the most left-field and blue moon random pamphlet subs. Even with a title page and epigraphs it&#8217;s 17/18 pages thereabouts. I could wait for the next one in-a-million pamphlet call outs that&#8217;ll consider something so short, or I could do what I&#8217;m doing here.</p><p>Faint heart never won fair maiden. Gah, the dreadfully important nonsense that is poetry, that it should come to <em>this</em>.</p><p>The other problem might be the subject matter, stained by stigma, and riddled with ridicule, that is, until fairly recently. You may be forgiven for not noticing that UFOs and &#8216;aliens&#8217; are having a bit of a moment, sufficient to permit their institutional rebranding as UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) and NHIs (Non-Human Intelligence). Arch-bozo Donald Trump has even waded into it with promises of revelations, no doubt to divert attention from the Epstein files.</p><p>What snagged my interest, and left me wondering why it was met with a cultural shrug, was the dread word uttered by senior intelligence whistle blower David Grusch in the US congress, when asked, &#8220;If we have recovered craft, do we have the bodies of the <em>pilots?&#8221; </em>To which<em> </em>he responded that yes, non-human <em>biologics</em> had been recovered. There have been three congressional hearings and multiple attempts at transparency legislation since the 2017 NYT article that set this current kerfuffle in motion.</p><p>I would urge anyone to avoid the rabbit hole that I threw myself into. At best it&#8217;s a bewildering hall of mirrors, with bad actors, a desperate counter intelligence operation losing its grip, a weird coterie of wannabe messiahs, grifters and charlatans. On the other hand, we could be on the brink of the most ontologically significant moment in all of human history. Steven Spielberg certainly seems to think so, his upcoming summer blockbuster, &#8216;Disclosure Day&#8217; looks set to make our collective skin crawl with gnawing unease. Surely poetry could layer the confusion and ambiguity inherent in what&#8217;s referred to as the topic&#8217;s &#8216;high strangeness&#8217; in ways no other form might be able to attempt. That was my brief.</p><p><strong>James McConachie, <a href="https://jamesmcconachie.substack.com/p/a-straight-up-poetry-pitch">A Straight-up Poetry Pitch.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a &#8220;book&#8221; from the very beginning?</strong></p><p>This might be unusual, but the titles often come first. I love titles. I love the act of naming something. It&#8217;s like a generative exercise. A perfect example of this is my poem &#8220;Antediluvian,&#8221; which is the last poem in <em>Citronella</em>. I was curious about the period of time in the Bible between the fall of man and the Great Flood &#8212; what I came to know as being called &#8220;antediluvian&#8221; (or &#8220;pre-flood&#8221;). I began asking myself, what happens in a moment of banishment? How does one feel looking back at a place called home while simultaneously seeing some strange land on the horizon? It was the first poem I wrote for <em>Citronella</em>, but in doing so, I knew I&#8217;d already written its ending. I wrote towards that closing with the other poems; led the speaker all the way to the edge of that cliff.</p><p>I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ve yet figured out how books &#8220;happen.&#8221; But I can say this: the more I write, the more I understand how my poems interconnect. It was clear to me when I had enough poems for my chapbooks, and it was clear to me when I had enough for my full-length collection. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?</strong></p><p>This is a big question, and one that could be answered in no less than a hundred different ways. I see my own role as a writer as being a sort of truthteller. In Shakespeare&#8217;s plays, the truthtellers often operate on the margins and in the fens. Think of the Fool in <em>King Lear </em>or the witches in <em>Macbeth</em>. These are queer, weird (wyrd) characters. I feel similarly as a queer writer. I write to reveal uncomfortable truths. I write frankly, and shy from writing fiction, because there is so much happening in the real world. Fiction is an interesting genre. I read a lot of it, and I value the way it can offer escape or confront me with difficult truths. But in my experience, contemporary poetry doesn&#8217;t allow for distraction &#8212; it cuts straight to the bone.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/03/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Loch Baillie</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>meditation<br>i remember i left<br>the lights on</p><p><strong>Tom Clausen, <a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/03/01/footstep-by-tom-clausen/">footstep</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My son is still small enough that, when I put him to bed, I can hear, briefly as I hug him, his heartbeat. It is a beautiful but also a baleful moment. Frank Kermode said, in <em>The Sense of an Ending</em>, that although the clock goes <em>tick, tick</em>, we hear <em>tick, tock</em>; bounded, as we are, in this little life, by a birth and a death, we hear the inevitable everywhere, giving to all things a beginning and an ending. And so the haunting <em>tick, tock</em> echoes in our lives, as it does in my son&#8217;s heartbeat.</p><p>It echoes through literature, too. It is the ageing Captain Hook, not the ever youthful Peter Pan, who is rendered insensible with fear at the approaching sound of the crocodile&#8217;s clock. Barrie&#8217;s finest stroke of genius was to have Peter himself make the ticking noise, unconsciously imitating the crocodile, as children do, which sends Hook crawling along the deck, only to plead to be hidden from Fate. &#8220;&#8220;Hide me!&#8221; he cried hoarsely.&#8221; And all the while, insouciant, loveable, innocent Peter keeps on ticking.</p><p>In a sublime moment, Barrie mentions that Peter &#8220;had seen the crocodile pass by without noticing anything peculiar about it, but by and by he remembered that it had not been ticking. At first he thought this eerie, but soon concluded rightly that the clock had run down.&#8221; It is terribly funny to read this after Hook has been crawling helplessly along the deck of the <em>Jolly Roger</em>, but it also makes that scene, for the reading parent, far more poignant. It means nothing to Peter that the clock has run down; it is all in the joke; but to the reading parent, faced with their own children and the <em>tick, tick </em>of their little heartbeats, it means all too much.</p><p>To the poets, time and death are as commonplace as toast and tea. &#8220;I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker&#8221;, wrote T.S. Eliot, four years after <em>Peter Pan</em>, in <em>The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock</em>. In that poem, we hear echoes of Marvell, who wrote one of the most famous lines of English poetry about the swift passage of time&#8212;&#8220;for always at my back I hear/time&#8217;s winged chariot hurrying near&#8221;. A few years later Noel Coward had hints of Shakespearean &#8220;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50428/song-fear-no-more-the-heat-o-the-sun-">golden lads and girls</a>&#8221; in the lyrics to &#8216;The Party&#8217;s Over Now&#8217;: &#8220;The candles gutter,/ the starlight leaves the sky;/ It&#8217;s time for little girls and boys to hurry home to bed,/ For there&#8217;s a new day waiting just ahead.&#8221;</p><p>Those lyrics are from 1932. Perhaps I am fanciful in hearing an echo of T.S.E. in them.</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/the-night-cometh">The night cometh</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Intense vertigo of the spinning variety, hearing loss, tinnitus (ringing in the ear), nausea, vomiting, and imbalance.</p><p>These are the symptoms of a condition caused by an ear infection or a virus attacking a particular part of the ear known as the bony LABYRINTH, a delicate complex located inside the inner ear that includes three specialized structures: the <em>vestibule</em>, the <em>semicircular canal</em>, and the <em>cochlea</em>.</p><p>The labyrinth converts mechanical signals transmitted by the middle ear into electrical signals, which are then relayed on to the auditory pathway in the brain.</p><p>The labyrinth also detects motion and position in order to maintain balance.</p><p>An inflamed labyrinth.</p><p>A hidden snail snell with oval handles.</p><p>A series of letters in which Samuel Beckett mentions his ear issues, and how motion is displaced by vertigo.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/2/25/the-thigh-of-the-mind">The thigh of the mind; or a few words that delight me.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the autumn of 2013, I was invited to the Library of Congress for a celebration of the newly acquired Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan papers. There alongside Sagan&#8217;s drafts of <em><a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2012/12/10/pale-blue-dot-motion-graphics/">Pale Blue Dot</a></em>, his hand-drawn diagrams of space and time, and his list of children&#8217;s book ideas (&#8220;Why do birds fly?&#8221; &#8220;Why do we cry?&#8221; &#8220;What is it like to be a tree?&#8221; &#8220;When I talk to myself, who&#8217;s listening?&#8221;) was a 1974 letter to his friend Timothy Leary, whom Sagan was about to visit in prison. After some thoughts on evolution, the possibility of extraterrestrial life, and the logistics of the upcoming visit, he added a postscript:</p><blockquote><p>P.S. The enclosed poem, &#8216;The Other Night&#8217; by Dianne Ackermann [sic] of Cornell, is something I think we both resonate to. It&#8217;s unfinished so it shouldn&#8217;t yet be quoted publically [sic].</p></blockquote><p>I immediately wondered about this poem, this poet, and down the rabbit hole I went, to discover that Carl Sagan had been Diane Ackerman&#8217;s doctoral adviser at Cornell and that she had gone on to publish a collection of astronomy-inspired poems. It was out of print. I managed to procure a surviving copy and instantly fell under its spell &#8212; here was a kindred spirit just as wonder-smitten by reality, &#8220;knee-deep in the cosmic overwhelm,&#8221; passionate and playful, &#8220;stricken / by the ricochet wonder of it all: the plain / everythingness of everything, in cahoots / with the everythingness of everything else.&#8221; Here was someone who could see the &#8220;light engrossed in every object,&#8221; could fathom the &#8220;molecular / grit&#8221; of that light, could feel &#8220;the cold compress / of the universe&#8221; against this burning mortality impelling us to make meaning and make poems on a planet of such irrepressible aliveness, encircled by such inhospitable bodies as &#8220;Pluto, rock-ribbed as a die-hard comet,&#8221; &#8220;Neptune, whose breath is ammonia,&#8221; &#8220;Mercury, pockmarked / by the Sun&#8217;s yellow fever,&#8221; and the &#8220;agitated fossil&#8221; of Jupiter with its &#8220;whirlpools and burbling / aerosols little changed since the solar-system began.&#8221;</p><p>What emerges from these ravishing portraits of otherwise, the way a sculpture emerges from the marble cut away, is a love letter to this particular world, this improbable flotsam of the possible. &#8220;How shall I / celebrate the planet / that, even now, carries me / in its fruited womb?&#8221; Diane asks, &#8220;full of stagefright / and misgiving,&#8221; then goes on to sign the celestial body electric, arriving at the most fundamental question:</p><blockquote><p>How can any system<br>observe itself?</p></blockquote><p>And the poems answer: with systematic wonder.</p><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/24/diane-ackerman-the-planets/">A Cosmic Pastoral: Diane Ackerman on the Intimate in the Infinite and the Responsibility of Rapture</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And if you are<br>tender to yourself, you&#8217;ll hear and<br>maybe even smell the rain falling on<br>asphalt, unroll the waxed and wrinkled<br>map of this life which shows you there<br>are still wildnesses left unexplored.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/02/little-essay-on-disorder/">Little Essay on Disorder</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have a few friends bringing out books soon, and they have told me how they struggle to continue to write, to even dare to post about their new books, or do readings, or any normal things.</p><p>I feel this pressure and anxiety as well&#8212;how do you write through the most stressful times I&#8217;ve ever experienced in my life? How relevant does poetry (or AWP, or a new book) feel in the face of women losing their rights to their bodies, facing a new war, facing threats to our voting rights? Can women in particular be expected to just go about business as usual? How can we deal with personal crises on top of political stress?</p><p>I try to spend time noticing nature, spending time reading, trying to deal with each crisis as it comes and just do the best I can. Friends are also a huge support. And can poetry save a country, save women&#8217;s rights to vote or use birth control, help us heal our own bodies or those of our loved one? Writers are storytellers, and storytellers have an important role to help people remember moments in lives, in history. If the American mythology seems to be teetering on the edge of insanity right now, how can we set that right? Can writing our own versions of mythology sound a note of hope, of justice, or reason? I hope so. I certainly don&#8217;t think it helps the world for artists to silence themselves in the face of so much uncertainty. Reading books about apocalypses helped me process the anxiety of the nuclear war threat of the eighties as a kid&#8212;perhaps something you&#8217;re writing right now will do the same for some other person? Speaking your truth&#8212;whatever that is&#8212;seems more important in a world where false information spreads like wildfire and hate tries to suppress everything kind, joyful, empowering. Is what you and I have to say about our daily lives, our work, our love lives, our disappointments and hopes important right now? I would argue, perhaps even more important than we know.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/spring-on-the-way-writing-through-hard-times/">Spring on the Way, Writing Through Hard Times</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8212; It&#8217;s perhaps an evergreen statement these days &#8212; I know the news of the world is harrowing today.</p><p>&#8212; Because the news of the world is harrowing and because the world is full of sorrows, we hold a place here for joy, for when you can get to it, for when it is needed. We lay down some hope and some beauty when we can. Sorrow is not the whole story. [&#8230;]</p><p>&#8212; I&#8217;ve been reading <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/fernando-pessoa">Fernando Pessoa</a>&#8217;s poems, enjoying all his pseudonyms. So many of his poems contain lines that will get in your head and stay. &#8220;The astonishing reality of things / Is my discovery every day. / Each thing is what it is, / And it&#8217;s hard to explain to someone how happy this makes me, / And how much this suffices me.&#8221; He says, &#8220;All it takes to be complete is to exist.&#8221;</p><p>&#8212; An oft quoted poem by Pessoa:</p><p>To be great, be whole: don&#8217;t exaggerate<br>Or leave out any part of you.<br>Be complete in each thing. Put all you are<br>Into the least of your acts.<br>So too in each lake, with its lofty life,<br>The whole moon shines.</p><p>&#8212; His book <em><a href="https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/293941/a-little-larger-than-the-entire-universe-by-fernando-pessoa-edited-and-translated-with-and-introduction-and-notes-by-richard-zenith/">A little Larger than the Entire Universe</a></em> seems to know things about the universe all the way into the future.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/theentireuniverse">The Entire Universe</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Once, when I went to see my mother, we climbed a mountain above the tree line. It was Mount Monadnock, a massive peak in New Hampshire. Partway up, a thunderstorm began, bringing rain and lightning. My mother, already haggard-looking in the eerie lightning, said, &#8220;Once you have begun a thing, it is fatal not to finish it.&#8221; We climbed to the top and started coming down in the rain to the <em>crack-crack </em>of lightning hitting the rocks. She was slow.</p><p>&#8220;Leave me up here,&#8221; she said.</p><p>I, too, believed in finishing a thing. I took my mother off that mountain.</p><p>This sense of hiking through the storm is my approach to the press, too, but getting a conversation going about a book is harder than ever, considering the other noise in our culture. Even those authors who have hit the ground running&#8212;like <a href="https://redhen.org/book/kill-dick/">Luke Goebel</a> or <a href="https://redhen.org/book/talking-to-the-wolf/">Rebecca Chace</a>&#8212;still have to fight for review space. Poetry is even harder to get into people&#8217;s hands. We have a book in Spanish and English coming out from William Archila, an El Salvadoran poet, who walks through the world quietly; I don&#8217;t know how many people will have the exquisite experience of his gentle footfalls across their kitchen floor. [&#8230;]</p><p>When I was growing up in the cult, we learned a lot about the building of the Christian churches, and I was interested in the construction of cathedrals. Germany&#8217;s grand Cologne Cathedral required the participation of the whole city, and in my classes, they made a big point about everyone participating. We all had to carry wood and take care of the animals in the afternoon, so maybe their lesson was a hint to us that we needed to be ready to participate in work.</p><p>But the part we didn&#8217;t learn was that the Cologne Cathedral took 632 years to build. That&#8217;s many generations of laborers, of dreamers. I like to think that by the time Red Hen is a second-generation press, it will have grown into a stronger, sturdier organization. We are taking firm steps, like building a new website, but I&#8217;m also working hard to build a stronger support network. I like to imagine that right around the corner, there are thought partners&#8212;those with expertise in marketing, finance, and law&#8212;ready to join our board and help us get to the next stage. I feel sure that this spring, we will find these helpers.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/a-cathedral-of-the-mind-sustaining">A Cathedral of the Mind: Sustaining the Arts Through Community</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I heard about the attack on Iran<br>I thought, look how far they&#8217;ll go<br>to keep the depredations of powerful men<br>off the front page. How can I just<br>shower, make breakfast tacos, listen<br>to Bach while the world is on fire?<br>The world is always on fire.<br>It&#8217;s not a new war. What can I do<br>but clean out the ashes<br>and kindle my little light?</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/02/28/many-things/">Many things</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>What will the weather be like on March 7th? I&#8217;m planning to attend the <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2025/04/01/riches/">book fair day at AWP </a>in Baltimore that day, but always &#8220;weather permitting.&#8221; Last year in Los Angeles, I liked having the option of just attending one day of the event&#8211;sans panels and such, which overload my introvert personality. But Baltimore is a 3-hour drive from here, so weather must permit! The past five years, March 6-8 has been mild and reasonably fair; so says my garden journal, so maybe I will get there. If so, I&#8217;ll return bearing poetry collections&#8230;</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/02/24/comparisons/">Comparisons</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Down at the shore I thought again about the sparrowhawk and adaptation. About how wildlife finds ways of coping, even thriving in nature depleted places. In front of me, amidst all the bustling of oystercatchers, ringed plovers and rock pipits, wrens were flitting back and forth. They slipped in and out of view amongst the boulders. Like the birds of coast and shore, they were finding food in the seaweed piles. I wondered where they shelter on this wild windy coast, where they nest. There are short stretches of tumbled walls but no hedges or bushes or clumps of bramble.</p><p>How might we have to adapt and make do as <em>our</em> familiar places change and weather patterns shift? Could I be as adaptable as a sparrowhawk or a wren? As resilient? Unlikely; me, with my stiff bones and slow gait, bad habits and old ways.</p><p>News of bombs falling in Iran, retaliatory strikes and mayhem found me at the sea-log-seat as I watched plovers whirl about the sands. But just as my spirit quailed, the most joyful sound rose up from the dunes and crofts. Skylarks! Heralding spring.</p><p><strong>Annie O&#8217;Garra Worsley, <a href="https://notesfromasmallcroftbythesea.wordpress.com/2026/03/01/february-flight-flood-light/">February flight, flood, light</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 8]]></title><description><![CDATA[notebooks full of angel drawings, a dream of burning, forced dactyls, a springboard to spring, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-8</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-8</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2026 23:58:30 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/b0bd227b-9396-4ae2-88f7-d32834f8985e_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: notebooks full of angel drawings, a dream of burning, forced dactyls, a springboard to spring, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>Do poets tend to have managers, or at least drivers? I think we should be issued with one for gigs and the like. It may stem from me not being the best driver in the world, but I drove back from a reading in Faversham last night and it absolutely horsed it down in stair rods all the way back. There was an hour and a bit I wouldn&#8217;t care to repeat in a hurry&#8230;</p><p>I am always grateful for the gigs, but that&#8217;s the second gig now in a couple of weeks that involves travelling an hour or more in each direction.</p><p>Two weeks ago it was a trip to Chipping Norton to read at a lovely gallery there called <a href="https://www.artandtalking.com/">Art &amp; Talking</a>. [&#8230;] It&#8217;s a 150-mile round trip to Chippy and back for me&#8230; However, I got to read for the first time in a beautiful venue, I got to read with the wonderful <a href="https://lauratheis.weebly.com/bio.html">Laura Theis</a> and <a href="https://zeroquality.net/">Robin Vaughn-William</a>s again. Robin puts on a great night&#8230;.The open mic readers were also excellent. My friend&#8217;s teenage daughter told me I wasn&#8217;t as boring as she thought I would be, so I&#8217;m calling that all worthwhile.</p><p><strong>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/02/22/the-great-song-of-indifference-and-engines/">The Great Song of Indifference (and Engines)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>At my desk I drink my coffee, check my diary again and work out how many hours I need for the other non writerly stuff in the week. This week I have emails to answer, a small pitch to put together and a meeting about a future work project that I am trying to pull together. I also have a couple of requests for brain picking sessions from emerging writers who want advice because they are writing in similar fields. I do these when I can, but I can&#8217;t always do them because it sacrifices time from my own work. I always feel guilty turning down endorsements and blurbs for exactly the same reason, and invitations to read at events from tiny organisations who don&#8217;t have a budget. I do them when I can, but I can&#8217;t always do them.</p><p>Then to work. I have to put my phone in a drawer otherwise every time I get frustrated I will look at it for the quick dopamine hit of watching cats do stuff. I am addicted. I cannot stop at one cat video.</p><p>On my notice board I have this quote by Hilary Mantel &#8211; my notice board is a shrine to this god of writing whose wise words have gotten me through some awful blocks:</p><p>&#8220;If you get stuck, get away from your desk. Take a walk, take a bath, go to sleep, make a pie, draw, listen to &#173;music, meditate, exercise; whatever you do, don&#8217;t just stick there scowling at the problem. But don&#8217;t make telephone calls or go to a party; if you do, other people&#8217;s words will pour in where your lost words should be. Open a gap for them, create a space. Be patient.&#8221;</p><p>In my case other people include cat videos.</p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/day-by-day-my-writing-week">Day by Day: My Writing Week</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Looking at my notebooks full of angel drawings and asemic mark making, I&#8217;m sure the average person would see a sort of madness. I prefer to concentrate on the meditative quality. But maybe the marks are a kind of refusal. (To be anything less than completely human). The more marks I make the more I realize that it is impossible to make the same mark twice. In fact, I&#8217;m generally trying for a unique mark/scribble. Some days the marks are responding to a piece of music I&#8217;m listening to but other times, I&#8217;m notating the silence, or the sounds in my skull. They are a ravelling and an unravelling, a joy, a calm, a human touch. Sometimes deliberate, sometimes wild, or thoughtless, beyond thought, a flying, a soaring, a darkness, a skating, a tangle.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/withnoillusions">With No Illusions But With Some Joy &#8211; On Asemic Writing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s so hard to focus these days, and find a rhythm of living that is not disrupted by fear. I mean we all should be feeling fear, but also hope and joy and solidarity. I hope you are all staying as safe as you can be.</p><p>One thing that helped me recently was to do an event at Clio&#8217;s with the DSA and the Oakland Education Association Rapid Response Team, a group of Oakland educators organizing to protect families from ICE. They organize community patrols and raise funds to provide legal aid, click <a href="https://www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/protect-oaklands-immigrant-families">here</a> if you want to donate. Just being in the room with with people who are taking action and being in solidarity felt good. Zeina Hashem Beck, Jason Bayani, and Sara Borjas gave amazing readings. I read some poems too.</p><p>Another thing that helps is to read a poem closely, and just sit with it. I&#8217;m getting ready to teach an <a href="https://communityofwriters.org/reader-you-already-know/">on-line class</a> on Tuesday on how to read a contemporary poem, which in some ways is an absolutely absurdly vast subject to even begin to approach. But I have some thoughts of ways to do it. Reading closely for me is always the way I get back to writing. For me, reading poetry is really about accepting and embracing and getting excited about what is challenging, unexpected, new, different. Reading poems has changed me. I feel like if everyone read poems there would be less evil in the world. I realize that&#8217;s naive, but I can&#8217;t help thinking it.</p><p><strong>Matthew Zapruder, <a href="https://matthewzapruder.substack.com/p/reader-you-already-know">Reader, You Already Know</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is an intervention by poets to be made, into the fiction-led &#8220;should writers read&#8221; debate and the &#8220;should writers read for pleasure&#8221; sequel. It should have something particular, and not only concerning that poets don&#8217;t get paid very much. It should also consider Donald Davie&#8217;s dictum that there is a group pressure to remain at the level of the skilled amateur &#8211; because for them, and you can detect this in many blurbs that aren&#8217;t (soi-disant) political, everything is &#8220;reading for pleasure&#8221; if they read other poets at all. For the practitioner of the ancient art, there is definitely reading for fulfilment, for a guide to living, and living must include pleasure. I wonder too about suggesting a new category for the current debaters of &#8220;reading for morality&#8221;, which is what enables us to sift among people who make political speeches and also to act locally (which will affect the personal anecdotes in our own poems but also guide us in making narrative without it always having to be politically exemplary &#8211; whatever that is &#8211; line by line). Regardless of all of this, what of seeing the poet made to struggle by their poem &#8211; not with the poetry basics, but with a form they could handle easily if it were inert? An oeuvre entirely composed of good poems that are totally commonplace workmanlike in the idiom of a century or two up to the day is unlikely to survive. So is the struggle crucial, and how do poets do their reading of other poems to aid the struggle only of not writing badly (not, per se, every time the political struggle nor, as with fiction, &#8220;good writing&#8221;/the saleable)?</p><p><strong>Ira Lightman, <a href="https://iralightman1.substack.com/p/reading-to-write-poems">READING TO WRITE POEMS</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On a news channel someone says the President<br>is planning a gigantic triumphal arch<br>and wants an airport named after him.<br>(Of course he does.)<br>Wind rattles the windows.<br>I think &#8216;OK, I need to get work done&#8217;,<br>open the laptop, remember once<br>a Buddhist monk told me<br>in a station waiting room<br>life requires no explanation.</p><p><strong>Bob Mee, <a href="https://bobmeepoetryandmore.wordpress.com/2026/02/18/harpooning-prawns-in-a-wok/">HARPOONING PRAWNS IN A WOK</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Look at this picture from the gold medal winner for women&#8217;s figure skating, and her celebratory leap in the air. And if you haven&#8217;t done it yet, watch Alysa Liu&#8217;s gold-medal winning skate&#8212;I promise even if you don&#8217;t like skating, it will inspire joy. If they don&#8217;t cut it, you can see how afterwards she curses as she celebrates, as well as hugging the bronze medalist and swinging her around in a spontaneous hug. It reminded me of the poetry world, how we need to celebrate our wins with this much joy, and the wins of our friends and colleagues.</p><p>On that note, AWP. I&#8217;m not going to be there this year, as I am instead taking a trip home to Cincinnati to visit my father, who is ill, and family. Which is not to say, I will not miss seeing my friends. But AWP can be a lot even for completely healthy young people, much less people with disabilities and illnesses that tend to flare up under stress. And right now, I have to prioritize family, and if I only have so much strength, energy, and money for travel, I&#8217;m going to choose home over a conference. If you&#8217;re going, I hope you have a wonderful time, and post lots of pictures. [&#8230;]</p><p>I [&#8230;] had good news from my poet friend, Kelli Russell Agodon&#8212;she got her first poem in the March issue of <em>Poetry</em>, &#8220;Trying to Sext My Partner, Who Replies &#8216;I Can&#8217;t Get My Camera to Work.&#8217;&#8221; It&#8217;s not up on their web site yet, but I got my issue and so Charlotte the literary kitten and I had so much fun reading it.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/missing-awp-me-too-celebrating-wins-new-glasses-and-quail/">Missing AWP? Me too. Celebrating Wins, New Glasses, and Quail</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I stopped going to AWP when I had a baby and haven&#8217;t attended since. For many years, I blamed new motherhood for my lack of attendance. But I am no longer a new mother. And yet, I still have not attended the conference.</p><p>It is only now, in writing this, that I think I understand the true reason. In 2014, my last time at the conference, I was genuinely dismayed by how little attention was paid to the serious crises within academia. So much so that I was compelled to write an open letter to AWP: <a href="https://www.salon.com/2014/03/17/professors_in_homeless_shelters_it_is_time_to_talk_seriously_about_adjuncts/">Professors in homeless shelters: It is time to talk seriously about adjuncts.</a></p><p>Since then, the conference has improved somewhat in this regard. They have incorporated one or two panels on the subject of adjuncts. There is also now an <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/351986344-awp-writers-adjunct-caucus?utm_source=mentions">AWP Writers Adjunct Caucus</a>. Yet largely, the conference remains dedicated to pursuing one&#8217;s own personal career ambitions&#8212;publishing, getting an agent, improving craft, enriching one&#8217;s pedagogy.</p><p>Meanwhile, <a href="https://www.thinkingineducating.com/the-shameful-reality-of-adjunct-faculty-compensation-in-higher-education/">70% of the academic workforce</a> is now contingent labor. Many adjuncts are earning less than minimum wage. Since I published that article in 2014, conditions have only gotten worse. Adjuncts still report <a href="https://www.ijahss.net/assets/files/1749831517.pdf">juggling several teaching jobs at once</a>, <a href="https://www.thinkingineducating.com/the-shameful-reality-of-adjunct-faculty-compensation-in-higher-education/">working for poverty wages</a>, and <a href="https://www.nea.org/nea-today/all-news-articles/life-contingent-faculty-member">avoiding hospital visits for fear of financial ruin</a>.</p><p>According to the <a href="https://www.highereducationinquirer.org/2025/08/comparing-adjunct-faculty-conditions.html">Higher Education Inquirer</a>,</p><blockquote><p><strong>Pay and Financial Security: Poverty Wages Become the Norm</strong></p><p>In 2006, Hoeller reported that Washington community college adjuncts earned just 57 cents for every dollar paid to their full-time colleagues. The disparity persists&#8212;and in some ways, it has widened. Today, more than a quarter of adjuncts report earning under $26,500 a year, below the federal poverty line for a family of four.</p></blockquote><p>According to a report on <a href="https://nap.nationalacademies.org/resource/26405/6_The_Impacts_of_2020_on_Advancement_of_Contingent_Faculty-Culver_Kezar.pdf">The Impacts of 2020 on Advancement of Non-Tenure Track and Adjunct Faculty</a>,</p><blockquote><p>The pandemic&#8230;increased career insecurity for non-tenure-track faculty in ways that are more subtle but equally important. For instance, when institutions extended tenure and promotion clocks, they often failed to think about the implications of moving online for instructional and research faculty.</p></blockquote><p>All this and yet I&#8217;ve yet to see a single panel dedicated to the kind of structural changes that would improve the material conditions of grad students, adjuncts and non-tenured professors. These might include sessions on how to create a grad student union, how to obtain health insurance as adjuncts, how to organize a sit-in at your university for increased teaching stipends (as former <em>Gulf Coast</em> editors and students at University of Houston successfully did).</p><p>But no. Such panels do not exist at AWP. Meanwhile, there are all sorts of panels dedicated to political engagement. We can learn to &#8220;write resistively&#8221; or learn &#8220;Cartooning at the End of the World.&#8221; We can discuss &#8220;Editing for Community and Change&#8221; or &#8220;Strategies for Navigating Organizational Change.&#8221;</p><p>But, it seems, what we cannot, must not, should not ever discuss is the broken system staring us all right in the face. Perhaps it&#8217;s not very sexy to have a panel dedicated to collectively organizing for health insurance and a living wage. Or, maybe such panels might not be very welcome by those who actually sponsor the conference.</p><p><strong>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/q-why-does-awp-barely-touch-the-crises">Q: Why does AWP barely touch the crises in academia?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Lately, I&#8217;m trying to find enough mojo to send out some poems. My thinking is that given current circumstances, having poems in (mostly) online journals offers more possibility that someone, anyone, will read them. Poetry like most arts is communicative, so poets need readers; I <em>treasure</em> my readers, but they are few. I love books, but my books do not sell well. That means the poems don&#8217;t reach an audience. This blog doesn&#8217;t have a host of regular readers, either, though there are some stalwart followers for whom I am immensely grateful. Then what are a poet&#8217;s options? Small-press publication (let&#8217;s hear it for those wonderful folks!) and self-publishing can get you the physical book, but for readers you have to do a ton of self-promotion. This is a skill I have never developed and that I do not, at my age, wish to learn. Besides, I am out of the job market now and have no need for a CV full of publication credits.</p><p>But I read literary journals. My colleagues in creative writing read literary journals. Some lit journals continue to produce paper issues, bless them, but more of them post poems on various social media platforms, where casual viewers might run across a poem and&#8211;who knows?&#8211;read it! Therefore, it seems to me <em>that&#8217;s</em> what I ought to be doing: getting my work in magazines, large and small, local and international, professional and amateur, one poem at a time as a kind and careful editor decides my poem suits the journal. I think that in 2026, more poems reach people online than in books. Am I wrong about that? I guess I could research that question if I really want to know.</p><p><em>Of course</em> I love books and will never stop reading them, poetry books and other kinds. <em>Of course</em> I would be thrilled to have another book in print if the manuscripts I send out ever were to find homes. However, probably my focus this year will be on the more ephemeral but wider-reaching media forms. I want to remind myself that I write because what I want to say may be valuable to someone other than myself; might strike someone as beautiful, sad, or wise; might make someone think in a different way or learn something new. Poetry has always done that for me, after all.</p><p>Now if only I can generate the mojo&#8230;</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/02/17/midwinter-mojo/">Midwinter mojo</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve lost my enthusiasm for all things writing, except the actual writing. I&#8217;ve barely tried to get published, picking publications and press that I have a connection with or that I really want to get into, mostly through sheer bloody-mindedness of getting rejections year after year. I&#8217;m determined that eventually I&#8217;ll find one they like.</p><p>My poetry collection that was accepted in 2019, and delayed and delayed, will never be published, at least by that press as it is closing this year. The editor had long gone silent to my queries, so I stopped trying. I continue to occasionally send out that collection and my others to different editors, more out of habit than with any hope.</p><p>Mostly now, I think of my collections as a record of my life and thoughts that will never really be shared until I&#8217;m gone, like my writing notebooks and my diaries, just a bit more thematically organised. And the thought of not publishing them doesn&#8217;t really bother me. [&#8230;]</p><p>I wrote or finished 73 poems in 2025 which is higher than average for me, as most were written for a specific collection that will probably never be published. I&#8217;ve had an urge to write unusual love poems, so I&#8217;ve just gone with it. I think it&#8217;s complete, but as is my way, I will continue to tinker with it for a long while yet.</p><p>My new writing practice routines means I&#8217;m writing regularly, even if only just a few notes or scribbles. I try and draft out at least one poem a week, not necessarily a good one, but it&#8217;s a nice feeling on Sunday to have something typed into my drafts file. [&#8230;] I&#8217;ve gone back to the process, what I love about writing, the slow accumulation of ideas, words on the page.</p><p><strong>Gerry Stewart, <a href="http://thistlewren.blogspot.com/2026/02/sweeping-away-last-clutter-of-2025.html">Sweeping Away the Last Clutter of 2025</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Under my bangs<br>this smudged and gritty<br>cross a remembrance:<br>A dream of burning, my very<br>bones done in.</p><p><strong>Kristen McHenry, <a href="https://kristenmchenry.substack.com/p/lenten-poem-a-week-project-week-1">Lenten Poem-a-Week Project: Week 1</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Unbidden, I imagine<br>a womb</p><p>fashioned from<br>blue, purple, and crimson cloths</p><p>(knitting and weaving:<br>women&#8217;s work)</p><p>twisted yarn like blood vessels<br>intertwining, carrying blood<br><br>back and forth, looping in<br>the lungs of all creation, nourishing<br><br>us in this nest<br>where if we listen, really listen<br><br>we can hear the heartbeat<br>of Shekhinah.</p><p>*</p><p>Another poem from my current project, an expanded volume of Torah poetry. This poem arises out of <a href="https://www.sefaria.org/Exodus.25.1-27.19?lang=bi&amp;aliyot=1">Terumah</a> in the book of Exodus.</p><p><strong>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/02/19/mishkan/">Mishkan</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Lately, I&#8217;ve been experimenting with my writing &#8211; (as in Dr. Frankenstein but using a journal and pencil in place of electrodes and lightning) &#8211; and it&#8217;s opened doors and closed windows for me. I&#8217;ve discovered a great deal in the power of words, but I&#8217;ve also found new rivers in myself. And that&#8217;s felt good.</p><p>I&#8217;ve spent the last two years moving into hybrid work &#8211; fusing genres, blurring lines &#8211; or that&#8217;s what I&#8217;m telling myself. But, it seems to be working on several levels. There&#8217;ve been a few falls from cliffs, of course, but I keep moving.</p><p>I&#8217;m more open to ideas, less controlled. A statement by Stanley Kunitz &#8211; &#8220;A poem has secrets that the poet knows nothing of&#8221; &#8211; has been a map for me. I apply his notion of &#8220;secrets&#8221; to all the forms of writing I&#8217;ve been working in &#8211; poetry, essay, cnf, flash.</p><p>I also hear words by Flannery O&#8217;Connor in this &#8211; &#8220;I write to discover what I know&#8221;. My own writing does reveal layers of self &#8211; layers I didn&#8217;t know were there, but they were. They&#8217;ve always been there. Waiting.</p><p>So &#8211; we wait &#8211; for the writing to appear. And, we never know when that&#8217;s going to happen. Of course, I&#8217;m meaning the moments of writing that lead to discovery &#8211; not the day-to-day writing, in whatever genre &#8230; the time set aside or found to allow the drafting to move forward. Writing with no plan, no agenda. Putting words on the page &#8211; or screen.</p><p><strong>Sam Rasnake, <a href="https://samrasnake.substack.com/p/the-experiment-finding-the-new">The Experiment: Finding the New</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Like all endings, endings in poetry are often caught between two extremes. It is tempting to slam the door too hard, or to slink out so quietly nobody notices you&#8217;ve gone. They are all the more difficult, I think, when a poet is writing in so-called free verse, though ending a (so-called) formal poem isn&#8217;t exactly easy either.</p><p>Perhaps, like all the best endings, the best endings in poetry aren&#8217;t endings at all. Looking back at the poems I wrote about on this blog last year, one thing I notice is the way in which they each close with musical and metrical effects which ring out after the poem is over: Thomas&#8217;s <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/remembering-adlestrop">misty counties</a>, Brooks&#8217;s <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/the-long-trick">twinklings and twinges</a>, Masefield&#8217;s <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/the-long-trick">long trick</a>, even Larkin&#8217;s <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/like-something-almost-being-said">whispering trees</a>. Here is the final stanza of &#8216;<a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57869/why-brownlee-left">Why Brownlee Left</a>&#8217; by the Irish poet Paul Muldoon, its abandoned horses staring out beyond the last line:</p><blockquote><p>By noon Brownlee was famous; They had found all abandoned, with The last rig unbroken, his pair of black Horses, like man and wife, Shifting their weight from foot to Foot, and gazing into the future.</p></blockquote><p>The horses can&#8217;t quite move forward into the future they&#8217;re gazing at, but they keep moving all the same. They seem to be caught there forever, shifting their weight from foot to foot. And one way in which Muldoon achieves this effect is by setting that ambiguous image, the not-quite-ending, off against the &#8216;closing&#8217; rhyme which, again, is only half a closure (foot to / future). A half-rhyme is all it takes to set the thing ringing. Muldoon makes it look easy. It isn&#8217;t.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/poetry-of-departures">Poetry of Departures</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the 1970s, I didn&#8217;t know poems could speak to my life as a young woman. I&#8217;d never heard a contemporary poet read in person. That changed in college when I discovered Diane Wakoski&#8217;s <em>Motorcycle Betrayal Poems</em>. Later, hearing Gary Snyder read about wildness and Gwendolyn Brooks describe love &#8220;like honey&#8221; made me realize poetry could be a living, breathing force. I wanted my students to feel that too&#8212;and to find the power of their own voices.</p><p>I also wanted to bring in some of the magic of InsideOut, the Detroit poets-in-the-schools program founded by Terry Blackhawk. I invited local poets from the University of Michigan or visiting writers passing through town. We hosted all-school readings, performances, and a beloved event called &#8220;Shorts on the Ledge,&#8221; where students read brief pieces from a hallway ledge during National Poetry Month. We partnered with Jazz Band, Dance Body, and the annual Art Show. We read poems on the first day of school and at graduation. Whenever the school gathered, we offered a poetry prelude.</p><p>In 2011, a colleague and I opened our classroom once a week for Poetry Club. We advertised in the student bulletin, hung posters, and I brought homemade cookies or muffins. Our formula was simple: read a poem, talk about it, write, and share. Students came because they needed a place to write what <em>they</em> wanted to write in school.</p><p>Fifteen years later, the club is thriving. In the early days, we begged for five or six students; now a dozen come regularly.</p><p><strong><a href="https://trishhopkinson.com/2026/02/22/creating-a-high-school-poetry-club-why-and-how-guest-post-by-ellen-stone/">Creating a High School Poetry Club: Why and How &#8211; guest post by Ellen Stone</a> (Trish Hopkinson)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I was at school, the English department ran a (voluntary) verse speaking competition, in which we, well, spoke verse, competitively. It was immensely absorbing. One year, I did &#8216;Death, be not proud&#8217; (alas, when I tried it just now, I only remember the first quatrain). Another year, I did a passage of <em>Paradise Lost</em>, (ending &#8216;Who durst defy the omnipotent to arms&#8217;) now lost to me. I knew other sections of Milton at university. I performed in several Shakespeare plays, and remember a fraction of them now, though I know my way around <em>Hamlet</em> reasonably well. In those days, though it was never a formal requirement, I took memorisation seriously. I once knew the whole of <em>Ode to a Nightingale</em>&#8230;</p><p>It didn&#8217;t all vanish, thankfully. And the poetry I learned subsequently has largely stayed with me, and I slowly add to my stocks, meagre though they are. (One thing I can recite in full on demand is Hilaire Belloc&#8217;s <em>Matilda, </em>of all things.) I decided several years ago to start memorising more, (including several poems by Robert Frost, which I used to say by heart to my children when they were little), and though I am, and always have been, an insufficient pupil, bad at schedules and consistency, I am not entirely failing at that endeavour even now, though I do far too little.</p><p>Last year, I memorised &#8216;Daffodils&#8217; by Herrick. I am currently learning &#8216;My true love hath my heart.&#8217; Alan Lascelles, Private Secretary to King George VI (and also to the Abdicator&#8212;<em>hiss</em>) knew Gray&#8217;s <em>Elegy</em> by heart, as, once, did so many English school boys. Lascelles was appalled to learn that the king hadn&#8217;t even heard of it. Perhaps I shall learn that one next. I am resolved to take memorisation as seriously again as I used to at school. (Join me!&#8212;though you should expect me to fail!)</p><p><strong>Henry Oliver, <a href="https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/george-steiner-breaking-my-heart">George Steiner breaking my heart with his description of the way people used to memorise poems, Bible passages, classic works.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The students look at me as if I&#8217;m the lab<br>animal in the crate, and they&#8217;re the scientists</p><p>circling the room with clipboards and pens.<br>I dearly want to know: what will it take</p><p>to kindle a fire, get them to care<br>about stories and poems, warm up</p><p>to metaphor and meaning? Toward the end<br>of the session, they shut their tablets</p><p>and zip backpacks close, heave out of their<br>seats and walk out of the room&#8212; expressions</p><p>mostly unchanged as I erase the board, return<br>the matchstick to its box marked &#8220;strike anywhere.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/02/strike-anywhere-match/">Strike Anywhere Match</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This scene was outside King&#8217;s College Cambridge yesterday [photo]. Typewriter at the ready, the poet offers the public a &#8220;Poem on the Spot&#8221;. No AI.</p><p>Today I went to Huntingdon, about 30km from Cambridge. They have an alley of murals I didn&#8217;t know about, featuring T.S. Eliot, William Cowper, Lucy Maria Boston, Henry of Huntingdon, George Herbert and Samuel Pepys.</p><p><strong>Tim Love, <a href="http://litrefs.blogspot.com/2026/02/street-poetry.html">Street Poetry</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I am currently on hiatus from daily poems in favor of hammering away slowly [at] plays as I try to increase my skills there, but will be making an e-zine in March of the Bluebeard poems (and a special print book object edition for Patreon subscribers, so keep an eye out for that.) You can still get in on the action there before the end of this month and land a signed copy of CLOVEN and my little 2026 desk calendar featuring collage work. This was a small print run, but I hope next year to make both a spiral-bound calendar and a desk standing version.</p><p>Tuesday, we are headed to Steppenwolf to see another Strindberg play,<em> Dance of Death</em>, which looks to be about a contentious marriage, which fits well as I am finishing up a first draft of the Chopin adaptation. This week, we also have new bookshelves arriving to deal with the living room situation, in which they are basically collapsing under the weight of way too many books[.]</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/02/notes-things-2222026.html">notes &amp; things | 2/22/2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>How easy it is to build a house from the pieces at hand. A mini table here, a houseplant and storage boxes there. With glue, scissors, pencil, cardboard, wood. But who says it couldn&#8217;t look completely different? Each little house remains one model among many.</p><p>marks<br>on the new floorboards<br>years ago</p><p>How many variations could be created? Imagine them in a single line. The judges enter. Point with their fingers. Take notes. Look concerned. Smile. Move back and forth.</p><p>How easy it is to read the room but forget the house.</p><p><strong>Kati Mohr, <a href="https://pi-and-anne.com/2026/02/20/compass-needlework/">Compass Needlework</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m fascinated by the potentially infinite array of how literary influence shapes writing. How could American short story writer Lydia Davis, one of the most striking prose stylists of the past few decades (as well as one of my personal favourite writers), profess that the late Connecticut prose poet Russell Edson (1935-2014) was the most important writer on the development of her style? Whatever overlap between their work might exist, one of these things is not like the other.</p><p>One of the first of my contemporaries I encountered with a personal library as large as mine was the late Toronto writer Priscila Uppal (1974-2018), and there was something both striking and wonderfully exciting upon realizing our libraries had little to no overlap. From what I could see, only P.K. Page&#8217;s <em>Hologram</em> (1994) was the exception, although I&#8217;m sure there were others. Based on her library alone, one might gather that Uppal&#8217;s was a literature fueled by a narrative lyric with a more European base, offering a heft of titles by Guernica Editions and Exile Editions, which sat as a counterpoint to my own, rooted in 1960s Canadian postmodernism: west coast<em> TISH</em> poetics, Talonbooks and Coach House Press, into the prairies and south, towards Black Mountain, Richard Brautigan and the San Francisco Renaissance. I remember thinking how glorious it was to see a collection so wildly different but equal in scale, and the two in counterpoint suggested to me the mark of a healthy, vibrant literature: knowing these alternate perspectives were both held in high regard. If you want a quick overview of how any writer is shaped, head straight for their library.</p><p>Of course, influence is rarely a straight line. A collage, perhaps, or a constellation. I remember a conversation with Kingston writer Steven Heighton (1961-2022) and Ottawa poet David O&#8217;Meara, back when O&#8217;Meara had that apartment in Ottawa&#8217;s Lowertown; how they both swore by John Berryman&#8217;s &#8220;Dream Songs,&#8221; as collected through his <em>77 Dream Songs</em> (1964) and <em>His Toy, His Dream, His Rest</em> (1968). I remain baffled by their attachment to the work. I&#8217;ve also never understood how anyone could enjoy the poetry of Don Coles, another poet I know admired by Heighton and O&#8217;Meara. What am I missing? The years I&#8217;ve attempted to return to the work of Robert Duncan, unable to grasp the appeal, despite admiring the work of multiple writers who swear by him; despite my holding Duncan&#8217;s contemporary and compatriot Jack Spicer as such an important poet across my own trajectory, as well as Robin Blaser, the third in their triumvirate of American poetry and poetics. The San Francisco Renaissance: Spicer, Duncan and Blaser. What am I missing?</p><p>In some ways, I find Davis citing Edson reminiscent of longtime and former Talonbooks publisher Karl Siegler who once offered that he could see how the works of Vancouver poet George Bowering or Montreal poet Artie Gold influenced my work, but couldn&#8217;t understand my attachment to the work of the late prairie poet Andrew Suknaski. I mean, I thought it might have been obvious, but I suppose not: I came to Suknaski through the work of Dennis Cooley (and other prairie writers, I&#8217;m sure), latching onto Suknaski&#8217;s self-described &#8220;loping, coyote lines,&#8221; and quickly realized an affinity to how he returned to writing on the histories and complications of his geography-of-origin, a geographic and cultural space that had not yet been articulated through poetry. This is where I might point to the crowd, and bellow: I say &#8220;Glengarry,&#8221; you say &#8220;Wood Mountain.&#8221; A chant begins.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/lecture-for-an-empty-room-e21">Lecture for an Empty Room</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>For former Indiana Poet Laureate Norbert Krapf, it took nearly 50 years of listening to the deepest, locked-away part of himself to address the profound abuse to which his Catholic parish priest subjected him when Krapf was a child. During the period of that abuse, the priest took the photograph that became part of the cover art for Krapf&#8217;s 2014 autobiographical collection <em>Catholic Boy Blues</em> (Greystone Publishing), and gave it to Krapf&#8217;s parents. That haunting photograph, an evocative visualization of the painful words comprising Krapf&#8217;s poems, contains both dark secret and starker truth. Krapf wrestles with both over the course of his four-part collection by assuming four dramatically different yet intertwined voices: the boy who suffers sexual abuse, the man who sets upon the &#8220;healing journey&#8221; that requires reconciling the boy he was to the adult he became, the priest whom Krapf allows to engage in dialogue with the boy, who finds in himself the extraordinary courage to speak back once and for all, and a wise figure Krapf calls &#8220;Mr. Blues.&#8221; The latter speaks in four voices, too &#8212; friend, advice-giver, counselor, mentor &#8212; that if they could be sounded as one, might best be described as &#8220;savior,&#8221; for Mr. Blues ultimately helps the boy Krapf was and the man Krapf is today to &#8220;break free&#8221; of &#8220;the language of pain&#8221; to sing as &#8220;one with the spirit inside me&#8221; where hope and forgiveness, even love, reside. Mr. Blues teaches boy and man to see that</p><blockquote><p><em>there&#8217;s always a hopeful boy inside the man. Deep down lives a hopeful boy inside the man won&#8217;t quit fighting till he comes out best he can.</em></p></blockquote><p>In that final &#8220;Love Song for Mr. Blues&#8221; from which the above lines are quoted, we find all the reasons Krapf is able to survive his harrowing journey.</p><p>*</p><p><em>Catholic Boy Blues</em>, the twenty-sixth of Krapf&#8217;s more than 30 books, is dedicated to &#8220;my sisters and brothers of any age in all lands abused by priests or other authority figures.&#8221; As anyone knows who pays even slight attention to the news, especially over the last two decades, an enormous group of Catholics and former Catholics &#8212; Krapf now known to be among the thousands of primarily male adolescents abused &#8212; suffered a profound silencing, because of the presence of priest-pedophiles in the Church. Krapf movingly describes that silencing:</p><blockquote><p><em>Not even the great<br>visionary wordsmiths<br>Isaiah and Jeremiah<br><br>had to find words<br>to tell their people<br>how it feels<br><br>for a boy<br>to be so defiled<br>by a priest<br><br>that for fifty years<br>he keeps his mouth shut<br>even to those he loves.</em></p><p><strong>~ &#8220;Not Even Isaiah and Jeremiah&#8221;</strong></p></blockquote><p>In his acknowledgment in the Preface that his &#8220;responsibility and mission as a poet&#8221; oblige him to share the &#8220;dirty little secret&#8221; with the public, Krapf, born in 1943, bears startling witness to art&#8217;s power to save when, as the persona Mr. Blues says in &#8220;Mr. Blues Wakes Up,&#8221; we can &#8220;sing it straight.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/norbert-krapfs-cathlic-boy-blues">Norbert Krapfs &#8216;Cathlic Boy Blues&#8217;</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Part of the reason why Isobar is a vital press is because [Paul] Rossiter has a clear purpose in mind for it, a purpose with three parts or strands. The first of these is to bring into English the work of key 20th century Japanese poets who have been generally neglected, poets like Yoshioka, Kiwao Nomura, Rin Ishigaki and Sanki Sait&#333; (to name just ones that I&#8217;ve reviewed). Many of these poets engaged with western poetry; Yoshioka translated Rene Char, who was a key figure for Nomura, and Ishigaki was also clearly influenced by surrealism. Equally, the VOU poets were clearly in conversation with western concrete/visual work.</p><p>The second strand is the publication of English-language poets who live and work in Japan, and who engage, to one degree or another with Japanese literature and culture. The result is that Isobar books are a venue for cross-cultural fertilisation in very real terms.</p><p>Glasgow&#8211;Tokyo Line by James McGonigal and John Pazdziora, subtitles An East-West Hyakuin, fits perfectly into this strand. A <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renga#Structure_of_and_conventions_of_Hyakuin_renga">hyakuin</a>, for anyone who doesn&#8217;t know, is a 100-poem <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renga">renga</a>, or linked verse, written collaboratively by two or more poets turn-taking. There are rules or conventions to the form that McGonigal and Pazdziora follow, with one key exception; their collaboration was not in person and limited to a single block of time, but extended and conducted through email.</p><p>Another interesting aspect of the book is the blend of languages, with most of the text being in standard English, with a healthy leavening of Scots, and the odd hint of Japanese included. This has the effect of making it seem like there are more than two voices at play at points.</p><p>The linked verses hover around the passage of time, the seasons, mortality, impermanence and, ultimately, cyclical renewal.</p><blockquote><p>Can fresh leaves foretell<br>the snick-snap of garden shears<br>on October days?</p></blockquote><p>There&#8217;s a sense of the human integrated with the Buddha nature of the world:</p><blockquote><p>Stretching for plums, my fingers<br>greet a snail. Good day, neighbour.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/02/23/several-isobars-a-review/">Several Isobars: A Review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I love this love poem, the &#8220;philia&#8221; kind, dear old pal. Nostalgia in its &#8220;algia,&#8221; an ache, but funny and odd, in the way that old friendships and memories can be. There is a helplessness to it, how the speaker is awash in his own foibles, ones that he knows he can admit to this old friend, who likely knew them all too well, and maybe had a few more. It cracks me up. It makes me sad-laugh, laugh-cry, this apostrophe, which is a strange word for speech or a poem addressed to a person, as its etymology lies in words meaning &#8220;turning away from,&#8221; but is also used to describe an indicator of possession, as well as an indicator of something missing. Which also makes me sad in a isn&#8217;t-that-funny way.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/02/23/the-fate-of-the-cruel-unusual/">the fate of the cruel &amp; unusual</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><em>How should I be?</em> is the question I&#8217;ve been asking myself these last two months. If my lifespan is now counting down in years or months or maybe even weeks rather than the decades I expect we mostly luxuriate in imagining, what is it I should do with a day, an hour, a breath, a synapse? What should be my mindset, and the means by which my time&#8212;imaginary god&#8212;is made? Thus far I have tried: pious, melancholic, pragmatic, defeated, paralyzed, depressed, and, simply, numb: unfeeling, unthinking, if-I-don&#8217;t-move-nothing-else-can-go-wrong. Those of you who know me in real life can probably guess that none of these has fit particularly well.</p><p><em>One must have a mind of winter</em> I thought to myself yesterday, getting dressed for a run, and as I ambled along in safe-heartrate-zone I found myself transfixed by the verbs: to regard, to behold. Stevens was an insurance executive, and legend has it that he&#8217;d send a page down the street to the library to copy out definitions and etymologies of words he was turning over in his mind whilst writing policies and other boring business things, a fact I take to mean: there is nothing accidental about any word that turns up in one of his poems. It&#8217;s not simply that one must accept one&#8217;s circumstances in order to understand them so much as that one must accept them&#8212;develop a mind for their reality&#8212;in order to see them clearly and thus to hold them in esteem, to see what is remarkable, what can be held dear, no matter the odds.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-snow-man-by-wallace-stevens">&#8220;The Snow Man&#8221; by Wallace Stevens</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In addition to showing us that grief is both a complex shared and unique emotion, Webb suggests that there are many forms of loss, just as complex and difficult to resolve. in <em>She called her Melanie</em> we meet the unresolvable loss of a mother who gave her child up for adoption; in <em>New and to him who came from my body</em> we find the loss of a way of life experienced by a mother on the birth of her first child and the loss when that child gains independence; and in <em>If only you didn&#8217;t have to shove your living in my face</em> we find the loss and ultimate recovery of self-respect during and after an abusive relationship.</p><p>There will be many potential readers who have experienced grief in their lifetimes: it is an inevitable consequence of having loved. There will be much to connect with for such readers in this collection. However, like all literature worth reading, Webb offers us fresh perspectives and insights, deepening our understanding in emotionally intelligent poems of great skill.</p><p><strong>Nigel Kent, <a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/02/21/review-of-grey-time-by-julia-webb/">Review of &#8216;Grey Time&#8217; by Julia Webb</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Among the poems one really doesn&#8217;t expect, there&#8217;s this: a poem about <a href="https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%204%3A1-11&amp;version=KJV">Christ&#8217;s forty days</a> in the wilderness by Robert Graves (1895&#8211;1985). Graves was young when he published the poem in his second collection, the 1918 <em>Fairies and Fusiliers</em>. He&#8217;d been through the war, become friends with the poets Siegfried Sassoon (1886&#8211;1967) and <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-hospital-barge-at-cerisy">Wilfred Owen</a> (1893&#8211;1918), and published his own war verses. (In 1985, a memorial was placed in Westminster Abbey for the poets of the First World War. The long-lived Graves was the only one left to attend.)</p><p>He had yet to write his memoir of the war, <em>Good-Bye to All That</em> (1929) or his strange book about poetry&#8217;s beginning in worship of a divine mother figure, <em>The White Goddess</em> (1948). His best-selling historical novels, <em>I, Claudius</em> and <em>Claudius the God</em>, wouldn&#8217;t appear till 1934 and 1935.</p><p>In 1918, for that matter, Graves had yet to make a public point of his loss of faith. By 1948, following James Frazer&#8217;s <em>The Golden Bough</em> (1890&#8211;1915), Graves would insist in <em>The White Goddess</em> that &#8220;Christian legend, dogma and ritual are the refinement of a great body of primitive and even barbarous beliefs, and that almost the only original element in Christianity is the personality of Jesus.&#8221; In Today&#8217;s Poem, &#8220;In the Wilderness,&#8221; however, Graves emphasized not the personality but exactly those mythopoeic elements of Jesus. (He would later call it his &#8220;last Christian-minded poem.&#8221;)</p><p>His fantastical account of that mythopoesis is aided enormously &#8212; turned nearly into an incantation prayer &#8212; by the rhymed two-stress lines of the poem and its forced dactyls. The meter quickly turns artificial, standing outside the natural words to become the kind of musical chant we know from nursery rhymes and counting games.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-in-the-wilderness-4f5">Today&#8217;s Poem: In the Wilderness</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>[Geoffrey] Heptonstall explores the nature of storytelling and how a narrator can try to influence a reader to draw a desired conclusion. However, a narrator can&#8217;t control a reader, especially a reader with an enquiring mind, who reads and sits with what they&#8217;ve read to bring their own lived experience to the text and question it. Ultimately, Heptonstall also questions what truth might be. A narrator doesn&#8217;t tell the same story twice, placing emphasis on certain details can tailor the story to a different audience, who, for cultural or personal reasons, might need different arguments or persuasion to see the narrator&#8217;s viewpoint. &#8220;The Truth on the Tongue&#8221; is a quiet, thought-provoking collection that aims to recreate the sense of timelessness that is an audience listening or reading a tale.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/02/18/the-truth-on-the-tongue-geoffrey-heptonstall-cyberwit-book-review/">&#8220;The Truth on the Tongue&#8221; Geoffrey Heptonstall (Cyberwit) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Last week I was struck by the wording of a Latin memorial composed in the 1660s by Payne Fisher &#8212; once <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/cromwells-forgotten-laureate">Cromwell&#8217;s poet</a>, though glossing over that phase for obvious reasons by 1665 &#8212; for one Jane Robinson, wife of Thomas Robinson, protonotary of the Common Pleas and prominent member of the Inner Temple. Jane died in November 1665, aged 49, of metastatic breast cancer. Most unusually, the memorial specifies the disease and even how it was treated:</p><blockquote><p>Septendecim Annos<br>Cum Marito suo suavissim&#232; feriata est,<br>Et ab Ipsius sinu dem&#249;m malevol&#232; divulsa est<br>Per MORBUM CANCRALEM.<br>Cujus infandos Cruciatus postqu&#224;m di&#249; victrix pertulisset,<br>Et Laev&#232; Mammae detruncationem<br>Intrepid&#232; passa fit:<br>Veteri (post intervallum sex Mensium) revertente Morbo,<br>Et vitalia validi&#249;s invadente,<br>Fato concessit:</p></blockquote><p>This means:</p><blockquote><p>For seventeen years<br>she rejoiced most sweetly in the company of her husband,<br>and was at last cruelly torn from his embrace<br>by CANCEROUS DISEASE<br>after she had long victoriously endured its unspeakable torments,<br>and had intrepidly suffered the amputation<br>of her left breast:<br>when the old disease returned (after an interval of six months)<br>and invaded her vital organs more powerfully,<br>she yielded to fate.</p></blockquote><p>This describes a mastectomy &#8212; surely a very horrible business indeed in the 1660s, without any anaesthesia &#8212; that Jane surprisingly survived, followed by a recurrence of the disease, which spread into her <em>vitalia</em>, i.e. her interior organs. This seems to describe metastasized cancer, recognised as such. Although general statements about the courageous endurance of suffering are quite common in elegies and memorials, this sort of detail is unusual and must have been requested specifically, presumably by her husband.</p><p>Fisher&#8217;s inscription is prose, not poetry, though it is densely rhetorical in a way that we might associate more with verse. The pronounced alliteration for emphasis &#8212; as at <em>Veteri (post intervallum sex Mensium) revertente Morbo, / Et vitalia validi&#249;s invadente</em>, is typical of Fisher&#8217;s style. In any case, the distinction between Latin prose and verse in this kind of text was fuzzier than you might think: the mid- to late seventeenth century saw a particular vogue for a kind of free verse in Latin that was related to the fashion for the &#8216;literary inscription&#8217;. (I&#8217;ve written about Latin free verse and related forms before <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/on-new-forms">here</a>.) Fisher, who had a sharp ear for a new trend, was rather a pioneer in this form. Back in 1651 he composed an elegy for Henry Ireton the Latin of which is a very early British example of this kind of free verse. The parallel English version uses rhymes, and indeed it is parallel-text examples like this help to demonstrate that this sort of Latin was understood as verse, rather than prose.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/dying-is-a-difficult-enterprise">Dying is a difficult enterprise</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;The moment of writing is not an escape, however; it is only an insistence, through the imagination, upon human ecstasy, and a reminder that such ecstasy remains as much a birthright in this world as misery remains a condition of it.&#8221;</p><p>At one point in March 2024, I copied these words into a yellow notebook. It was the spring of Larry Levis; azaleas aching to bud, stammering possible colors in the margins of former journals. I remember thinking spring would destroy me, as it does annually, gutting me with its flushes and fevers, distracting me from the needs of surrounding mammals. Each day lengthening by inches of light. Moths moving like nocturnes near the doors. And Levis&#8217; poems garlanding the floor of the porch with their gentleness&#8230;</p><blockquote><p>WOUND</p><p>I&#8217;ve loved you<br>as a man loves an old wound<br>picked up in a razor fight</p><p>on a street nobody remembers.<br>Look at him:<br>even in the dark he touches it gently.</p></blockquote><p>Like the ravish of spring, Levis seasons his stanzas with unremitting tenderness for life, the sap-work of being. I return often to his &#8220;<a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/143tQQxVJEoW1S-SDVcJz3IiYxZ2DTIn2/view?usp=sharing">My Story in a Late Style of Fire</a>,&#8221; for the momentum it accrues as it winds down the page, working the space between the biography and the apologia:</p><blockquote><p>I also had laughter, the affliction of angels &amp; children.<br>Which can set a whole house on fire if you&#8217;d let it. And even then<br>You might still laugh to see all of your belongings set you free<br>In one long choiring of flames that sang only to you&#8212;<br>Either because no one else could hear them, or because<br>No one else wanted to. And, mostly, because they know.</p></blockquote><p>&#8230; and for the inflammatory, unforgettable scherzo:</p><blockquote><p>One of the flames, rising up in the scherzo of fire, turned<br>All the windows blank with light, &amp; if that flame could speak,</p></blockquote><p>&#8230; and for how Levis circles the figure of Billie Holiday, a talismanic figure that animated his jazz pantheon, jazz being the musical form that Levis deployed and studied for its repetitions and returns and metaphysical resonances.</p><p>&#8220;My Story in a Late Style of Fire&#8221; is a self-portrait that leaps from the canvas like the face in Caravaggio&#8217;s convex shield, occupying the continuous present of poetic address. Yet its speaker takes leave of the reader with an embrace, a <em>likening </em>as bright as it is critical:</p><blockquote><p>I know this isn&#8217;t much. But I wanted to explain this life to you, even if<br>I had to become, over the years, someone else to do it.<br>You have to think of me what you think of me. I had<br>To live my life, even its late, florid style. Before<br>You judge this, think of her. Then think of fire,<br>Its laughter, the music of splintering beams &amp; glass,<br>The flames reaching through the second story of a house<br>Almost as if to&#8212;mistakenly&#8212;rescue someone who<br>Left you years ago. It is so American, fire. So like us.<br>Its desolation. And its eventual, brief triumph.</p></blockquote><p><em>Brief</em>, it is. Brief as the blooming set to a season. And what literary form turns this brevity to face vastness? Poetry.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/2/16/larry-levis">Larry Levis: For love of immanence.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In the interests of research I&#8217;ve been doing some investigating. Just how easy would it be to pass off an AI-generated poem as one&#8217;s own work?</p><p>So on Chat GPT I offered the prompt: &#8220;Can you write a 14 line poem with a science fiction theme in the style of Caroline Bird?&#8221; In a few seconds this is what it produced:</p><p>The British Secret Service issues me a sensible coat<br>and a name that tastes like static.<br>I learn to listen through walls politely,<br>to sip tea while history clears its throat.<br>My handler says don&#8217;t fall in love&#8212;<br>everything leaks eventually.<br>The dead drop is a park bench feeding pigeons secrets.<br>I memorise faces the way others memorise prayers.<br>At night, the truth sleeps beside me, fully clothed.<br>London keeps blinking like it knows.<br>I file my feelings under miscellaneous,<br>and burn the rest with the kettle on.</p><p>Once I&#8217;d tried the same exercise with four or five other poets a few commonalities started to leap out, such as heavy use of simile, often one &#8216;quirky&#8217; idea per line, little or no through-references, sonic echoes or layered meanings. The poems kind of<em> looked like</em> poems but there wasn&#8217;t much below the surface, Which ties in with the fact that AI is only privy to what&#8217;s already been written. Or as <a href="https://tygertyger.net/">Rachel Piercey, editor of </a><em><a href="https://tygertyger.net/">Tyger Tyger</a></em> said to me: &#8220;Each new poem works on its own terms &#8211; a highly individual, poem-by-poem house style that AI could never comprehend, because it has never been done before and AI can only look back.&#8221;</p><p>The twist in the tail is that I then ran these AI-generated poems by<a href="https://originality.ai/"> Originality.ai,</a> an AI engine trained to spot AI in texts. It&#8217;s not fool-proof as is has been trained primarily on non-fiction texts, but the result was pretty conclusive. [&#8230;] Busted!</p><p><strong>Robin Houghton, <a href="https://robinhoughtonpoetry.co.uk/2026/02/18/can-ai-engines-write-poetry/">Can AI engines write poetry?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This my the 52nd free newsletter / essay / manifesto / article and it marks one year of writing weekly dispatches on this platform. It is also the tenth and final chapter in a series I&#8217;ve been writing about the poet John Keats and his last days in Rome.</p><p>February is an important month in the Keats calendar. It was in February of 1820 that the poet suffered his first lung haemorrhage, coughing blood and understanding the seriousness of his condition. He would die the following February in Rome, cared for by his friend, the artist Joseph Severn.</p><p>Over these last weeks I&#8217;ve described events leading up to his death and it doesn&#8217;t make for easy reading. We know how this story plays out and who really would want to follow it toward its inevitable, uncomfortable, painful end? This wasn&#8217;t exactly the reason the poet who wrote to me gave when she left but I think it had something to do with it. She&#8217;d spent long periods of last year in hospital, in pain and witness to the pain of others. Weekly instalments describing another poet&#8217;s demise isn&#8217;t exactly the most comforting material to receive. I myself find a fatigue has set in as the story of Keats approaches its sad conclusion. I mean, what do you say? I mean, what can you say? [&#8230;]</p><p>I thought I&#8217;d shift focus, not in order to avoid describing how a light went out, not to ignore the <em>Bright Star</em> of this story but to consider its supporting actor, Joseph Severn.</p><p>Severn had been with Keats on his journey from London in September of 1820 when the <em>Maria Crowther</em> set sail on an arduous voyage to Naples. He was there for the poet&#8217;s 25th birthday in October spent in quarantine on their ship in the Italian port. There are stories that he threw Keats&#8217; opium overboard into the Bay of Naples believing, with their arrival, the promise of fairer weather would restore the poet&#8217;s health.</p><p>Severn felt Keats no longer required the drug he&#8217;d used to treat the pain of his condition and the sore throats he suffered brought on by coughing fits. Severn later removed (another) bottle of laudanum from Keats&#8217; possession in Rome when he feared the poet may try to take his own life. Severn was a man of faith. A believer in God. Keats was not. While Keats didn&#8217;t possess the same fierce atheism that earned Shelley the epitaph of &#8216;the infidel poet&#8217; he was a free thinker, his devotion was to poetry. That he may have been tempted in his last days by the &#8216;ungodly&#8217; act of suicide was something abhorrent to Severn. Although it goes too far to say he&#8217;d rather see his friend suffer in acute pain than provide him with oportunity to end it forever we do know how tormented Severn was in his duty of care, how he wrestled with decisions such as this.</p><p>Nicholas Roe, chair of the Keats Foundation and fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, states in his 2012 biography that he believed that Keats was in fact an opium addict and Severn, among several of his friends, was aware of this. It is a claim, of course, and there&#8217;s no real evidence beyond the jealous mood swings Keats displays in letters to his fiancee Fanny Brawne and veiled references to the use of opiates (in <em>Ode to a Nightingale</em> for example) to support it. He certainly didn&#8217;t have the same appetites as Samuel Taylor Coleridge who was a bonafide junkie and the first poet to enter rehab. But that&#8217;s another story.</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n52-loving-the-pain-away">N&#186;52 Loving the pain away</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Whitman&#8217;s words in the preface to the original edition are at least as radiant and rousing as the verses themselves &#8212; words that continue to enliven heart, mind, and spirit a century and a half later. He writes:</p><blockquote><p>The land and sea, the animals, fishes, and birds, the sky of heaven and the orbs, the forests, mountains, and rivers, are not small themes &#8230; but folks expect of the poet to indicate more than the beauty and dignity which always attach to dumb real objects &#8230; they expect him to indicate the path between reality and their souls.</p></blockquote><p>And yet he does indicate the path. In a passage partway between sermon and <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/tag/commencement/">commencement address</a>, he writes:</p><blockquote><p>This is what you shall do: Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/20/walt-whitman-leaves-of-grass-preface/">Walt Whitman&#8217;s Advice on Living a Vibrant and Rewarding Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have been looking at rough drafts, as I&#8217;ve been doing when I don&#8217;t have a new poem bubbling up. I am surprised by how many poems came from the bushel of apples I bought in October. In the future, when I deliberate the wisdom of buying apples in bulk, let me remember how many ways those apples fed me.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/02/tuesday-scraps-texting-mix-ups-and.html">Tuesday Scraps: Texting Mix-ups and Passings and Other Goblins</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>After last weekend&#8217;s yarn show I set myself a catching up kind of a week. The kind where sparkly conversations with good friends featured amongst time to tackle admin type things and time to see if the poems that wait patiently in the draft folder are ready for polishing. The kind of week without a particular routine which allowed for resting and for seizing the moment when there was a gap in the rain to take a daily stroll.</p><p>It was good to get out for daily walks again after having recently had to wait for my cough to diminish. I felt my body easing its way back in to striding out and being glad for being out in the fresh air. I also realised how much I had missed listening to music for that dedicated segment of the day. My soul shines more fully when the right sounds are in the day. The country road route is currently muddy and wet, but I like its familiarity as I get back into the swing of things. The fact that walking this route takes as long as listening to the album <em>Personal History</em> by Mary Chapin Carpenter is also rather splendid.</p><p>It was good to have a free and easy week, it felt rather like having a springboard to jump from on the journey towards spring. Spring is my favourite season, and I love the feeling of entering it with a sense of renewal and to revelling in the newness it offers. So many reminders of growth as the rhubarb stretches out new stems and the snowdrops flourish in the borders. Mixing these wonderful visuals in with the joy of lengthened days makes so much seem possible. It even had me venturing into the garden with a pair of secateurs to begin the big tidy up.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/02/23/i-see-blue-sky/">I SEE BLUE SKY</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s an all-white affair, the blizzard sweeps<br>in with style, its blinding white tux,<br>bow tie and stiff starched shirt,<br>its grandeur, its threats and proclamations,<br>its show of power. In a flick of its<br>handsome wrist, it shows us who&#8217;s who.</p><p>How blankly we stare at its parts,<br>its top hat and white entrails,<br>wanting, not wanting its magic entourage<br>to disappear.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3655">Mr. Universe</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#26149;&#27877;&#12395;&#21402;&#12365;&#30813;&#23376;&#12398;&#30772;&#29255;&#12363;&#12394;&#12288;&#26494;&#26412;&#12390;&#12405;&#12371;</p><p><em>shundei ni atsuki garasu no hahen kana</em></p><p>spring mud<br>a thick piece of glass<br>in it&#8230;<br>Ch&#333;ko Matsumoto</p><p>from <em>Haiku Shiki</em> (<em>Haiku Four Seasons</em>), August 2025 Issue, Tokyo Shiki Shuppan, Tokyo</p><p><strong>Fay Aoyagi, <a href="https://fayaoyagi.wordpress.com/2026/02/17/todays-haiku-february-17-2026/">Today&#8217;s Haiku (February 17, 2026)</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 7]]></title><description><![CDATA[cobra mating season, the hand of a Medieval scribe, a riddling hermit guarding a magic portal, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-7</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-7</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2026 00:56:47 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/eab83a7d-6b98-4221-a89d-25ff234d9e6a_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: cobra mating season, the hand of a Medieval scribe, a riddling hermit guarding a magic portal, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>It has been awhile friends and a lot has been going on in the world since I last posted here. These days I am trying to balance my life as best I can. Somedays I do that better than others. I am sure many of you feel the same way.</p><p>Writing and reading poetry helps. It focuses my attention to the long arc of history, gives solace, expresses what so many of us are feeling or thinking these days. I read poems written during times of upheaval and remember that humans have a long history of bad behavior and yet, and yet, the pink camellia in my backyard is bringing forth her blooms, the birds are still arguing who gets the best spot at the suet cube, and my husband once again has the coffee ready for me after my long night of sleep.</p><p>Recently my husband and I took the train from Portland to Seattle. We stayed two nights in the hotel where we had our wedding reception 37 years ago, walked the city, and took the monorail to the Opera. We met family for dinner, and even took in an exhibit at the Seattle Art Museum. Seattle is not the city it was when I lived in the area 8 years ago. My favorite stores were gone, entire blocks are boarded up waiting for new tenants, there is still homelessness, and drug use on some streets. In general, it looked worn out, much like I feel these days. And yet, and yet, the Seahawks fans were out by the thousands, the Olympics in the West were as beautiful as they have ever been, and the coffee at Storyville was just as good as I remembered it.</p><p>I recently took a class with the poet <a href="https://www.danushalameris.com/">Danusha Lameris,</a> who shared that we often write to our &#8220;irritants&#8221;. Those things that get under our skin and keep rubbing at us. Today, I had a poem published in the online journal <a href="https://www.radarpoetry.com/issue-44-toc">RADAR POETRY </a>titled <a href="https://www.radarpoetry.com/issue-44-toc">SEEN.</a> It is a narrative poem about a young boy who lived in the same small coastal town I lived in as a kid. This is the second poem I have written about him, and I have wondered why I keep doing so. Why the memory of him is like a burr in my sock. I think in the end, I have a need for him to be seen like the image above, beyond the dark winter trees. I think somehow in these heavy days of heartbreak, I finally acknowledged his pain.</p><p><strong>Carey Taylor, <a href="https://careyleetaylor.com/2026/02/15/seen/">SEEN</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Enlightened men are more likely to pump iron and own bitcoin stocks. Positivists and tech-bros are more likely to support the genocide of Palestinians. The possibility of greening the desert commits itself to banishing all nostalgia for the actual land as shepherded by its inhabitants for centuries. &#8220;We obviously don&#8217;t think nostalgia can cause a person to commit murder anymore, or advertising firms wouldn&#8217;t encourage companies to use nostalgia in their marketing,&#8221; writes Grafton Tanner. &#8220;The truth is, there actually isn&#8217;t much of a difference between the words of the positivists and Fabrik Brands. In fact, they&#8217;re both trying to accomplish the same thing: <em>the eradication of longing</em>.&#8221; [&#8230;]</p><p>In the interest of poetry, I need to detach my brain from the exhausting emptiness of the commercialized present. Longing is what poetry does. Longing finds a loose solace in the &#8220;frequency of images of the moon,&#8221; that source of nostalgia that humans still cannot quite fix in their discourse. I love whatever it is about the moon that continues to escape us.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://alinastefanescu.substack.com/p/notes-on-nostalgia">Notes on nostalgia</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>butter in the pan:<br>it sings its song<br>of browning</p><p><strong>Bill Waters, <a href="https://billwatershaiku.wordpress.com/2026/02/12/hopewell-valley-neighbors-magazine-february-26/">Hopewell Valley Neighbors magazine: February &#8217;26</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I also know there are so many poets who have died homeless in San Francisco, and that is not what I aspire to do, feeding pigeons in the dark. Near the end of Wanda Coleman&#8217;s life, we were giving her money to live and collecting more to support her. I called one friend, a poet, to ask him if he would be comfortable giving something. I felt kind of weird, thinking maybe he would say that she shouldn&#8217;t need help when she&#8217;d lived a grand poet&#8217;s life, but he said, &#8220;Kate, if you&#8217;re asking me if I understand that as poets, we don&#8217;t manage our money, and we might be someplace else in our heads, I know that.&#8221; And I thought, I got you. We might be building castles in the air, we might be writing the blues or drinking the stars, but we don&#8217;t spend our lives making, counting, or spending money.</p><p>For all of us writers and creatives, the wandering and the wooing of the muse is the substantial part of life, the nourishment of ideas. If you have kids, which I do, it gets tricky. You have to feed them. But when you aren&#8217;t young anymore, you have to think about the trajectory of the rest of your life. No one will be able to fully take care of you. In the end, I wish Wanda had been cared for better.</p><p>In writing, there are two ways to approach a story: plotting and pantsing (figuring it out as you go). I am not a plotter. I am a pantser. My husband and I are both writers, so we live in a plotless world. At times, it&#8217;s indecently plotless. But I am leaning into plotting and planning: write big books, build up the press, swim more, find another way to make a living so the hubby can work less. In April, for our birthdays, we&#8217;ve planned to visit my sister-in-law in Murrieta and go to sushi together. I plan for love, for family, the dream of a life of tranquil Sundays.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/a-dream-of-tranquil-sundays-how-we">A Dream of Tranquil Sundays: How We Value Our Lives</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The cats sigh and briefly stretch, spreading<br>their toes apart, twitching their ears<br>as a gust kicks loose snow into a swirl&#8212;</p><p>a kind of dust devil on the lawn,<br>a devil made of icy crystals. Apparently,<br>winter is not as tired as we are.</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/02/12/tired/">Tired</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s not a sun, or moon, but has something of their capacity to shine. It&#8217;s the colours and how they fell into place, randomly. This was a mat I made for my daughter, a rather wonderful photographer living in the Netherlands. [image]</p><p>This year my seventh collection of poems comes out with <a href="https://www.saltpublishing.com/products/making-the-wedding-dress-9781784633844?srsltid=AfmBOooM4JwRfEDERJdKvGzjAF7tvSC9xuhfnJMUUAZr701DNf2C2HLJ">Salt Publishing</a>. My first collection, <em>Powder Tower</em>, was published in 1994, the year she was born. In glorious ignorance when it was shortlisted for the 1995 TS Eliot prize I had no idea of how lucky I was. Well, two small children, freelance working &#8211; daily life was distracting.</p><p>But this collection&#8217;s title, <em>Making the Wedding Dress</em>, marks a lifetime of change from gunpowder to silk&#8230;and the wedding dress was real, for my daughter. My son played piano as she walked into the hall with her dad. The sequence about sewing that gave the book its title does feel like it&#8217;s summing up a lifetime making clothes, covers, mats, bags, costumes, you name it &#8211; whatever scraps and a machine can come up with. Zero waste, repurposing, there are new terms but I feel sewing&#8217;s about respect as well as meditation. And the rest of the book &#8211; there are strange poems about modern living, the tensions we exist among, about money, sadness about lost species that were part of my childhood and I thought would always be around, like snowy winters, watching age catch up and wring out memory. How lucky, though, to have a cover image from my fabulous friend <a href="https://janesybillafordham.com/">Jane Fordham</a>, whose work is continually surprising, revealing, unique.</p><p><strong>Jackie Wills, <a href="http://jackiewillspoetry.blogspot.com/2026/02/not-sun-or-moon.html">Not a sun or moon</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Across the lobby, in the bar and restaurant behind us, they are setting up for Valentine&#8217;s day. It&#8217;s all ruby balloons and red rose petals. It&#8217;s the kind of scene that Philip Larkin, the slippers and gin and pipe smoke poet of Hull would add a good doleful drone to as he watched the couples come in, as he watched the blokes slouch out. Only he&#8217;d probably do it tomorrow. He&#8217;d do it when the balloons were sagging, the roses wilting. It is Keats who&#8217;d be turning the volume up, adding pulse and throb to the occasion, Keats who&#8217;d be accused of making a fuss, of going over the top. And I&#8217;m not sure which team I support today, which game I want to see played. Is it flare and fancy footwork or composure and a solid work rate I&#8217;m after? There were 4000 Chelsea fans in Hull last singing in the snow and I thought about Keats saying, &#8220;Love is my religion &#8211; I could die for that.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Jan Noble, <a href="https://jannoble.substack.com/p/n51-love-is-my-religion">N&#176;51 Love is my religion</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Love is a lot<br>like physics:<br>It takes study</p><p>to understand<br>how masses &#8212;<br>yours, his &#8212;</p><p>attract, how his body<br>heat conducts<br>and your heart rate</p><p>accelerates before<br>either has had time<br>to evaluate impact.</p><p>You think you get<br>principles of velocity [&#8230;]</p><p>Radio station KPBX in Spokane, Washington, invited students of St. Andrews-Sewanee School, Sewanee, Tennessee, to select and read on the air (SAS owns and operates its own radio station, <a href="https://sasradio.org/">SASradio</a>) poems with a science focus. In searching online for such poems, the students and their faculty sponsor came across my &#8220;Love Is a Lot Like Physics&#8221; and wrote to ask permission to read it on air. The <a href="https://www.spokanepublicradio.org/show/poetry-moment/2023-10-05/kendall-elder-reads-love-is-a-lot-like-physics-by-maureen-doallas">poem was broadcast </a>and recorded on &#8220;Poetry Moment&#8221; on Spokane Public Radio on October 5, 2023. It was read by student Kendall Elder.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/love-is-a-lot-like-physics">Love Is a Lot Like Physics</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There is a difference [&#8230;] between an editor stating that their journals are labors of love in order to make writers aware of the conditions under which their magazines are created, and editors stating their journals are labors of love in order to extract sympathy from writers and, as [Anandi] Mishra writes, &#8220;exploit earnest writers for cheap labor.&#8221;</p><p>Case in point:</p><p><em>Angel Food Mag</em>: &#8220;This is a labor of love and unfortunately, we cannot pay writers.&#8221;</p><p><em>The Garlic Press:</em> &#8220;Unfortunately, this magazine is a labor of love, and we cannot offer payment for publication at this time.&#8221;</p><p><em>&#8220;Whale Road Review</em> is a labor of love and can&#8217;t offer monetary payment at this time, but we include a &#8216;tip the author&#8217; feature so readers can send money directly to our writers.&#8221;</p><p>Obviously, most writers expect these conditions at literary magazines. Payment is unfortunately not the norm. But framing the inability to pay writers&#8212;which is the basic professional standard in every other market besides literary magazines&#8212;is like a tug on the heartstrings while getting robbed. It&#8217;s bad enough that most writers don&#8217;t get paid at literary magazines. Do we need to use <em>love</em> as a means to justify the practice?</p><p><strong>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/q-whats-with-all-the-luvvy-duv-labor">Q: What&#8217;s with all the luvvy duv &#8220;labor of love&#8221; malarkey?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I didn&#8217;t have the highest hopes for Valentine&#8217;s Day, but we took the arduous trip downtown and back to attend the <em>Spectacle du Petite</em> show at <a href="https://www.roqlarue.com/">Roq La Rue</a>, which features a ton of wonderful artists including my current art crush, <a href="https://www.dewiplass.com/">Dewi Plass</a>, whose works Glenn photographed me with. Below are some of the pieces, including the fennec fox piece, for you to enjoy. However, I recommend a visit to the show! Glenn also took me to a downtown bookstore, so I could peruse lit mags and magazines not available to me on the East side. The whole thing wore me out, but I was happy I went. Glenn made duck and strawberry cupcakes, and we had dinner at home, which was lovely. (I also received two rejections&#8212;one book, one lit mag&#8212;on Valentine&#8217;s Day, which seems like a slap in the face. Not cool, places that reject on V-Day. It&#8217;s a hard day for a lot of people! Geeze!)</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/valentines-day-and-artist-dates-birds-in-the-cold-melancholy-ai-and-voting-rights/">Valentine&#8217;s Day and Artist Dates, Birds in the Cold, Melancholy, AI and Voting Rights</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Even now, in my sixties, I keep falling<br>in love with things. The crumpled<br>texture and weave of linen, the sharp<br>clean edge of a cotton collar, the soft<br>slouchy hems of bright socks.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/02/self-portrait-with-once-lonely-sheep/">Self Portrait, with Once-Lonely Sheep</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In addition to eating way too many raspberry and lemon paczki for one person this week and the rest of February, my other treat was<a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DUoVdQZj2rq/"> getting a new tattoo, a pair of fancy and decorative scissors.</a> Lately I do more digital work than analogue (something I am vowing to change this year) but when I did work more with physical materials, I always preferred scissors over X-actos, which sometimes meant my cuts were unweildy, but I was just more used to them (though it depends on the scissors.) They are the first tattoo on my left arm, which I don&#8217;t plan to create a sleeve, so it stands alone on my forearm and is actually about the size of an actual pair.</p><p>And speaking of collage, the Februllage endeavors have been going well. Since we&#8217;ve been coming and going a lot, I&#8217;ve been doubling up and working ahead to make sure I can post daily, if not create daily (this is much easier with collages than NaPoWriMo poems.)</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/02/notes-things-valentines-edition-2142026.html">notes &amp; things: valentine&#8217;s edition | 2/14/2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A stray barks: sharp, staccato, afraid.<br>Like she is shouting in a different language.</p><p>She must have spotted another cobra.<br>They are everywhere now.<br>It is, after all, mating season.</p><p>The other street dogs don&#8217;t come near.<br>They are picking their battles.<br>Or the afternoon is too warm, too languorous,<br>too burdensome, to die.</p><p><strong>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/trying-to-make-sense-of-the-world">Trying to make sense of the world &#8211; attempt #1</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;The Quiet Ear&#8221; is subtitled &#8220;An Investigation of Missing Sound&#8221;. Raymond Antrobus was diagnosed deaf at the age of six when it was discovered that he was missing sounds at certain frequencies, e.g. birdsong, and unable to hear certain letter combinations, particularly &#8220;is&#8221;, hearing &#8220;talisman&#8221; as &#8220;tal man&#8221; or &#8220;tally man&#8221;. Typically the teachers who&#8217;d written him off as slow didn&#8217;t apologise. [&#8230;]</p><p>The book&#8217;s title comes from a chapter, which also is the title of a poetry anthology that contains a poem by Ted Hughes called &#8220;Deaf School&#8221;. Hughes had been commissioned by the National Theatre to research &#8220;how people live without language&#8221;; a bizarre commission given that the Deaf are not without language, but hearing. Hughes visited a Deaf school in London and the result was a problematic poem. The poem, in Antrobus&#8217;s words, &#8220;positions the speaker of the poem as a wise observer; there&#8217;s a tone of certainty that pathologises the deaf children, seeing them as passive amusements&#8230; The biggest irony is that Hughes is lazily describing something highly sophisticated, the language of sign&#8230; Seeing Hughes use his poetic gift to frame deaf children as animalistic simpletons was a double assault to me, disappointing and hurtful. What is the use of a poet who uses their talents to enforce harmful stereotypes on marginalised people and their language?&#8221;</p><p>Antrobus&#8217;s reaction was to write a poem that mirrored the language back at Hughes. To get it published, he needed permission from the Hughes&#8217; estate which was denied. Antrobus then redacted the lines in the poem so you only see the title and then a series of black blocks. Showing it to some school children, one suggests that if you rotate the poem by ninety degrees, you can see the poem as bars on an audiologist&#8217;s chart.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/02/11/the-quiet-ear-raymond-antrobus-weidenfeld-and-nicholson-book-review/">&#8220;The Quiet Ear&#8221; Raymond Antrobus (Weidenfeld and Nicholson) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The palaeography sessions are weekly, on zoom, from America. I have access to them through my fellowship with the <a href="https://www.folger.edu/">Folger.</a> They have become something I treasure: a quiet, thoughtful place of puzzle solving and companionship amongst my otherwise chaotic days of caring and freelancing and trying to write the book. I value the ritual of it. I value the feeling of joining the group and being welcomed. Usually we begin by going over the alphabet, looking at the way that secretary hand can be formed, always with the reminder that the scribes that wrote the documents are people, and each person has their own handwriting. We are reminded of context, that there is a world of difference between a son writing a letter home from university, and a letter from a spy in a royal house. Then we open a document that all the group can see and we transcribe it together, slowly moving along, a word at a time. We are shown how to enter the transcription for scholarly use and although this is not why I am here &#8211; I know I will never have the confidence or skill to transcribe anything in the archives &#8211; I enjoy the way that knowledge of how it is done brings me closer to the transcribers when I am roaming down the rabbit holes of archive work.</p><p>The stories of people are not just embedded in the text that is written. It&#8217;s in <em>how</em> it&#8217;s written. When we come across letters that are obviously more ornate than they should be, we can see that this is a throw back to an older medieval style and I can imagine someone who learned to write in a medieval hand passing down a habit of over exaggeration of majuscules through the family, the old ways being slowly rubbed away at the edges as each new generation learns to write. I am reminded of how I used to copy the way my mum wrote her capital Es in a double curled sweep, though I had never been taught to do that by my teachers.</p><p>Learning to read 16th and 17th century documents is so much more than learning the shape of the letters. Much of the spelling is phonetic, sometimes I think I can detect accent in the way that words are spelled. To learn the hand of a scribe you write the letters out, looking at the ink on the original page to follow the direction of the quill, getting a feel for the direction of the crosses, the way an &#8216;a&#8217; merges into the minims of an n or an m, and this way you get a feel for their habits, their positioning, the way they might lean a quill on a knuckle joint, the way they get distracted and bunch a letter too close to the edge of a page, or miss a word out and have to go back and stick it in on a slant. A manuscript becomes a moment in a life, then, the dipping of a quill and the fattening of the letters with ink, the thin pale words at the end of a long line where the quill needs re dipping, the drip, the smudge where a sleeve has caught.</p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/the-butchers-hook-and-the-hot-cross">The Butcher&#8217;s Hook and the Hot Cross Bun</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This is the notebook of one William Lynnet (or Lynnett), born around 1622, who was admitted to Trinity as a student the year before, in 1641. William&#8217;s notebook contains various bits of Latin and English verse, some of his own composition and several addressed to prominent Cambridge contemporaries, as well as Donne&#8217;s translation of Psalm 137, the popular translation of Herbert&#8217;s &#8216;Aethiopissa&#8217; (which I discussed <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/stay-lovely-boy-why-flyst-thou-me">here</a>) and its &#8216;answer&#8217; by Henry King, and an English poem by the poet Richard Crashaw, who was at Pembroke College, Cambridge until 1635 and thereafter at Peterhouse. Many items are dated to 1642 or 1643 and several describe or respond to the tumultuous political events of those years.</p><p>All of this is relevant because this manuscript also contains two copies of a good Latin poem which is ascribed, when it first appears, to &#8216;A. C.&#8217;. The <em>Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts</em> takes this to be Abraham Cowley &#8212; who was also at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1642/3, and duly appears in William&#8217;s list (in the image above, you can see his name about half way down the right-hand column). Although <em>CELMS </em>accepts the attribution to Cowley, as far as I know this poem has never been published. [&#8230;]</p><p>The poet compares himself to a singing bird who, her nest destroyed in a storm, no longer has the heart for song, and struggles to know what to do:</p><blockquote><p><em>At si prosternit nidum fors saeva tepentem,<br>Et nova tempestas quaerere tecta iuvet,<br>Maesta silet; metuit suspiria mittere, cantus<br>Ne possit gemitu mixtus inesse suo.<br>Flebiliter pressis circum vaga cursitat alis,<br>Et cui adesse nequit nescit abesse loco.</em></p><p>But if cruel fate destroys her cosy nest,<br>And a storm means she needs a new house,<br>In sorrow she falls silent, afraid to mourn<br>In case her song be spoilt by her lament.<br>Weeping she dashes back and forth, her wings<br>Close-pressed, she cannot either stay or go.</p></blockquote><p>This situation is compared to that of the poet who, having lain long secure and singing joyful songs in &#8216;your shade&#8217;, now faces the possibility of being forced into exile as a result of the &#8216;storm&#8217; &#8212; that is, of course, the storm of Civil War, which broke out fully in this year, 1642. The &#8216;you&#8217; of the poem might refer to a particular individual, but I think it is most likely that it refers to the university itself. Cowley was indeed eventually forced to leave Cambridge in 1644 to take refuge first in Oxford and later in France.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/with-hope-into-the-lists-cowley-on">With hope into the lists: Cowley on the eve of civil war</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>What I love about &#8220;Nostos&#8221; is what I love about so much of Gl&#252;ck&#8217;s work: the intensity of focus, and the sensation of entering another&#8217;s consciousness so completely that it feels like your own, both effects accomplished by careful management of the line, by the way enjambment can cut across syntax to enact the movement of the mind.</p><p>The opening five lines establish the logic that structures the rest of the poem, its pattern of incompletion and association, continuity and rupture. The opening line alone give us a microcosm of this tension:</p><blockquote><p>There was an apple tree in the yard&#8212;</p></blockquote><p>It&#8217;s a complete sentence&#8212;and yet not, the em dash denoting fragmentation, the statement breaking off. More accurately, a breaking away from, as line 2 directs us into a new temporality:</p><blockquote><p>this would have been<br>forty years ago&#8212;</p></blockquote><p>The shift from the simple past &#8220;there was&#8221; to &#8220;this would have been&#8221; is weirdly complicated. It <em>was</em> forty years ago, and there&#8217;s no conditionality implied by the usage, but the idiomatic construction evokes demotic speech&#8212;the sense that we are being spoken to, or perhaps speaking to ourselves. It&#8217;s a storytelling gesture that shifts our sense of time, from past recollection to present-tense situating of the image. And it colours mood as well, introducing the minor chord of &#8220;would&#8221;: a word of longing, of distance on its own. This distance is revealed as temporal when line 3 opens with the unit of time&#8212;forty years&#8212;but abruptly turns spatial as another interruptive em dash is followed by the preposition &#8220;behind,&#8221; pulling us again into the realm of the concrete, letting us hang there for an instant in uncertainty: behind what?</p><p>So there is a lot going on, if you track the movement line by line and word by word, attentive to the subtlest shifts in verb tense, grammatical mood, intonation, and to read Gl&#252;ck I think you must be. But I find this concentration so rewarding, and the precision, ironically, disarming. In this instance, it&#8217;s how it captures the way we tell stories, which is also the way memory works. An image arises, unanchored, and the mind finds a place for it, slots it back into a larger narrative.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/nostos-by-louise-gluck">&#8220;Nostos&#8221; by Louise Gl&#252;ck</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Overall, the amount of white space, the amount of enjambment, and the short lines slow the poem down. We&#8217;re getting plenty of time to parse the syntax and savor each line. The poem either begins with a single line or as a couplet that includes the title, depending on how you look at it, but the last line is certainly on its own. It&#8217;s emphasized because it&#8217;s all by itself, cushioned in white space. The question is also emphasized by the repetition of &#8220;my hands&#8221;:</p><blockquote><p>Tell me what to do<br>with my hands&#8212;my hands&#8212;<br><br>what can my hands do now?</p></blockquote><p>The speaker is pleading. There&#8217;s a sense of desperation and a deep desire to be useful. To be a helper. The repetition three times here also mirrors an earlier repetition: the anaphora in stanza three. Anaphora is the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses, lines, sentences. In this stanza, &#8220;come&#8221; is repeated three times:</p><blockquote><p>Come hurricane, come rip current,<br>come toxic algal bloom.</p></blockquote><p>This poem is full of surprises, reconsiderations, and switchbacks. Form and content are working in tandem. The speaker of &#8220;A dead whale can feed an entire ecosystem&#8221;<strong> </strong>wonders aloud about what it can do to be a helper. And, I&#8217;d argue, in its articulation, and in its witnessing, it <em>is </em>a helper. I hope if you enjoyed this poem, you&#8217;ll seek out more work by Rachel Dillon.</p><p><strong>Maggie Smith, <a href="https://maggiesmith.substack.com/p/behind-the-scenes-look-757">Behind-the-Scenes Look</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Copies of <em><a href="https://madvillepublishing.com/product/white-winged-doves/">White Winged Doves: A Stevie Nicks Poetry Anthology</a></em> are going out to the media, for review requests, and to the contributors. I received a box of books a week or so ago, and I am thrilled with how it&#8217;s turned out. Donna Kile&#8217;s gorgeous cover photography, the tactile matte finish on the cover, and even the fonts. And, of course, the poems by our fantastic contributors. We really can&#8217;t wait for these to start shipping out to readers in May. [&#8230;]</p><p>In other news, I shared the stage with fellow poets and long-time friends Franklin Abbott and Cleo Creech on Jan. 8 as part of an exhibition of panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt at the Decatur Library. It was a moving evening of poetry and I &#8211; and the audience &#8211; were verklempt for most of it. I don&#8217;t do that many in-person readings anymore, but I&#8217;m glad I did this one.</p><p><strong>Collin Kelley, <a href="http://collinkelley.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-big-reveal-white-winged-doves.html">The Big Reveal: &#8220;White Winged Doves: A Stevie Nicks Poetry Anthology</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m excited to share that I have a podcast episode out with <a href="http://instagram.com/megsreadingroom">Meg</a> of Meg&#8217;s Reading Room. I can&#8217;t say enough about Meg. She is such a calm, gentle presence in this world. I love her podcast about books, and was so honored when she invited me on.<br><br>You can listen to our episode on <a href="https://open.spotify.com/episode/34hM02D7adkRzwA9xfg67Y?si=d6cc2646cd144969">Spotify</a> or <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/megs-reading-room/id1761060886?i=1000749562754">Apple Podcasts</a>. At the very end, I share a poem from the book that I have not shared anywhere else, so go check it out!</p><p>Here&#8217;s Meg&#8217;s description of the episode:</p><blockquote><p>In our conversation, Allison shares why motherhood gave her the courage to start sharing her work with the world, how connecting with her own voice has helped shape her work as a speech-language pathologist, and why going deep through her writing and creative workshops has been bringing her joy in this season.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Allison Mei-Li, <a href="https://writtenbyallison.substack.com/p/a-few-love-poems">A Few Love Poems</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://isobarpress.com/titles/noon-an-anthology-of-short-poems-volume-2/">NOON: An Anthology of Short Poems (Volume 2)</a>, ed. Philip Rowland, Isobar Press, 2025, ISBN 978-4-907359-52-2, &#163;12.00</p><p><a href="https://www.dedaluspress.com/product/fog-bells-8-contemporary-turkish-poets/">Fog Bells: 8 Contemporary Turkish Poets</a>, ed. Neil P. Doherty, Dedalus Press, 2025, ISBN PB 978191562933, &#8364;14.50</p><p>The first time <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2019/11/21/two-anthologies-a-review/">I reviewed two anthologies together here</a>, one of them was the first volume of the NOON one. You can imagine my surprise when Volume 2 arrived with a quote from that review on the back cover:</p><blockquote><p>The work in NOON is poetry tending towards the ideal condition of silence, which is a kind of music, and the visual element, not only within but in the space around each poem, is key to eliciting the quality of attention required from the reader when a poem places so much weight on so few words.</p></blockquote><p>I could use exactly the same words in reviewing this second volume, but I won&#8217;t. Instead I want to look in a bit more depth at Rowland&#8217;s explanation of his method as explained in his Preface:</p><blockquote><p>As in every issue, as well as the first anthology, the poems in this volume have been arranged in a renga-like sequence. Besides being a creative aspect of the editorial process, this is meant to allow for a range of short-form poetry to resonate in stimulating and sometimes surprising ways for the reader.</p><p>&#8230;</p><p>This is, then, much more an anthology of poems than poets.</p></blockquote><p>In practice, because, with just one exception, poems by each poet are grouped together, this involves resonances within a poet&#8217;s work and across the works of the preceding or subsequent contributor. [&#8230;]</p><p>What also emerges is the flexibility around what Rowland means by a short poem, defined as anything under 14 lines. While NOON tends towards the haiku, there&#8217;s room for anything that fits, really, including a couple of tiny haibun (or at least that&#8217;s how I read them), like this one by Sabine Miller:</p><blockquote><p>VESSEL</p><p>If you were a vessel, what shape would you be? I say urn and she says murmuration. I am filled with dusty blue marbles; she is filled with sky.</p><p>the dark rock<br>a darker bird<br>alighting</p></blockquote><p>In the Preface, Rowland says the book is &#8216;short enough to be read from start to finish at one sitting&#8217;. I can confirm that this is the case, and that at the end the temptation is to go back to the beginning and read it again. And again. Each reading revealing new delights. It&#8217;s a delight in ways that few anthologies (or single books of poetry) manage. I&#8217;ll finish off with a poem from Caroline Clark that, for me, sums up the experience of reading the book:</p><blockquote><p>Can I be with you<br>while you read this?<br>Don&#8217;t look up<br>or say anything.</p></blockquote><p>It&#8217;s a book to keep by you, to read and read again, to savour like fine wine.</p><p><strong>Billy Mills, <a href="https://millsbi.substack.com/p/a-review-of-two-anthologies">A review of two anthologies</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>There&#8217;s been a shift at night. Used to be I&#8217;d forget to attend class until exam time. Sometimes my primary school or secondary school or university graduations were rescinded because I missed a class. Pretty common dream among people I understand.</p><p>Or I searched a toilet and all would be out of service. I&#8217;d show up for meals and it was all eaten. I&#8217;d be lost, disoriented. I hid, evaded, be pursued, shot at. I&#8217;d run through cities forests in primeval fear. I&#8217;d stash myself under furniture, in heating ducts. I&#8217;d almost always escape. Sometimes I was a disembodied observer of other people and did nothing in my own dreams but watch chaos unfold.</p><p>There were non-stress dreams of course. But the shift is this: on waking, say, that was stupid, I should have this or that. I broke into my own dreams lucidly.</p><p>In dreams I started asking for other student&#8217;s notes, asking the front desk to confirm my schedule, chatting with professors, being in lectures, graduating.</p><p>I started asking directions to a working washroom, pee anyway even if the only one was a urinal in a crowded hallway. I started showing up at buffets before the crowd or before opening. Being lost in another souk, I said in my dream, no not this again, so bored, walked past the vendor, threw up the flap of the tent and hailed a cab.</p><p>Being lost and locked in a museum or store at night I started stealing stuff. Or exploring, finding new underground tunnels, and new rooftops to observe from.</p><p>My run in the forest became a joy of running and watching the neighbourhood sprout houses and businesses and I started talking with these familiar fictional neighbours, each dream a next time lapse.</p><p>Being held hostage, I started to huff, disgusted with fellow prisoners, getting up, telling off the gunmen until he reddened. I demanded cash for damages, or snatched his gun, taking him out and the marksmen.</p><p>The shifts have mostly happened over the last year, some spreading back a decade. [&#8230;]</p><p>The dreams are starting to echo being a member of community, taking roles as protector, saviour, competent, self-serving. I move from inaction and reaction to action.</p><p>Twenty years pass and I don&#8217;t feel cringe for existing. I ask what I want and instead of writing down goals and sub-steps, on some deep level I give permission instead of self-flogging. I don&#8217;t try to manage others or bow to others. There&#8217;s some equality. There&#8217;s some interdependence. There is something opening. Out of the forest, into the plain. New options.</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/02/10/agency/">Agency</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i think we should install more doors to nowhere.<br>more windows full of bricks.<br>i am sick of functionality. i want<br>the nest to be as absurd as it is to be<br>alive right now while people are being stolen<br>from their ice cream places. from their schools.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/02/10/2-10-5/">wild zillow</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Across her three Comma Press collections &#8211; <em>Dr James Graham&#8217;s Celestial Bed</em> (2006), <em>Lifting the Piano with One Hand</em> (2013) and, especially, <em>Where the Road Runs Out</em> (2018) &#8211; Gaia Holmes&#8217;s poetry has burned with a unique free spirit, content-, form- and sensibility-wise. Her poems are unlike anyone else&#8217;s, filled with unlikely, netherworldly events frequently set on the fringes of society but which are real and compelling.</p><p>In this collection of 19 stories, Holmes&#8217;s first foray into fiction, many of the characters are neurodivergent and/or getting a raw deal out of life: bullying, toxic relationships, domestic violence, bereavement, conception difficulties, loneliness, terrible neighbours and a general sense of passivity which these problems cause or exacerbate. However, many of the stories concern ways in which those characters, through their own willpower or with some magical realist intervention, circumvent their circumstances. In her writing, Holmes is careful to avoid the trap of overtly feeling sorry for her characters and often does so by employing a first-person narrator who just tells it as it is.</p><p><strong>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/02/10/review-of-gaia-holmess-he-used-to-do-dangerous-things/">Review of Gaia Holmes&#8217;s He Used to Do Dangerous Things</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Yesterday I was thinking about how being an athlete is unlike being a writer. I watch the Olympics, and I have no illusions that I will ever be at that level, and worse&#8211;the window for that level of skill is tied to youth. With writing, I can continue to improve.</p><p>I thought about this off and on throughout the week, as I have walked from my office to my classrooms and observed clusters of students who are talking about their creative writing. I don&#8217;t think these projects are for a class. I think they&#8217;re just students who like to write and have found each other. I love the building where most humanities classes are taught. It was built 15 years ago, so it&#8217;s a very different building than any other building where I&#8217;ve taught. There&#8217;s more natural light, for one thing, and less decay. The common area has spaces for informal gathering/studying, spaces that look like a small living room, spaces that look like a kitchen table, and two tables of barstool height, with higher chairs. There&#8217;s a charging station beside one of them, and plenty of plugs throughout the common space. There are some backless couches that look like waves outside of each classroom.</p><p>Some of the students hang out as they wait for classes to start, but other students hang out all day. As I overhear conversations, I feel inordinately happy. There&#8217;s the creative writing discussions and the students helping each other in a variety of classes. There are students scrolling through their phones, and others staring at laptops, but more often than not, they&#8217;re interacting.</p><p>As I walk back and forth, I sometimes feel wistful, sometimes nostalgic, sometimes sad about how long ago my own undergrad days have become. I can also be prone to the sadness of feeling like I haven&#8217;t lived up to my potential. Yesterday I laughed at myself a bit&#8211;I can still keep working on writing projects, and I can keep doing it deep into old age, barring some kind of injury. In terms of athletic prowess, I&#8217;m not going to be skiing ever again; fear of breaking a bone is just too much of a deterrent.</p><p>Happily, I&#8217;m fine with that. I didn&#8217;t like skiing when I did it in my younger years, so no great loss. Aging must be much more difficult if what brings one joy is not something one can do with an aging body.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/02/writing-life-olympian-life.html">Writing Life, Olympian Life</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m always surprised when talking with another poet, and they say something along the lines of <em>I should see more modern dance, but I don&#8217;t really know what to make of it. </em>This, of course, is another version of what we frustratingly hear all the time as poets&#8212;I want to read poetry, but I don&#8217;t <em>understand</em> it. I feel like the emphasis on understanding is preventing so many people from enjoying and experiencing not just poetry but the variety of art that exists in the world, such as dance, experimental music, or abstract painting. Even those of us who spend our time immersed and versed in one discipline and recognize that every artwork need not tell a story or be representational, still often find ourselves trapped by the false idea of needing to understand a piece of art if it&#8217;s in a realm outside our own.</p><p>Here&#8217;s my plea. Let&#8217;s free ourselves of this idea.</p><p>For me, what makes modern dance amazing is that it strips dance down to its fundamental ingredients&#8212;the shapes that bodies can take and the motions that bodies can make&#8212;and reimagines it front and center. When I watch a dance piece, I observe the architecture of the dance&#8212;both for individual dancers and as a group&#8212;and I notice repeating and building patterns of gestures, undulations, or transfers of weight. All of this, of course, is anchored by the music and lighting, set and costumes, or lack thereof (some of the best pieces shine because of their spareness, by letting the dancer just dance). Together, it&#8217;s about creating an energy, a feeling that you take in, that you open yourself to. And maybe, just maybe, if you just let it happen, Emily Dickinson&#8217;s &#8220;cleaving of the mind&#8221; will come.</p><p>When I stand in front of a Rothko painting, such as the Seagram murals, I feel myself vibrate, physically and emotionally. That&#8217;s the ultimate for me. Like modern dance, modern painting is painting stripped down to its essential ingredients&#8212;color and texture. It isn&#8217;t about sense, but the <em>senses</em>. We don&#8217;t make something of it; instead, it makes something of us.</p><p>As my bedtime reading, I&#8217;ve been traveling through Fra<em>n</em>cesca Wade&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Gertrude-Stein/Francesca-Wade/9781982186012">Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife</a>, </em>which speaks to how Stein similarly sought to make poetry new by experimenting with its very textual and grammatical building blocks.</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Each word in [Stein&#8217;s] <em>Tender Buttons</em> . . . was recognizable in itself, but here words follow others not to advance any story, but to propel the text forward through verbal echo, surprise, or pure insistence. . . . <em>Tender Buttons</em> is a celebration of mutability, a rejoinder to the rules, where words are set free from the shackles of meaning and grammatical function, made unfamilar, and charged with power to make the world afresh.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>Whether you&#8217;re reading a poem or listening to a drone composition that reverbates with found sounds, it is precisely the allure of surprise and the unfamiliar that makes them successful, powerful, and engaging. If we stop asking what it means and start asking what we feel, perhaps we&#8217;ll all find our way to the forms of art that we didn&#8217;t realize we needed and that speak to us even though we thought they were beyond our grasp.</p><p><strong>Carrie Olivia Adams, <a href="https://poetryandbiscuits.substack.com/p/celebrating-the-ingredients">Celebrating the Ingredients</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?</strong></p><p>I&#8217;m trying to write a poetry of &#8220;what is&#8221;, at the risk of seeming like some kind of antiquated rational materialist. (Guilty.) What you believe has consequences: if you believe in the literal existence of Santa, you need to wrestle with the existence of the surveillance apparatus implied by that belief, you need to acknowledge that this authority in which you believe prefers rich kids, and so on.</p><p>So I&#8217;m trying to write about the marvellous world we live in, which means that I write about natural phenomena, often through the explanatory lens of science. I deliberately avoid mysticism, metaphysics, spiritualism, and other forms of woo that are pretty commonplace in contemporary poetry. But I don&#8217;t think that the transcendent and the numinous &#8212; the truly wonderful &#8212; are the property of those modes of thinking. I&#8217;m trying to write about what it&#8217;s like to be in this world, to live in it, to experience its aesthetics and poetics. This is a bit different than the way that many poets write about science and nature: either the natural phenomenon is used solely as a metaphor, as in &#8220;I wandered lonely as a cloud&#8221;, or the poem is a hymn to the phenomenon. (Grossly oversimplifying here.) I&#8217;m trying to do something different with my poetry, to write about the world as it is and about our experience of it.</p><p>Adjacent to this is a technical question I&#8217;m interested in, which has to do with how poems might be constructed differently. If we imagine that words and lines are the atoms and molecules, respectively, of poetry, what happens if we do chemistry with these? If we pull them apart and put them together. This experiment already exists in poetry, of course, in, for example, enjambment or <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44395/gods-grandeur">Manley Hopkins</a>-esque portmanteaux. But how far can this be pushed? To what poetic end? Do there exist poetic polymers and macromolecules? What do they look like? What are they for? [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?</strong></p><p>I&#8217;ve been a math teacher, and I&#8217;m currently a physician. I should have been a physicist, but fear and laziness prevented this. Some days I think I&#8217;d like to be a Zamboni driver, or the guy who drives the rake around the infield at a baseball stadium.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/02/12-or-20-second-series-questions-with_01626032941.html">12 or 20 (second series) questions with Paul Moorehead</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poem was written on March 26, 1802, while Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy were at <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dove_Cottage">Dove Cottage</a> in the Lake District. &#8220;While I was getting into bed,&#8221; Dorothy notes in diary, &#8220;he wrote the Rainbow&#8221; &#8212; which does suggest a rapid composition (albeit with later days&#8217; entries in the diary revealing his agonizing about the poem, building toward the move he would make with the Immortality Ode).</p><p>We should note too, I suppose, her reference to the poem as &#8220;the Rainbow.&#8221; Without falling fully down the rabbit hole (exploring, for example, how much Wordsworth meant a wordplay with pi, &#960;, for the semi-circle of the rainbow and the &#8220;piety&#8221; of the last line), we can still remember that the clash of science and poetry was in the air &#8212; and particularly in discussions of rainbows and Newton&#8217;s 1704 <em>Opticks</em>.</p><p>In the 1728 &#8220;<a href="https://allpoetry.com/The-Four-Seasons-:-Spring">Spring</a>&#8221; section of his <em>Four Seasons</em>, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-mists-in-autumn">James Thomson</a> speaks of the rainbow as</p><blockquote><p>. . . refracted from yon eastern cloud,<br>Bestriding earth, the grand ethereal bow<br>Shoots up immense; and every hue unfolds,<br>In fair proportion running from the red<br>To where the violet fades into the sky.<br>Here, awful Newton, the dissolving clouds<br>Form, fronting on the sun, thy showery prism;<br>And to the sage instructed eye unfold<br>The various twine of light, by thee disclosed<br>From the white mingling maze.</p></blockquote><p>But &#8212; anticipating Wordsworth &#8212; he adds:</p><blockquote><p>. . . Not so the boy;<br>He wondering views the bright enchantment bend,<br>Delightful o&#8217;er the radiant fields, and runs<br>To catch the falling glory</p></blockquote><p>Thomas Campbell post-Wordsworthian 1819 &#8220;<a href="https://allpoetry.com/To-The-Rainbow">To The Rainbow</a>&#8221; makes explicit the opposition of science and childhood:</p><blockquote><p>Can all that Optics teach unfold<br>Thy form to please me so,<br>As when I dreamt of gems and gold<br>Hid in thy radiant bow?</p></blockquote><p>Charles and Mary Lamb in their 1809 <em>Poetry for Children</em>, admit the conflict but offer a <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/68359/68359-h/68359-h.htm#i_018">more ameliorative take</a>:</p><blockquote><p>. . . If I were<br>A natural philosopher,<br>I would tell you what does make<br>This meteor every colour take:<br>But an unlearned eye may view<br>Nature&#8217;s rare sights, and love them too.</p></blockquote><p>And so on. The question of the nature of rainbows does set up, however, the question I find most interesting about the poem: the meaning of the final phrase, &#8220;natural piety.&#8221;</p><p>In marginalia scribbled in his copy of the 1815 edition of Wordsworth&#8217;s <em>Poems</em>, William Blake would <a href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Life_of_William_Blake,_Gilchrist.djvu/464">take aim</a> at the phrase: &#8220;There is no such Thing as Natural Piety Because the Natural Man is at Enmity with God&#8221; &#8212; adding &#8220;I see in Wordsworth the natural man rising up against the spiritual man continually; and then he is no poet, but a heathen philosopher, at enmity with all true poetry or inspiration.&#8221;</p><p>And it&#8217;s possible that Wordsworth meant the word <em>natural</em> in the way that Blake supposed &#8212; a declaration of human nature as filled with a native piety and goodness, in rejection of the Christian idea of the Fall.</p><p>But a better reading, I think, would take <em>natural</em> to be about external phenomena. The nature here is not human nature, which darkens as we age (hence the Immortality Ode&#8217;s &#8220;Shades of the prison-house begin to close / Upon the growing Boy&#8221;). It is rather Nature&#8217;s own piety &#8212; both, I think, in the sense that Nature herself is pious, reveling in her creation, and in the sense that Nature, seen correctly, is an occasion of grace. The natural world wants us to be pious, to grasp heart-leapingly in the experience of a rainbow the transcendental characteristics of created being: beauty, truth, and goodness.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-my-heart-leaps-up-ac1">Today&#8217;s Poem: My Heart Leaps Up</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Basil Bunting&#8217;s long modernist poem <em>Briggflatts</em> (1966) was published sixty years ago this winter &#8212; first in <em>Poetry </em>magazine and then as a book from Fulcrum Press. It was subtitled &#8220;An Autobiography&#8221;, but Bunting denied that it was &#8220;a record of fact&#8221;, saying &#8220;the truth of the poem is of another kind&#8221;. Despite the often abstruse allusions, he also felt that &#8220;no notes are needed&#8221;. But he provided a handful nevertheless, on the grounds that &#8220;a few may spare diligent readers the pains of research&#8221;.</p><p>Bunting&#8217;s notes were titled &#8220;Afterthoughts&#8221;, and most relate to the Northumbrian landscape and language of his early twentieth-century youth, where the poem is primarily set (Briggflatts, the Quaker meeting house of the title, is actually over towards the west in Cumbria, but Bunting saw this as part of the old Northumbria). He had returned to North East England after travelling widely, and wrote the poem in his sixties, filling notebooks on the train as he commuted to his sub-editing job on the Newcastle <em>Evening Chronicle</em>.</p><p>Like T.S. Eliot&#8217;s Notes to <em>The Waste Land</em>, Bunting&#8217;s &#8220;Afterthoughts&#8221; have the air of a riddling hermit guarding a magic portal. The first warns that &#8220;the Northumbrian tongue&#8221; may sound strange to non-natives, and that &#8220;Southrons&#8221; &#8212; those from the south of England &#8212; &#8220;would maul the music of many lines of <em>Briggflatts</em>&#8221;. Further on, we are told to &#8220;piece [&#8230;] together&#8221; the story of the Viking king, Eric Bloodaxe, &#8220;from the Anglo-Saxon chronicle, the Orkneyinga Saga, and Heimskringla, as you fancy&#8221;. By the time we get to the word &#8220;skerry&#8221;, Bunting&#8217;s only comment is &#8220;O, come on, you know that one&#8221; (it&#8217;s a small rocky island, covered at high tide). &#8220;Scone&#8221;, meanwhile, is singled out so that we can be told to &#8220;rhyme it with &#8216;on&#8217;, not, for heaven&#8217;s sake, &#8216;own&#8217;&#8221; (on the question of whether to apply jam or cream first, however, he is silent).</p><p>I had a new experience of <em>Briggflatts</em> recently when I read it alongside the much more extensive annotations that have been available for the past ten years at the back of Don Share&#8217;s excellent edition of <em>The Poems of Basil Bunting</em> (2016). One of the things I appreciated about how Share lays out these notes for the reader is that, as well as interleaving Bunting&#8217;s original &#8220;Afterthoughts&#8221;, he also uses bold type to pick out everything the poet said elsewhere about the poem: interviews, letters, conversations. So it&#8217;s possible at a glance to follow an extended authorial commentary on particular words and lines.</p><p><strong>Jeremy Noel-Tod, <a href="https://someflowerssoon.substack.com/p/pinks-40-how-it-feels-rubbing-down">Pinks #40: How It Feels Rubbing Down a Gravestone</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Rebuff, repulsion, lacking allure &#8211; it&#8217;s a risk to call an anthology of poetry <em>The Opposite of Seduction</em> and perhaps Nicola Thomas&#8217; brief Introduction to this book of new German poetry in translation suspects as much. She concedes, &#8216;poems here . . . may test the boundaries of Anglophone tastes&#8217;. But that depends on your taste and for most readers this anthology will seem a vigorous enjoyable collection of young(ish) voices, most hardly ever heard in English before like Nadja K&#252;chenmeister&#8217;s delicate, flowing lyrics of existential uncertainty (tr. Aimee Chor), or Anja Utler&#8217;s sole contribution, a re-writing of the Daphne myth, exploiting the white page, a choppy fragmentation, exclamation, and a suitably headlong, hectic delivery. A different note is struck by Uljana Wolf, in her whimsical teasing away at self-awareness, waking at four in the morning, or down on hands and knees with an English-speaking partner, to consider dust bunnies (in German &#8216;Wollmaus&#8217;); &#8216;our little creatures, how they swap their fluffy, moon-gray names&#8217; (tr. Sophie Seita). [&#8230;]</p><p>Technique dominates rather than subject matter, though the selection is organised by subjects such as Heart, Body, Soul, Beast, Season, Machine, Home. Oswald Egger writes lush, musical celebrations of the natural world which in Ian Galbraith&#8217;s renderings evoke Hopkins, even Dylan Thomas. Din&#231;er G&#252;&#231;yeter brings material from the migrant experience (tr. Caroline Wilcox Reul) and Ulrike Almut Sandig creates a genuine split-screen reading experience, playing poem texts off against story board instructions either side of the page (tr. Karen Leeder). Given the breadth of experimentation going on here, there are inevitable failures. These are poets working to free both writer and reader from conventions, to open up novel realms of human experience, a liberation from history. Occasionally, Jan Kuhlbrodt&#8217;s nightmare vision of a man hoarding books and newspapers hovers behind some poems, so intent on their own language are they, perhaps in need of a &#8216;reminder of a reality that knows more than paper&#8217; (tr. Alexander Kappe).</p><p><strong>Martyn Crucefix, <a href="https://martyncrucefix.com/2026/02/13/review-the-opposite-of-seduction-new-poetry-in-german-shearsman-books-2025/">Review: The Opposite of Seduction: New Poetry in German (Shearsman Books, 2025)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>My fourth collection <em>Grey Time </em>(Nine Arches Press, 2025) circles around the themes of grief and loss. These are subjects that I have touched on in my previous collections, but with this collection I decided to give my attention over to it more fully, to read around the subject area and to more fully explore what grief is, and how it affects us and changes &#8211; not just in the aftermath of a loss but over the years that follow. I also wanted to explore how our relationship with those we have lost changes over time. Loss in the collection is not just confined to death though; there are other losses too &#8211; losses that can be equally devastating. The poem &#8216;owl birth&#8217; touches on one such loss.</p><p>To give some context: when my mother was a teenager, she got pregnant and was subsequently sent to a home for young single mothers. The baby was to be put up for adoption but she was initially allowed to bring the baby home from hospital allowing her to bond with her. This made the handing over even harder and she never really recovered from this loss and she spent the rest of her life looking for that lost daughter. I only learned of this other child after I had already left home. The effects on me were two-fold. Firstly, it changed my view of myself &#8211; I had always been the first/oldest child, and secondly, it made sense of some of my mum&#8217;s behaviour &#8211; her mental and physical absences, her hot and coldness. I was struck by how cruel it was to let a young mother spend so long bonding with their child only to then whisk it away.</p><p>I didn&#8217;t actually set out to write a poem about this particular loss. The poem came out almost fully formed while I was on a writing retreat. Each night as I was trying to get to sleep, I was disturbed by the sound of owls screeching. Many of my poems contain animals or other things from the natural world, and those owls made their way into several poems in this collection. The pine forest also is a recurring trope in my poems &#8211; I grew up in small town surrounded by pine forest and its very particular atmosphere seeps into a lot of my writing.</p><p><strong><a href="https://nigelkentpoet.wordpress.com/2026/02/14/drop-in-by-julia-webb/">Drop-in by Julia Webb</a> (Nigel Kent)</strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Form &#8211; what is it good for? Quite a lot, it turns out. The poetic focus and concision, for example, of being required to work within a particular rhyme scheme, or within a certain number of lines. Traditional form engages us in a conversation with a poetic history; it places us within a shared poetic culture and heritage. Poetic form can act as a scaffolding for thought and experience; a container for intense emotion. It is of course, a great way to develop poetic discipline, whilst conversely being a fun and exciting way of playing &#8211; trying things we&#8217;re not used to, finding new possibilities, taking risks, stepping beyond the habitual and discovering new directions. And perhaps most importantly &#8211; for me, anyway &#8211; form offers a powerful means of expression, exploration and discovery, deepening the meaning which hovers under the surface of our conscious poetic intentions.</p><p>On Tuesday night, Kim and I &#8211; aka the Laurel and Hardy of poetry &#8211; delivered an online workshop on poetic form. For our paying subscribers, you&#8217;ll find a recording of that session in your substack inbox, along with Kim&#8217;s powerpoint and sestina template. Yes, Kim bravely and beautifully led us through one of the most complex forms, despite my claim that it was the metaphorical equivalent of bringing cabbage to the shared poetry meal. And of course, Kim proved me entirely wrong &#8211; using a stunning example by Kathryn Maris to show how sestinas can offer us all a fluid and powerful receptacle for our obsessions. Which, in Kim&#8217;s case, is currently hamsters.</p><p><strong>Clare Shaw, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/form-c84">FORM!</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Some days all I can say is ay yi yi. Or oy. Or fuuuuuuuuck. You know, those wordless expressions of mostly-vowel sounds the outbreathing of which, the offgassing of which you hope will take away some of the poison, some of the poison you&#8217;ve inhaled inadvertently from the world, the sorrows, the woe and strife, the basic are-you-kidding-me&#8217;s that tumble into our faces, singular and collective, big picture and small. At the level of finding-a-parking-space or the level of world-peace. Oof. That&#8217;s another one of my exhales. Jeeesh. Yeesh. Ach du liebe. Eventually I&#8217;ll gather my words together and make a coherent sentence. But I won&#8217;t be sure about it. It&#8217;ll be mostly noise created by consonants, as if I know what I&#8217;m talking about. But it&#8217;s the vowels. It&#8217;s the vowels that carry the spiritual truths, the hopes and dreams, terror and aghastness, the weariness.</p><p>I like this poem for how confident it is. Here&#8217;s the deal, the poem says. Here&#8217;s what&#8217;s gonna go down. I don&#8217;t know this poet, but I&#8217;ll follow her anywhere.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/02/16/or-maybe-things-were-not-communicated-clearly/">or maybe things were not communicated clearly.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Think of all the work the weather can do in a poem: symbol and foreshadowing; metonymy, for the spirit of a place or time; a metaphor for the poet&#8217;s inner state; a frame for the poem&#8217;s cinematography; an event, a catalyst. Sometimes weather functions allegorically, as a sign of divine intervention. Latterly, in its climate-change variants, it seems sent to punish human stupidity and greed. Weather often signals how little control humans have over our lives. We are at the mercy of this world, not vice-versa.</p><blockquote><p><em>This house has been far out at sea all night,</em><br><em>The woods crashing through darkness, the booming hills,</em><br><em>Winds stampeding the fields under the window</em><br><em>Floundering black astride and blinding wet</em></p><p><em>Till day rose; then under an orange sky</em><br><em>The hills had new places, and wind wielded</em><br><em>Blade-light, luminous black and emerald,</em><br><em>Flexing like the lens of a mad eye.</em></p><p><strong>Ted Hughes, &#8216;Wind&#8217;</strong></p></blockquote><p>To talk of the weather is often to describe our quotidian struggle or ease with our &#8216;circumstances&#8217;. The seasons, though, provide a larger frame for understanding what happens when circumstance &#8211; landscape and settlement, and all the human endeavour it hosts &#8211; meets time and its changes. Can we grow what we need? Will we thrive or be thwarted?</p><p><strong>Lisa Brockwell, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/south-of-my-days">South of my Days</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Lent starts this week, and as I was thinking about the intersection of poetry and my relatively new reversion to Catholicism, I got a little over my skis and came up with the grand idea to write forty poems in forty days. After some reflection, I have since whittled that down to seven poems in seven weeks, which is far more realistic. I&#8217;ve noticed a tendency to want to Lent-max and I&#8217;m not sure what drives that. It&#8217;s certainly not any kind of innate holiness. Perhaps something about all of the sacrifice, asceticism, and general austere feeling of the season incentives a kind of perverse competitiveness in me. But it&#8217;s more likely that I&#8217;m just trying to prove to God how good I can be so He will love me. I still sometimes cling to the illusion that I&#8217;m in the driver&#8217;s seat and that I can earn His love as long I complete some arbitrary, self-created to-do list and wave it up at Him, going, &#8220;See? I checked everything off!&#8221; Yes, I fully realize how ridiculous I am. The bottom line is, watch this space for a poem a week during Lent. These will be exploratory drafts, so no promises on quality, depth, or literary value.</p><p><strong>Kristen McHenry, <a href="https://kristenmchenry.substack.com/p/rounding-down-arguing-with-robots">Rounding Down, Arguing with Robots, Dreams of a Watery Sun</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Previous-Bethany (who hangs around) likes to curl into a fetal position (a lot) and say things like, &#8220;I have no talent for this!&#8221; &#8220;I can&#8217;t do this!&#8221; But I am changing. I&#8217;ve attended a No Kings protest, I&#8217;ve written to senators and congress people, I&#8217;m getting a new roof (right now in fact, much hammering overhead), and new flooring (much needed but on hold), and dealing with a wet, rotted sub-floor in the kitchen (not sure how that&#8217;s going to turn out). I asked my therapist, &#8220;Am I going to get through this?&#8221; And she said, &#8220;You are getting through it.&#8221;</p><p>And, miracle of miracles, I have <a href="https://www.escapeintolife.com/poetry/little-joy-poems-by-matthew-murrey/">a new review up at EIL </a>&#8212; of Matthew Murrey&#8217;s <em>Little Joy.</em></p><p>And, other kinds of writing keep seeping out, in part thanks to <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/sheila-benders-writing-it-real/">Sheila Bender&#8217;s </a>on-line class about writing grief. In addition to Sheila&#8217;s books and my classmates&#8217; posts, I&#8217;ve also been reading an anthology, <em>The Language of Loss: Poetry and Prose for Grieving and Celebrating the Love of Your Life, </em>edited by Barbara Abercrombie; and <em>Finding Meaning: the Sixth Stage of Grief, </em>by David Kessler, which <em><a href="https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/books/story/2019-11-15/finding-meaning-david-kessler">The Los Angeles Times </a></em><a href="https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/books/story/2019-11-15/finding-meaning-david-kessler">calls</a> the very best kind of self-help book.</p><p>My typical strategy now would be share a poem or short prose section from one of these books (so many excellent choices). Instead I&#8217;m going to share my own new poem. Excuse any hammering or thumping that creeps into the audio. And thank you for listening.</p><p><strong>Grief wakes me in the morning<br></strong><br>and puts me to bed at night.<br>She stirs sorrow into my oatmeal.<br>She fusses, adjusting the light<br>as I read, offering a blanket.<br>When I leave the house,<br>she grabs her shoes and goes with me,<br>walks fast, takes my hand. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>Bethany Reid, <a href="https://www.bethanyareid.com/what-am-i-doing-here/">What Am I Doing Here?</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>These are my first gigs for 2026: Catch me if you can, please come, say hello. Not long now, spring soon come, soon come. I sense a big shift for all of us in March. I can feel it, taste it, the world is turning, changing, the universe is shifting. I know prayers will be answered, and this dark shadow will pass, winter will end, so for now please keep on keeping on, keep reaching for the light, and remember to eat your greens and lead with love, always, lots of love xxsg</p><p><strong>Salena Godden, <a href="http://www.salenagodden.co.uk/2026/02/gigs-festivals-fundraisers-march-2026.html">Gigs &amp; Festivals &amp; Fundraisers, March 2026</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It is worth taking the time to look at a photograph. That instant holds so much. If you have read my favourite book, Lispector&#8217;s <em>The Stream of Life</em>, then, you will have thought of the &#8220;now-instant.&#8221; &#8220;Each thing has an instant in which it is.&#8221; &#8220;Is my theme the instant? my life theme. I try to keep up with it, I divide myself thousands of times, into as many times as the seconds that pass, fragmentary as I am and precarious the moments&#8230;&#8221;</p><p>Mama! O Life! What is the heart? What is it to be human? This instant is already the next instant. What divine frequency are you on so that I might connect to you with my own divine frequency. Hello, I am here! In a world where we paint blue hearts on walls by photo booths and dress them in protective vests. Someone else comes along and writes Gaza in a small black heart.</p><p>Nothing will be forgotten though it will take some time to see.</p><p><strong>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/weliveintime">We Live in Time</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I thought we&#8217;d get to do all sorts of things that we never got to do, travel some, a lot more time out and about. We did get to be at Jaipur Literature Festival and I did some amazing work there, but before that I was hit with the most crazy flu-like thing, and then when that passed and I thought, aha, all good now, and we did Jaipur, a few days after we got back I woke up with a funky neck and then lost all power in my right arm and was bent over so that I could not straighten up. Thankfully, I found perhaps the best physiotherapist in the land, just down the road from me, but it was so bad for a couple of weeks that any walking had me in shards of pain. The medication I ended up on squashed my sense of being in my body, and it&#8217;s only a few days since, but something shifted and about 80% of the pain has lifted.</p><p>But this is Karma Country. In these three weeks I&#8217;ve had to meet my body with absolute tenderness and kindness, accepting what it can and can&#8217;t do each day, and, in its way, this has found its way into the new writing. I have to write at a Joycean pace, perhaps slower even, but having to be immobile so much, and with no place or position in which there wasn&#8217;t some pain, and no amount of determination from my rough, irascible, Irish, determined side that I tend to lean into when I need to push through would do anything to help or advance the situation, I had to simply allow everything to be as it was, is. Once I did this, the spirit of the writing began to grow, show me avenues and routes that I&#8217;d never have thought of in years of black coffees. Yet there is something even greater that has come from this enforced period of tenderness and acceptance. The clarity again of being the author I am. Given some of the dimensions of the world I move through, I do observe many an author, some world-stage famous, operating as a kind of story of themselves that they have to keep up. Either that, or recent reading has shown me that many books of the last couple of generations are a kind of bourgeois level of agreement that uses form as a blanket of consensus of what we mistake literature for. It showed me that I&#8217;m not part of that, and the writers and books I truly love are not part of this deepening egregore. I&#8217;ll perhaps say more in an essay about this.</p><p>While I also observe that I, and the authors who, by whatever means, have managed to stay free, pay for dearly not walking in this valley of vasana. The joy my heart feels at being the insistence to be free to write whatever I want, and that there are books and other authors across human time who have done the same, who have not done what is expected of them by the virality of that cultural conditioning that has reduced art so greatly across every form. As I&#8217;ve said before, it may mean these works never get published, never get to you, the reader, in the way I would love them to, but know they are being written, mostly by tenderness and patience rather than any force or pressure. I just keep tuning up in tenderness and the words are there. They are not even pushed to fit a narrative, or fit a genre, or style of deference, they are just there. Calliope is coming to the edge of the field each night to play her flute and my heart has learned to listen better than it ever did when I was almost the famous poetry guy who thankfully spotted the trap ahead of me when I was offered Professor of Poetry at Oxford some years back. That, as they say, is another story, and I know some of you know it, and my why for saying no.</p><p>Keep on reading, dear reader, and keep on writing if you write, and as I always I&#8217;d love to hear your thoughts, what book you are reading, what you love.</p><p><strong>John Siddique, <a href="https://johnsiddique.substack.com/p/valentines-day-weather-report">Valentine&#8217;s Day Weather Report</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>some of spring&#8217;s small teeth shall be my own</p><p><strong>Grant Hacket <a href="https://lostwaytothesky.blogspot.com/2026/02/blog-post_64.html">[no title]</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 6]]></title><description><![CDATA[beach cobbles, resonating surfaces, ambiguous texts, imaginary friends, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-6</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-6</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 00:56:46 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/e707b0f8-f0b9-4f63-896d-eed2a18e3283_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: beach cobbles, resonating surfaces, ambiguous texts, imaginary friends, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>South African President Nelson Mandela famously said &#8220;Poetry cannot block a bullet or still a sjambok, but it can bear witness to brutality-thereby cultivating a flower in a graveyard.&#8221; I borrowed this quote when I applied for my Fulbright Fellowship to South Africa where I wanted to investigate the poetry of protest &#8212; South Africans who had written during the anti-Apartheid movement of primarily the 1970&#8217;s and 80&#8217;s.Poets such as Jeremy Cronin, Ingrid de Kok, Zakes Mda, Mazizi Kunene, Wally Serote and many others. I was fascinated.</p><p>Now, decades later, I am &#8220;back home&#8221; seeing my own country under siege. In the month of January, two American citizens were gunned down in broad daylight in Minneapolis, Minnesota&#8212;a city hitherto known for down home midwestern hospitality and as the birthplace of Prince. For years, I taught a class on the history and literature of the Holocaust. The years leading up to the final solution, look remarkably like what we are living through now. [...]</p><p>Can a poem offer solace to a community? Can a few thoughtful lines calm a life? Alter the course of American history? Probably not. And yet poetry is what we look to in times of crisis. After September 11th, the New Yorker Magazine, published <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57095/try-to-praise-the-mutilated-world-56d23a3f28187">&#8220;Try to Praise the Mutilated World&#8221;</a> by Adam Zagajewski.</p><p>I also think of William Yeat&#8217;s poems <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43290/the-second-coming">&#8220;The Second Coming</a>&#8221; and Elizabeth Alexander&#8217;s poem, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/52141/praise-song-for-the-day">&#8220;Praise Song for the Day.&#8221;</a> I think of Ross Gay&#8217;s poem <a href="https://poets.org/poem/small-needful-fact">&#8220;A Small Needful Fact,&#8221;</a> and Maggie Smith&#8217;s poem, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/89897/good-bones">&#8220;Good Bones,&#8221;</a> and Lena Khalaf Tuffaha&#8217;s poem <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/143255/running-orders">&#8220;Running Orders&#8221;</a> &#8212; all poems that spoke in the immediate wake of trauma but that also endure over years, decades.</p><p>These poems rise up from my subconscious unbidden during hard times. The power of the work continues on as documents of our times. All of these fall under the heading of documentary poetry. These works are also among my favorite poems written in the 21st century. They matter on an emotional register as well as a historical.</p><p>I don&#8217;t want to pretend that the poem I wrote last month has the same staying power. All I know is that these poems that come unbidden, out of great pain, matter.</p><p>As a working poet, the poems I&#8217;ve written about my human rights work in Bosnia Herzegovina, or Gaza and the West Bank, or post Apartheid South Africa are among the poems I&#8217;m happiest to have written.</p><p>Susan Rich, <a href="https://susanrichpoet.substack.com/p/what-poetry-can-and-cannot-do">What Poetry Can and Cannot Do:</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>January was supposed to be quiet. Instead, it was a rollercoaster ride &#8211; atmospherically, emotionally, politically &#8211; a rocket-fuelled start to 2026. Weather patterns continued to see-saw. An oscillating Jet Stream travelled further, both north <em>and</em> south, dragging weather systems to unexpected latitudes. The perturbation and chaos continue to unfold. Impacts are becoming more extreme.</p><p>The Jet Stream is a thousand-mile-wide river of power, bigger than the Amazon, the Nile, the Ganges, greater than the sum of all these mighty flowing waters. The energy involved in moving masses of air so swiftly is almost incomprehensible. Warnings from science and voices of reason, already slow to enter our collective consciousnesses, are repeatedly overwritten by hollerings about politics, Epstein-omics, warmongering and military hardware. If only the strutting brawn, with their big tech, bags of dollars and guns, could perceive real planetary power, its truth, they might think differently.</p><p>Natural phenomena, geopolitical and socio-economic &#8216;landscapes&#8217; are increasingly turbulent. I feel these &#8216;unsettlings&#8217; increasingly and deeply. I watch my grandchildren play. My emotions swell and threaten to spill out. [...]</p><p>The great dunes at Red Point were white with frost; the billion-year-old Torridonian sandstone boulders and beach cobbles shone purple and mauve. We sat and drank hot black coffee and watched dozens of divers float on a current of calm. At Mellon Udrigle we stood at the water&#8217;s edge while a group of seals swam and played nearby. At Opinan, the sea was flattened by wind power. Its surface seethed and writhed like thick paint being stirred. Further out, the Minch flexed sapphire and holly-green, bursting with diamond-white flecks. And every so often, small waves broke into spindrift, each one releasing a rainbow made of gauze.</p><p>Annie O&#8217;Garra Worsley, <a href="https://notesfromasmallcroftbythesea.wordpress.com/2026/02/06/on-light-time-and-mars/">on light, time and mars</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It all seems to be about trees at the moment. I picked up The Overstory by Richard Powers in the Huddersfield branch of Oxfam and am enjoying it hugely. Each chapter is really a short story, linked by the theme of trees, but that&#8217;s underselling it. Powers conveys the ups and downs of people&#8217;s lives with a deft brushstroke, a style that allows him to compress a character&#8217;s life into a few pages, without compromising on depth. And then I found myself at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park today, immersed in the light and sound experience of an installation called &#8216;Of the Oak&#8217;, effectively the life of a single tree, but the science behind it allows you to see and imagine the mesmerising beauty of it. If you every doubted it, trees are incredibly alive!</p><p>Hopefully a tree haiku will emerge from all this, although it has to be said, I need to slow down a little and make space for writing again &#8211; not the first time I&#8217;ve had this thought!</p><p>Julie Mellor, <a href="https://juliemellorpoetsite.wordpress.com/2026/02/03/it-all-seems-to-be-about-trees/">It all seems to be about trees &#8230;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I can stay in my chair</p><p>but when I let my ears<br>turn wild I hear<br>You shouting<br>in the winter wind</p><p>Rachel Barenblat, <a href="https://velveteenrabbi.com/2026/02/06/listen/">Listen</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The world is a mess, we know that. Joseph Campbell said: &#8220;The Bodhisattva voluntarily came back into the world knowing that it&#8217;s a mess. He doesn&#8217;t come back &#8220;only if it&#8217;s sweet for me.&#8221; The Bodhisattva participates joyfully in the sorrows of the world.&#8221;</p><p>This doesn&#8217;t mean that we should give into the doom scrolling. We can know what the news of the world is without further traumatizing ourselves or seeing the same thing over and over. I&#8217;ve noticed that a lot of people are writing &#8220;signing off until spring&#8221; or some such posts on social media, and this might not be the worst idea. I&#8217;m on less right now, too. And I do believe in doing a two week or longer re-set with it all. It&#8217;s a tricky balance when you&#8217;re trying to promote your (or in my case your <a href="https://www.robertlemay.com/news/2026/2/2/save-the-date-may-2-2026-at-canada-house-gallery-in-banff">partner&#8217;s art and upcoming art show</a>) work. [...]</p><p>So, yes, I&#8217;ve been retreating to my sacred space, my study, as much as possible. And what I realized one morning after I&#8217;d spent (not kidding) over an hour writing correspondence where I basically just said no to 80 percent of the asks, was that my belated word of the year is: <strong>hermit</strong>. I&#8217;ve had years where my goal was to say yes, to embrace everything, the all. But this year, like many, I think I need to re-set. Read more books. Go more analog. Get into nature more. Garden more. (Once the ice ball that is our backyard at latitude 53 melts &#8212; somewhere in early May).</p><p>And though I am a firm believer in promoting and encouraging excellence, I also want to dabble more, as <a href="https://www.chookooloonks.com/in-defense-of-dabbling">Karen Walrond would say. In her latest book</a> she says that an amateur is defined as &#8220;one who loves.&#8221; And I think dabbling can make you even more appreciative of the art or craft you admire. Pick up some paints and you&#8217;ll certainly come to a new understanding of how Vermeer got the light on the pearl earring or how each petal was painted on a Rachel Ruysch flower. Walrond extolls the virtue of play, just like Campbell, and in her project to try new things she insists upon play, on curiosity, and to prioritize practice over perfection. We need to feel good! And dabbling can take us to good places mentally.</p><p>Shawna Lemay, <a href="http://transactionswithbeauty.com/home/participating%20joyfully">Participating Joyfully in the Sorrows of the World</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In my last post I declared that for me poetry was on hiatus. I intended to veer back to where it started, to the telling of short stories, the challenge of flash fiction.</p><p>And, as always happens, my inside has taken hold and now all these poems are emerging, and I can&#8217;t help but tell these stories by rhythm and line break and white space and even punctuation if I can get it right. I&#8217;m exploring emotion thanks to a poetry school course and it&#8217;s tough and awful and wonderful and magical. I&#8217;m getting feedback on my words and feedback on my feelings and people talk about a safe space and this relative anonymity makes me feel I&#8217;ve found it. And safety cushions danger, which make creativity and suddenly I don&#8217;t mind that this post will not be opened, read or shared or liked on here because 17 other people are reading what I write and they&#8217;re not commenting for algorithms or to make useful connections they&#8217;re comment because we each know how it feels to draw out words we hope will land.</p><p>Kathryn Anna Marshall, <a href="https://kathrynannawrites.substack.com/p/on-the-freedom-of-writing-about-everything">On the freedom of writing about everything with little care if it is read.</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s been a long time since I have needed painkillers for six days in a row and I did a lot of talking to myself about this during the week. Lots of words about needing to be patient and wait for things to pass. Reminders to myself to look for the joy in those glimmering moments when putting the washing on felt doable, when different drinks soothed my sore throat in different ways, and giving myself a gentle cheer of encouragement when I had the desire to pick up a book and read.</p><p>In amongst the resting to recuperate elements of my week, I also had the wonderful joy of being invited to be a guest on a podcast. I loved so much about this&#8230; the being asked, the feeling of being recognised as having something to say, the thinking about what we might talk about and then the absolute joy of being in the moment of the conversation. I was able to hear myself think out loud and there was laughter, and those are truly lovely things to be gifted when you share time with someone.</p><p>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/02/09/under-a-blanket/">UNDER A BLANKET</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Yesterday I drafted this blog from inside a very cold bongo drum. High winds rippled and banged our metal roof riotously: &#8220;Thumbing / the tin roof like a smoker who / cannot get the house to stay alight,&#8221; I wrote in <em><a href="https://tupelopress.org/bookstore/p/mycocosmic">Mycocosmic</a>, </em>in a poem about perimenopausal sleeplessness.</p><p>Even though hot flashes are rare now, I&#8217;m still not sleeping well. The radiators blast dry heat, a vaporizer blasts vapor in an attempt to counter the dry heat, and the dial on my brain&#8217;s worry machine is set to high. The U.S. is in very bad shape. Some beings I love are suffering. (The cats don&#8217;t mind if I violate their privacy, so I&#8217;ll say thyroid medication isn&#8217;t reversing the weight loss of our older cat, Poe; the young one, Vincent, has this condition where he&#8217;s allergic to his teeth. If you could use a reason for gratitude, there you go: you&#8217;re probably not allergic to your teeth. He&#8217;s the white cat pictured here in the bliss of painkillers.)</p><p>During Virginia&#8217;s uncharacteristic Big Freeze&#8211;just beginning to ease&#8211;I was unable to walk much, and losing that outlet affected my mood. In this tiny town unused to harsh weather, the snowplows do a lousy job, and many neighbors don&#8217;t shovel sidewalks, usually the rich ones in red brick mansions. Wealthy students slide their enormous SUVs into rare street spots, totally oblivious to the possibility that a local resident shoveled it with difficulty and wants it back when they return home with groceries. Small gripes. I think what&#8217;s getting to me is seeing so much cluelessness, people unaware of or indifferent to the needs of others&#8211;now, of all moments. Paying attention is an ethical obligation, a pretty minimal one. I know I&#8217;m not alone in that conviction&#8211;sending awed love to Minneapolis!&#8211;but so, so many people in my red county seem to have iced-in hearts.</p><p>So, as <a href="https://webbish6.com/happy-february-snow-moons-unusual-birds-cancer-scares-and-big-birthdays-the-power-of-community-and-more/">others have been blogging</a>, I&#8217;m finding a sense of community where I can. I did two poetry events this week that made me feel genuine connection to others: the Bardic Trails virtual reading (an exceptionally warm, lovely group!) and a panel discussion of poetry and the environment in the nearest big town, hosted by the <a href="https://piedmontgarden.org/">Botanical Garden of the Piedmont</a>, which is just getting off the ground as a welcoming public space, an oasis amid development. I also tuned in by Zoom to a panel discussion hosted by the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, just as a listener, and the panelists were SO smart. Poet Maya Jewell Zeller, talking about her forthcoming memoir <em><a href="https://porphyry.press/raised-by-ferns">Raised by Ferns</a>,</em> was one of them.</p><p>Lesley Wheeler, <a href="https://lesleywheeler.org/2026/02/08/winter-bongos/">Winter bongos</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Even the best poems have a habit of disappearing until the right person, at the right moment, presses them into our hands. When I first started reading, it was the introductions that drew me in: old Penguin anthologies, Faber&#8217;s <em>Poet to Poet</em> series, staple-bound pamphlets. Books you could carry in your pocket, chosen by an individual personality and introduced with style (and without condescension). Introductions are the way poetry survives. They are also, I think, something of an endangered art. Which is why I am starting a poetry press.</p><p><a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/">Headless Poet</a>&#8212;more on the name below&#8212;will give writers and poets space to recommend poems and poets of the past, especially work which has been buried by time. It will also publish brief introductions to the best new poetry. There will be little-known early modern poems, reassessments of figures like Thomas Hood and Lilian Bowes Lyon, entirely new work&#8212;and more besides, with introductions on their way from <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/111379771-victoria?utm_source=mentions">Victoria</a> Moul, <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/9335-jeremy-noel-tod?utm_source=mentions">Jeremy Noel-Tod</a>, Alex Wong, Tristram Fane Saunders and Camille Ralphs. I am looking forward to sharing them all.</p><p>Jeremy Wikeley, <a href="https://jwikeley.substack.com/p/why-im-starting-a-poetry-press-and">Why I&#8217;m starting a poetry press (and how you can help)</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today&#8217;s post is mostly about Horace &#8212; with some Wyatt and Jonson at the end. As any keen Horatians among my readers will know, the dictum that poetry should be both beautiful and useful comes from Horace too, so it is appropriate that I heard just this morning that a little collection I&#8217;ve edited, <em><a href="https://www.headlesspoet.com/shop/p/poems-beautiful-useful">Poems Beautiful &amp; Useful</a></em>, is now available for order from the very exciting new Headless Poet press run by <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/11888159-jem?utm_source=mentions">Jem</a>. This is a selection of the kind of poems that were most popular in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, drawn from both manuscript and the obscurer reaches of print. Several have not been published before, and most of them are not well-known. I am proud and delighted to be the editor of Headless Poet&#8217;s very first publication. <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/11888159-jem?utm_source=mentions">Jem</a> has a whole series of publications planned for this year, all &#8216;introductions&#8217; of one kind or another &#8212; definitely worth keeping an eye on.</p><p>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/how-come-maecenas">How come, Maecenas?</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Jayant [Kashyap] was a winner in the 2024 Poetry Business New Poets Prize, judged by the brilliant poet Holly Hopkins. I was really pleased to see that Jayant had won, because I recognised his work and style from a previous year when I&#8217;d judged the competition and he&#8217;d been shortlisted. In the back of the pamphlet, it was interesting to read that when he won, it was his fourth time of submitting - proving again that sometimes being published is not just a matter of talent, but of persevering, of finding a way of dealing with setbacks and rejections.</p><p><em>Notes on Burials </em>is a wonderful pamphlet - held together by a concern and interest in what we bury, what we carry with us and what we leave behind, how we die, and by extension of course how we live. There is sometimes a surreal touch to the poems - in &#8216;but dogs don&#8217;t want their puppies buried&#8217; the poem talks about a mother dog carrying dead puppies around and finishes &#8216;once I buried two dead pups in shallow ground / and next morning they were back up out of the mound playing with her&#8217;. This image has really stayed with me, and it&#8217;s an unsettling poem in terms of thinking whether this is an unreliable narrator, or whether this is surrealism, or the simple truth of a mistake or something else. Whichever, it often feels as if that border between life and death is more permeable than we usually appreciate in many of these poems. [...]</p><p>There is also a playfulness to language here - the roots of words are often examined closely and held up to the light, but I think Jayant is also interested in how words slip in and out of themselves and into other words. In &#8220;Oak&#8221; the speaker asks us to &#8220;Imagine it standing / at the edge of a forest - hermit/heretic/heritage&#8221;.</p><p>There is a run of really moving poems towards the end of the pamphlet which finishes on &#8220;Prayer for My Mother As A Child&#8221;. This is a beautiful poem which starts &#8220;Let me carry myself like a quiet emptiness in her school bag&#8221;. This line almost made me cry - that wish as a child to go back to before you were born and see the mother as a person, before they carried you - both physically and metaphorically and spiritually. It&#8217;s a poem full of longing for the mother figure to live a life she did not get to live [...]</p><p>Kim Moore, <a href="https://shawandmoore.substack.com/p/january-reading-diary">January Reading Diary</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://seventhquarrypress.com/products/shared-origins-a-collaboration-between-three-poets-mike-jenkins-david-lloyd-and-david-annwn">Shared Origins/A collaboration between three poets</a>, Mike Jenkins, David Lloyd, and David Annwn, The Seventh Quarry Press, 2025, ISBN: 9781919610085, &#163;6.99</p><p><a href="https://www.lulu.com/shop/david-annwn-and-john-goodby/giraldus-redivivus/paperback/product-7kveyyn.html?q=giraldus&amp;page=1&amp;pageSize=4">Giraldus Redivivus</a>, John Goodby and David Annwn, Incunabula Media, 2025, &#163;12.00</p><p>The concept behind Shared Origins is both simple and intriguing. Take three poets who started their writing careers together as students in the 1970s at Aberystwyth University and put together a set of poems from each of them that, in part at least, reflects their relationship with Wales and Welshness. [...] [It&#8217;s] a fascinating case study in how three poets can start out from much the same place and shared concerns, to one degree or another, but end up with radically different approaches to writing, From a personal perspective, it also introduced me to two poets whose work is new to me, which is always a good thing. Thank you The Seventh Quarry Press for making it happen.</p><p>Along with David Lloyd George and certain 1970&#8217;s rugby internationals, Gerald of Wales is almost certainly Ireland&#8217;s least-favourite Welshman, with his Topographia Hibernica being widely regarded as the spiritual forebear of Punch magazine&#8217;s caricatures of our 19th century ancestors. The Welsh, of course, may take a different view of his two Welsh books, the Journey through and Description of Wales.</p><p>Neither John Goodby not David Annwn is actually Welsh, but they both have long-standing relationships with that country, both personal and professional, and in Giraldus Redivivus they reinvent the Journey as a piece of 20th century intertextuality. In doing so, they take their lead from polyglot Gerald, who interleaved slices of French, Greek and Welsh into his Latin text, a text that contains quotations from classical and British authors, anecdotes (his own and reported), acute observations, smatterings of local history, and a sense of the hardships of travel all structured around a circuit clockwise from the south-east corner of Wales and back again. It&#8217;s a genuinely non-genre-specific work.</p><p>In their reimagining, Annwn and Goodby mirror the portmanteau, collage-like method of the original, with more-or less straight &#8216;found text&#8217; sections, passages that weave phrases or images from the original into passages of their own making, and a variety of verbivocovisual pages that either concretise the shape of what&#8217;s happening or make actual the difficult experience of reading the manuscript original, with the large A4 page size put to good use.</p><p>Billy Mills, <a href="https://ellipticalmovements.wordpress.com/2026/02/06/the-matter-with-wales-two-books/">The Matter with Wales: Two Books</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In 1976, twenty-three-year-old <a href="https://english.appstate.edu/faculty-staff/directory/joseph-bathanti">Joseph Bathanti </a>began his &#8220;walk away from [his] past&#8221; in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. That he&#8217;d earned a master&#8217;s degree but &#8220;wished to spend [his] days among criminals&#8221; left his parents confused and hushed. Bathanti knew nothing of the place he was heading to &#8212; North Carolina &#8212; or of the place to which he&#8217;d been assigned &#8212; a prison in Mecklenburg County. For this newly minted VISTA volunteer, any road out of Pittsburgh, to freedom, he was glad to take. That &#8220;[his] life was just starting&#8221; left Bathanti &#8220;near euphoria.&#8221; Driving south, he could never have guessed that it would take him more than three decades to articulate one of the most important lessons he learned as a &#8220;fugitive from [his] former life&#8221; up North: that we all, in our way &#8212; some by our choices, others by the misfortune of our circumstance &#8212; put in some &#8220;felon time.&#8221;</p><p>*</p><p>It was not until the fall of 2013 that Joseph Bathanti, formerly, <a href="https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/poetslaureate">Poet Laureate of North Carolina</a> (2012-2014), published <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Concertina-Poems-Joseph-Bathanti/dp/0881464708/">Concertina</a></em> (<a href="https://www.mupress.org/">Mercer University Press</a>), a remarkable collection of narrative poems that, in language both colloquial and lyrical, relate his true introduction to life, not only inside prison but also outside the razor wire. [...]</p><p>Time does not temper the truth Bathanti distills and documents on every page decades after his VISTA assignment ended. As he declares in another profound moment, &#8220;<em>So help me God</em>, there is no whole truth.&#8221; (&#8221;Jury Duty&#8221;)</p><p>Yet, there is respite from the ugliness and violence, for truth is never one-sided and life is never all-bad. Indeed, the brilliance of <em>Concertina</em> lies in its skillfully ingrained and repeated refrain about the dualities present in all of humanity, whether a &#8220;mother, shackled to a sweatshop / Singer in a dim downtown tailor shop&#8221; (&#8221;Faccia Tosta&#8221;) or the inmate &#8220;too exhausted to lift his heavy hands to protect himself&#8221; from the blows of his keeper. (&#8221;Cletis Pratt&#8221;) &#8220;A guard is not much different than a convict. / One hates the other, loves the other.&#8221; (&#8221;Transfer Day&#8221;)</p><p>The concertina, after all, can be played, too, and it&#8217;s possible to enjoy, as Bathanti does, the intermezzos &#8212; the downtime with Joan, the woman whose hand Bathanti clasped on &#8220;[his] first Sabbath out of the penitentiary,&#8221; who &#8220;lived in a boxy mill house on Moonlit Avenue&#8221; (&#8221;Moonlit Avenue&#8221;), with whom he enjoyed &#8220;miso soup and Roastaroma mocha, / the verse of Kim Chi-Ha.&#8221; (&#8221;This Mad Heart&#8221;) With Joan, the woman who was to become Bathanti&#8217;s wife, &#8220;[e]verything was crucial.&#8221;</p><p>The love that passes for poetry between Bathanti and Joan prevents hardening and cynicism. It makes it possible for Bathanti to draw on poignant moments for sustenance: visits to the women&#8217;s prison of children &#8220;in their perfect innocence and self-possession, / toddling dutifully into the arms of anyone // who reaches for them&#8221; (&#8221;Women&#8217;s Prison&#8221;); the sight of &#8220;project kids&#8221; practicing etudes in a church cellar while, upstairs, ex-cons partake of &#8220;soup kitchen food&#8221; (&#8221;ECO&#8221;); a reading lesson with an inmate whose &#8220;tragic flaw&#8221; is &#8220;the presence / of an extra 21st chromosome,&#8221; who, &#8220;[w]ith childish wonderment, / [. . .] whizzes through the drills.&#8221; (&#8221;Teaching an Inmate to Read&#8221;)</p><p>What comes clear in <em>Concertina</em> is this: where there is room for love and understanding, there is a place for hope and the possibility of redemption.</p><p>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/joseph-bathantis-concertina">Joseph Bathanti&#8217;s &#8216;Concertina&#8217;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>squeaky snow<br>nothing more to say<br>to myself</p><p>Tom Clausen, <a href="https://tomclausen.com/2026/02/06/antler-shed-by-tom-clausen/">antler shed</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A mouth is two things, a conduit for food or a means to communicate. Mona Arshi&#8217;s &#8220;Mouth&#8221; focuses on the latter, or rather how something that should be used for communication can also be silenced. A shut mouth says nothing. Power and societal imbalances can make it dangerous to speak, particularly if the person being spoken to is minded to wilfully misinterpret what the powerless speaker is saying. [...]</p><p>A mouth can be silenced, or it can speak lies when it is not safe to speak the truth. Eurydice feels compelled to diplomatically entertain in public but swear in private. She calls it &#8220;bragging&#8221;, talking up the King&#8217;s achievements and putting a positive spin on the negatives. From &#8220;experiments&#8221; to &#8220;expletives&#8221; the poem feels wordy and employs the rhythm of prose, deliberate strategies like Eurydice&#8217;s attempts to be diplomatic. The last four quoted lines employ more poetic devices such as consonance and the repetition of &#8220;o&#8221; mimicking an open mouth, usually a sign of surprise or horror.</p><p>Later the &#8220;Blind Prophet Tiresias Warns Queen Eurydice She Will Be Collateral Damage&#8221;. He notes, &#8220;Prophets are translators./ The first rule of a bloodthirsty regime/ is to bury translators. It&#8217;s a fact.&#8221;</p><p>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/02/04/mouth-mona-arshi-chatto-windus-book-review/">&#8220;Mouth&#8221; Mona Arshi (Chatto &amp; Windus) &#8211; book review</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Eavan Boland&#8217;s Eurydice opens her silence in song, a counter-song if you will, to that of Orpheus&#8217; lament, a lyric that gives us reason to believe that knowing one another is fundamentally impossible. The lovers lament different things. [...]</p><p>Boland&#8217;s poem reminded [me] of a wonderful essay by Jack Foley on Gertrude Stein&#8217;s portraits, and how he notes that time &#8220;is not only a <em>subject</em> but a <em>condition</em> of the piece,&#8221; a text which was also a portrait.</p><p>Foley thinks Stein deploys palindromes as a sort of mirror for which &#8220;the line runs out and then runs back.&#8221; The idea of recognition that Boland&#8217;s poem engages aligns somehow with Foley&#8217;s description of Stein&#8217;s palindromic relationality:</p><blockquote><p>The first half is identical to the second half&#8212;except that the second half is backwards. She has a phrase in still another portrait, &#8220;A Valentine to Sherwood Anderson&#8221;: &#8220;Idem the Same.&#8221; The word &#8220;Idem&#8221; is Latin and means &#8220;the same,&#8221; so the two halves of the phrase are saying the same thing&#8212;but they are saying them in two different languages. Stein&#8217;s relationship to the people she makes portraits of is like that. She and Picasso are &#8220;Idem the Same&#8221;&#8212;the same but different; they are like words which mean the same thing but exist in two different languages. Together, they constitute a kind of palindrome; they are full of the same elements, but one of them is running one way and the other is reversing that movement.</p></blockquote><p>Similitude meets me in my daily life as a lyric of resonating surfaces, or patches of sound that connect the world across languages, linking the experience of being as I apprehend it in the fluidity of Romanian and the more rigid, consonant-heavy textures of English.</p><p>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/2/6/eavan-bolands-eurydice">Eavan Boland&#8217;s Eurydice.</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Who now reads him, who now cares? George Meredith (1828&#8211;1909) was once a name to conjure with, one of the last great High Victorian writers, a peer of Thomas Hardy and Henry James. His 1859 novel <em>The Ordeal of Richard Feverel</em> brought him public fame. His 1879 <em>The Egoist</em> and 1885 <em>Diana of the Crossways</em> were considered additions to the canon of classic novels. His poetry was successful too.</p><p>His 1883 poem &#8220;<a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-lucifer-in-starlight">Lucifer in Starlight</a>,&#8221; for example. His 1881 poem &#8220;<a href="https://www.bartleby.com/246/680.html">The Lark Ascending</a>,&#8221; describing a bird in flight, inspired Ralph Vaughan Williams to write a <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZR2JlDnT2l8">1914 instrumental work</a> with the same title.</p><p>And then there is <em>Modern Love</em>, Meredith&#8217;s 1862 sequence of fifty poems about a failing marriage. Written in a curious pseudo-sonnet form, the 16-line poems trace out in pentameter the incidents, the words spoken and unspoken, that reveal the collapse of love, sympathy, and any desire for mutual understanding in a couple.</p><p>In today&#8217;s Poem of the Day, for example &#8212; the 35th in the sequence, beginning with the husband&#8217;s mean-spirited resignation when he realizes that &#8220;Madam would speak with me&#8221; &#8212; that husband in Meredith&#8217;s near novel-in-verse knows that his wife&#8217;s &#8220;quivering under-lip&#8221; means that she is near to bursting into either tears or raging anger (&#8220;The Deluge or else Fire,&#8221; &#8220;Niagara or Vesuvius&#8221;).</p><p>And he is concerned only to circumvent any such meaningful exchange. They speak in platitudes about their health and the news &#8212; so that &#8220;With commonplace I freeze her, tongue and sense,&#8221; and thereby the husband escapes the drama he can no longer feel worth the effort.</p><p>The 16-line stanza &#8212; built of four quatrains with an envelope rhyme: <em>abba-cddc-effe-ghhg</em> &#8212; is a sharp performance of Meredith&#8217;s skill at describing envenomed human interaction, and it reminds us that maybe the fading of the Victorian writer is a loss for us. And yet, I cannot bring myself to like the poem much. The commonplace meanness of the husband, the manipulative mood of the wife: just a little local unpleasantness that gives me a shiver and makes me wheel away, turning my collar up against the chill.</p><p>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-madam-would-speak-with">Today&#8217;s Poem: Madam would speak with me</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m immediately struck by the poems in <a href="https://kwakyouna.com/">Los Angeles, California poet and translator Youna Kwak&#8217;s</a> second full-length collection, <em><a href="https://uipress.uiowa.edu/books/and-other-cruelties">For This and Other Cruelties</a></em> (Iowa City IA: University of Iowa Press, 2025), the first of her work I&#8217;ve seen, and an apparent follow-up to her debut, <em><a href="https://fathombooks.org/html/survie.html">sur vie</a></em> (Fathom Books, 2020). Across four sections of first-person lyrics&#8212;&#8220;DEATH OF THE MOTHER,&#8221; &#8220;LIKENESS,&#8221; &#8220;AS IF&#8221; and &#8220;SECOND LIFE&#8221;&#8212;the poems are dense and intense, graceful and substantive. &#8220;I am preparing to write a book,&#8221; begins the first stanza of the eleven-stanza opening poem, a piece that pushes, swirls and loops in a remarkably dense yet nimble pattern. As the two-page piece ends: &#8220;Or lacking all these / to write the book about the death / of the mother you simply need / a mother, who is dead.&#8221; The opening poem immediately sets the tone and tenor for the book as a whole, writing out a bursting, bubbling grief of graceful and substative gestures, offering a light touch of lyric through lines thick with emotional heft. &#8220;We all know Mother means / I was born from your body but I too / guaranteed your living. // In the mothering reign where / you are always alive,&#8221; opens the poem &#8216;PREULOGY,&#8221; &#8220;alone and evenly / breathing, a place // of exile where you remain / a figure leaning lazy on a rock, / black spot of ink bored into sand, [.]&#8221; Her poems are collaged and purposeful, direct and layered, writing out all the mess and contradictions of mothers, of family, of grief and sentences. Offering a marvellous and subtle fluidity, these poems are delicately crafted with such utter grace and punch.</p><p>rob mclennan, <a href="http://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2026/02/youna-kwak-for-this-and-other-cruelties.html">Youna Kwak, For This and Other Cruelties</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When I take my first clear breath after illness, <br>the world smells both sharp and tender.<br><br>I remember echoes in stairwells, and streetcorners where<br>small flames were tended in the service of our hungers.<br><br>There are flowers that don&#8217;t recognize boundaries.</p><p>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/02/everyday-ciphers/">Everyday Ciphers</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>On Tuesday evening I finally started reading my copy of Harry Man&#8217;s &#8216;<a href="https://ninearchespress.com/publications/poetry-collections/popular-song">Popular Song</a>&#8216;. It&#8217;s taken me a while to get to reading it, having bought it at the London Launch at the Torriano Meeting Rooms. Harry was a very entertaining reader that evening. I know he read with Matt Bryden, Tom Weir, Tiffany Ann Tondut and Michael Brown too&#8230;I&#8217;m sure I&#8217;ve written about it here <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2024/05/05/things/">before</a>). Christ, it was nearly 2 years ago. Sorry Harry. However, we move&#8230;as the young folks don&#8217;t say anymore.</p><p>I was working my way through Harry&#8217;s book and got to his poem &#8216;I waterskied lonely as a clownfish&#8217;, and more importantly I got to Line 5 of the first stanza and knew I a) was reading a great poem and b) I had my blog post ready to go..</p><p>Mat Riches, <a href="https://matriches76.wordpress.com/2026/02/07/harry-the-man/">Harry the Man</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When Auden wrote his poem, the war economy that had won the Western Powers their victory was only just metamorphosing into what would become known as &#8216;late capitalism&#8217;. But he is already meditating on what is happening to society, and the world of work, in those lines about the &#8220;unimportant clerk&#8221;. As Hecht points out, Auden&#8217;s definition of a &#8216;worker&#8217; (in his commonplace book, <em>A Certain World</em>) is that of someone who is &#8220;personally interested in the job which society pays him to do&#8221;, and not that of a &#8220;wage slave&#8221;. For Auden&#8217;s worker, &#8220;what from the point of view of society is necessary labor is from his own point of view voluntary play&#8221;. With that as context, Auden goes on to ask a question first published over a half a century ago, in 1970:</p><blockquote><p>What percentage of the population in a modern technological society are, like myself, in the fortunate position of being workers? At a guess I would say sixteen percent, and I do not think that figure is likely to get much bigger in the future.</p></blockquote><p>Without belabouring the point, for what passes as a member of the literati today, crushed on all sides by dwindling sales and diminished retail space, by shortened attention spans and FAKE NEWS, it might be understandable to cultivate an &#8220;imaginary friend&#8221;, or in other words, an ideal sense of &#8216;the reader&#8217;. That goes double for the poets.</p><p>There are some people (particularly in poetry, with its aesthetic pretensions and apparent disdain for marketing) who claim writing for a reader is a mistake, that it imposes unreasonable objective expectations on their subjective artistic expression, that one should place primacy on the writing impulse and leave the audience to organise themselves. As even Auden seems to concede, writing is &#8220;voluntary play&#8221;. It is possible these people are kidding themselves, and others, but if they are being sincere then they are playing on their own, without any imaginary friends. Just ask any small child if that&#8217;s a good idea.</p><p>If, on the other hand, writing for a reader imposes some rules on the play, perhaps that&#8217;s for the best. They are the rules of friendship, after all. In this reading, all the literati should indeed keep an imaginary friend. It makes the writing more likely to be any or all of the following: to be entertaining, to be edifying, to be &#8230; <em>excellent</em>.</p><p>And here&#8217;s the thing. Poets have always written for an imaginary friend, and not just in the specific mode of literary address that Anthony Hecht refers to. Poets write, in a conversation of influence and allusion, with poets that went before them &#8211; and given those poets tend to be dead, any friendship being forged is by definition imaginary. At the same time, implicit in the idea of posterity is the sense of writing for readers that are not yet born. Whose &#8220;sleeping head&#8221;, in his &#8216;Lullaby&#8217;, is being asked to lie, &#8220;human&#8221;, on Auden&#8217;s &#8220;faithless arm&#8221;? Or, to use perhaps the single best example in literature, who do you think John Keats is holding out his &#8220;living hand, now warm and capable&#8221; towards? Clue: he only goes and tells you.</p><p>Andrew Neilson, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/audens-imaginary-friends">Auden&#8217;s &#8216;Imaginary Friends&#8217;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Written in 1947, Thomas&#8217;s masterpiece was published for the first time in the Italian literary journal <em>Botteghe Oscure</em> in 1951 and soon included in his 1952 poetry collection <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Country-Sleep-Dylan-Thomas/dp/B0007FC9IY/?tag=braipick-20">In Country Sleep, And Other Poems</a></em>. In the fall of the following year, Thomas &#8212; a self-described &#8220;roistering, drunken and doomed poet&#8221; &#8212; drank himself into a coma while on a reading and lecture tour in America organized by the American poet and literary critic John Brinnin, who would later become his <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Dylan-Thomas-America-Intimate-Journal/dp/B0018Y5CVE/?tag=braipick-20">biographer of sorts</a>. That spring, Brinnin had famously asked his assistant, Liz Reitell &#8212; who had had a three-week romance with Thomas &#8212; to lock the poet into a room in order to meet a deadline for the completion of his radio drama turned stage play <em>Under Milk Wood</em>.</p><p>In early November of 1953, as New York suffered a burst of air pollution that exacerbated his chronic chest illness, Thomas succumbed to a round of particularly heavy drinking. When he fell ill, Reitell and her doctor attempted to manage his symptoms, but he deteriorated rapidly. At midnight on November 5, an ambulance took the comatose Thomas to St. Vincent&#8217;s Hospital in New York. His wife, Caitlin Macnamara, flew from England and spun into a drunken rage upon arriving at the hospital where the poet lay dying. After threatening to kill Brinnin, she was put into a straitjacket and committed to a private psychiatric rehab facility.</p><p>When Thomas died at noon on November 9, it fell on New Directions founder James Laughlin to identify the poet&#8217;s body at the morgue. Just a few weeks later, New Directions published <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Collected-Poems-Dylan-Thomas-Original/dp/0811218813/?tag=braipick-20">The Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas</a></em> (<em><a href="http://www.worldcat.org/title/collected-poems-of-dylan-thomas/oclc/366548&amp;referer=brief_results">public library</a></em>), containing the work Thomas himself had considered most representative of his voice as a poet and, now, of his legacy &#8212; a legacy that has continued to influence generations of writers, artists, and creative mavericks: Bob Dylan changed his last name from Zimmerman in an homage to the poet, The Beatles drew his likeness onto the cover of <em>Sgt. Pepper&#8217;s Lonely Hearts Club Band</em>, and Christopher Nolan made &#8220;Do not go gentle into that good night&#8221; a narrative centerpiece of his film <em>Interstellar</em>.</p><p>Maria Popova, <a href="https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/06/dylan-thomas-do-not-go-gentle-into-that-good-night/">The Story Behind Dylan Thomas&#8217;s &#8220;Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night&#8221; and the Poet&#8217;s Own Stirring Reading of His Masterpiece</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Is there, then, room to be made for a cultural space where the individual, their identity, and all their baggage, are left to one side? Might this be part of a movement that begins to redress the balance of this (actually quite precious, for all its faults) liberal democracy? I think there is, although what it would look like I&#8217;m not sure. I imagine an online platform where a weekly anonymous poem is shared, and anonymous commenters are welcome to leave their thoughts. A community of poets and readers who know nothing about one another. There may be some rudeness if the poem met with disapproval, but how long would such rudeness last if the nymity of the poem was denied? Where is the fun in trolling if you don&#8217;t know who it is you&#8217;re trolling? And might, at last, some form of trust ensue?</p><p>The second argument comes from a feeling I have that many (perhaps all) of us tend to base our judgements of poems as much on the identity of the poet and what other people have already said about a poem, as we do on the objective &#8216;thereness&#8217; of the words on the page. This is part of the function of the blurbs on book covers; they&#8217;re partly there to sell the book, obviously, but also, I feel, to tell people what to think: <em>oh, X says this is great; then it will be okay for me to think it&#8217;s great too</em>. And this focus on context and nymity also leads (I suspect, although I&#8217;m not sure I could prove it) to a slightly cowardly tendency of some online reviewers to wait until a collection has been well reviewed by a couple of other critics, so they know whether they are safe to like or dislike it.</p><p>As I say, context is important; but there is also a sense in which critics&#8217; views are both formed and then validated by the identity of the poet. A new poem from a much-admired, multiple TS Eliot Prize winner sits in a different spot in a reader&#8217;s brain from one by an unknown &#8211; or known and disliked &#8211; poet. And can we really say we read a poem we know to be written by a man in the same way as one we know to be written by a woman? Likewise race and sexual preference.</p><p>There is a fair rebuttal of this argument, which is: of <em>course</em> we read these works differently, and so we should. There is language that is appropriate for some groups and not for others. In fact, you can probably go further and say we <em>need </em>to know as much as we can discover about a poet&#8217;s cultural identity so that we have the information we need in order to form an appropriate opinion of their work.</p><p>But this argument only goes so far.</p><p>The need expressed in the previous paragraph is only a need if your approach to poetry is extractive and judgemental: one in which you ask yourself, &#8216;What can I take from this work, and what opinion can I form about it?&#8217;. But there is another approach, and one I prefer, which where the reader asks: &#8216;What can I give of myself to this work, and what can I learn from it?&#8217;</p><p>If I take the second approach, my own identity and context are key, because I cannot escape them. Outside that&#8230; there are words; and there is what occurs when those words meet my own particular outlook on the world. This is <em>my</em> reading; and I must ask myself, what happens to my outlook on the world, now I have encountered these words? What aspects of my Self must I open up, and scrutinise, and change? This process could be seen as a gift I receive from the poem and my encounter with it. I am not so much extracting from the words, but in opening myself up to them, they respond by giving themselves to me.</p><p>Chris Edgoose, <a href="https://woodbeepoet.com/2026/02/07/on-anon-the-case-against-nymity/">On Anon: the case against &#8216;Nymity&#8217;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radoslav_Rochallyi">Radoslav Rochallyi</a> is a poet, essayist, and interdisciplinary artist living in Prague, Czech Republic -- and the author of eight books of poetry. Recently I found his work featured <a href="https://maa.org/math-values/vector-poetry/">here in </a><em><a href="https://maa.org/math-values/vector-poetry/">Math Values</a></em>, an online publication of the MAA (Mathematical Association of America).</p><p>In Rochallyi&#8217;s article -- entitled &#8220;Vector Poetry&#8221; -- he shows us three different illustrations of poetry portrayed using vectors. He takes a phrase that he would like to communicate poetically and offers three examples of how it could be portrayed using vector poetry. The phrase is:</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Time is pouring out of my broken watch glass. You look ahead, and you&#8217;re right. Because the potential of the past is just &#8230; a sandcastle.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p><a href="https://maa.org/math-values/vector-poetry/">Here is a link </a>to Rochallyi&#8217;s complete article.</p><p>JoAnne Growney, <a href="https://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com/2026/02/vector-poetry.html">Vector Poetry</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Why should people with money get to use a special lane? That&#8217;s not fair. Yeah, yeah, life isn&#8217;t fair, people with money use special lanes all the time. Still. This road was supposed to be for everybody! Now, as if the grind of traffic wasn&#8217;t bad enough, you have to sit in your old junky Toyota and stare at those mofos in their Lexuses gliding along the interstate with their <em>SmoothPasses</em>? What fresh hell is this?!</p><p>Not to mention, now the lanes for everyone else are even <em>more</em> <em>congested</em>! Where before this interstate had four lanes, now there are just three. The city gave that fourth lane to the SmoothPass drivers! They built a Lexus Lane!</p><p>So, okay, yes, the commute has gotten better, but only better <em>for some people</em>, the ones who can pay for it. The rest not only have to wait but have to wait <em>even longer</em>. The city has privatized a public problem, sloughed off financial solutions onto its citizens, and officially made things <em>worse </em>for the majority of people.</p><p>Crimminy.</p><p>There has to be a better way.</p><p>*</p><p>By now you&#8217;ve probably guessed that I am not writing exclusively about interstate travel. This is not, after all, Highway News.</p><p>What I am talking about here is the recent trend of magazines offering expedited response times to their submissions. In a <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/q-grande-dame-literary-or-grand-scam">recent weekend column</a>, I stated that this was unusual, generally not done. Several readers pointed out that I was incorrect.</p><p>Over the past week, I&#8217;ve learned that these readers are right. Numerous magazines have adopted this practice. In exchange for a response anywhere from three days to two weeks, writers can now pay between $5 - $25.</p><p>Becky Tuch, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/q-are-literary-magazines-building">Q: Are literary magazines building Lexus Lanes?</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The judges, I could tell, were very interested<br>In what I had to say. They let me speak<br>More than others; they rarely interrupted.</p><p>Continue down a road for long enough:<br>Eventually, to turn aside requires<br>An act of will beyond your reach.</p><p>Some power must remove the rotten things<br>And all the dirt that&#8217;s settled on this world;<br>And some new instrument must be created.</p><p>Brad Skow, <a href="https://mostly.substack.com/p/walther-funk-interviewed-at-nuremberg">Walther Funk Interviewed at Nuremberg</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I compared this video <a href="https://youtu.be/SEu0tx1_Zwk?si=ZbPkL33JbJ9UpjeI">Why Your Brain Learns Better than Paper</a> to my own experience of reading a lot of ebooks and a lot of traditional books.</p><p>And then I tried to compare whether the books were poetry, lit crit, social sciences or physics.</p><p>The results don&#8217;t fit the patterns this guy is describing, and I tend to think therefore that he&#8217;s talking about a certain genre of book (fiction and certain kinds of informational book) that I don&#8217;t read but that are all that many or most readers read.</p><p>I feel he was good at describing the pleasure of reading real books, but he had to do so by denigrating reading eBooks. Obviously books have a tactile feel and a smell, and yes you can go back to something you&#8217;ve read by flicking back and forth and remembering where the sentence was, recto or verso, top or middle or bottom.</p><p>But you can also do word searches on ebooks, and I for one use these all the time, with very satisfying results. Because I&#8217;m interested in ambiguous and layered texts, with subconscious meanings, I find that word searching flushes things out. I find the eye makes a SUMMARY, and then on several occasions has told me that such and such a page, in total, means only the SUMMARY. I am then quite surprised, by changing the font or the text size, or coming at a text via search, by something very specific that I have been overlooking &#8211; but which is now impossible to overlook when it&#8217;s distorted or magnified or sticking out like a sore thumb by these &#8220;linear and scrolling&#8221; ebook habits.</p><p>Above all, I would point to James Joyce&#8217;s Ulysses. Because it was written by a professional singer and lover of music, and also a lover of signage and words in visual designs, on buildings and in newspapers, it is in some ways a collage and in other ways a symphony. The collage and symphony aspects tend, as all good paintings and music do, to feel different on different hearings and hung differently in different light with different neighbours. Ebook reading of Ulysses offered me this. It took away from the literally awe inspiring look that printers (guided by Joyce) gave the novel on the page. Awe can blind us, and create fetishism. Ebooks give a flow back, and resist certain stuck habits.</p><p>And a book like Ulysses, like a poem, is about much more than the rational business world, or the creation of a world and drama in average fiction. A poem can be much more spiritual, about life lived on many levels. And poets often write to aficionados (either other poets or the trained reader) for a reason, the same reason that a composer writes a chamber piece; or you shouldn&#8217;t attend Wimbledon hoping for test cricket. There are expectations, there is fancy footwork to be admired, as well as a certain metronome (but not a rhythm as such, not merely more of the same, in the same rhythm, as we got in the venue the previous day).</p><p>Ira Lightman, <a href="https://iralightman1.substack.com/p/why-your-brain-learns-better-than">Why Your Brain Learns Better than Paper (a critique)</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have been thinking about the artifices of art, the superficial surfaces, the pleasing semblances. &#8220;It looks just like a photograph,&#8221; said someone approvingly of a realistic scene painted in oils. (No one says of the photograph, &#8220;It looks just like the real thing.&#8221; They might say, &#8220;It looks like a painting.&#8221;) And the so-called &#8220;real thing&#8221;? What does it look like? And a misty version of that realistic scene? Is that integrating something of emotion, or the murkiness of memory? And the impressionistic version, is that closer to how the brain grabs at colors and edges and scents and sounds and forgets all kinds of details? And if the surface of the scene is nubbled with thick paint, what then? Are we disappointed to find that the painting is a painting? Or does it enhance the experience with its tactility, its boldness? And if there are other substances on the surface &#8212; tissue paper, string? And if someone sticks a sticker of a dinosaur and calls it absurdist? That too can be pleasing. Or not. What does it mean to &#8220;enter&#8221; an artwork? What does it mean that something of the work prevents entry? I&#8217;m reading a collection of poems that have a lot of&#8230;er&#8230;words in them, but I can&#8217;t quite make sense of it all. I can&#8217;t gain entry. A poem is all artifice. Text and space and form. No one mistakes a poem for a photograph or for the &#8220;real thing.&#8221; But I can get lost in fiction. Can look up suddenly from the page, disoriented to time and place and even myself. Isn&#8217;t that funny? And music &#8212; it&#8217;s all artifice! Banging and strums and dingledingle. And it can make me cry. What is up with that? Fool me once. Fool me forever. Please.</p><p>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/02/09/tell-me-train-sound/">Tell me, train-sound</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I attended a talk on Sylvia Plath and Mysticism and Witches by someone who is publishing a book on the subject. Almost everyone in the Zoom room had a Dr. before their name (except me), but I felt so comfortable during the talk&#8212;after all, I&#8217;ve been studying Plath for over thirty years, before it was cool! The talk itself really inspired my thinking about witchy poets, too. And about whether or not I should go get that darn PhD, health issues be darned. I really could use more intellectual stimulation&#8212;after all, I might have limitations in my body, but my mind gets really bored with limitations. [...]</p><p>This also caused me to take another look at the relative witchiness of the manuscript I&#8217;m currently circulating to publishers. [...] I did work with changing the manuscript&#8217;s title again. How do you land on your titles when you&#8217;re sending out your books? Do you fiddle with them, adjusting them to what you think a particular publisher might like, or do you just stick with one until it&#8217;s taken? I&#8217;m afraid I am a fiddler. But it is good to step back and look at a manuscript as a whole and ask&#8212;what story is this book telling? What characters are central? What are the general vibes? Are there too many books out there with a certain title already?</p><p>I like anything that puts my work in a different light, that helps me think of it in a different way.</p><p>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/superbowls-and-sunshine-witchy-poets-wordclouds-and-titling-changing-perspectives-and-losing-control/">Superbowls and Sunshine, Witchy Poets, Wordclouds and Titling, Changing Perspectives and Losing Control</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>When Red Hen began growing, I went to New York, and for the first time, I met with a few agents with the idea that in some glorious future, we might be significant enough to take books from them. I met with one well-known agent, Georges Borchardt, who told energetic stories about his years in the business. &#8220;When I was first working with Sammy,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Sammy wasn&#8217;t that famous.&#8221; I didn&#8217;t know who Sammy was, but as he kept going about the times that Sammy flipped between French and English, I looked behind him on the wall, where he&#8217;d hung a large picture of Samuel Beckett receiving the Nobel Prize. Sammy!</p><p>I was fascinated. I asked about Marguerite Duras, the French author whose work I knew he had introduced to Americans. He spoke about her like he&#8217;d just talked with her yesterday, like she was a dear old friend. Speaking of T.C. Boyle made him light up. He loved talking about his legendary boots, the California rush of his books. Then he started on Eli Wiesel, one of the most notable voices in Holocaust literature. After Wiesel became famous, they held parties in his honor, and he asked Georges to come along. At some point, Georges would decide to leave, and as he stood by the elevator, Eli&#8217;s footsteps would rush up behind him.</p><p>&#8220;The party is for you,&#8221; said Georges. &#8220;You have to go back!&#8221;</p><p>&#8220;I&#8217;m coming with you,&#8221; Eli would say.</p><p>&#8220;No, you&#8217;re not. You have to stay.&#8221;</p><p>After an hour of meeting, Georges invited me to dinner at his home. His wife, Anne, made a lovely soup, and I marveled at their two libraries: one in English, one in French.</p><p>After that, I thought maybe we should try to last longer as a publishing house, meet more people like Georges Borchardt. But there was no one else quite like him: erudite, well-read, generous. He was curious about what I was reading, what books I liked, what authors I had met and wanted to meet. Being in the room with him was like a crash course in publishing. He explained to me that the whole publishing business used to be built on midlist books&#8212;those that weren&#8217;t blockbusters but were still viable and worthwhile to publish&#8212;but then it changed, and it was all about the big sellers. Mid-list was an easier category, he said. Ian McKuen and T.C. Boyle started as midlist. They had breakout books, books that took longer to catch on, but Georges stayed with them.</p><p>Across all these years, I&#8217;ve still never met anyone quite like him. He just died at ninety-eight, and his daughter, Valerie, has taken over his agency. He will be missed. [...]</p><p>Publishing is a kind of madness. Anything else would be easier. But we remain in the hard work and tumble, thinking bigger, building our legacy. Borchardt stayed in the thrum of it until the end. A hero of literature.</p><p>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/on-georges-borchardt-and-the-maddening">On Georges Borchardt &amp; The Maddening Dream of Publishing</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I wrote this poem for the late Richard Sanger, with whom I had the pleasure to work on his last collection, <em>Way to Go</em> (Biblioasis, 2023). It was published posthumously, which Richard knew would likely be the case while we were working, and I remember how inspiring I found his patience about this fact. By that point I&#8217;d seen the publishing industry rush enough books to press for one reason or another, few of them matters of life and death. That he remained more committed to making the best poems he could make than to whatever personal edification or pleasure he might take from seeing them published was rare, and inspiring. I admired him very much. Here in the uncertainty of my own illness, his conviction about how a poet lives&#8212;how a poet dies&#8212;is even more profoundly moving to me.</p><p>I don&#8217;t much care for opining about my own work insofar as intent or, ack, interpretation, but in the spirit of engaging with all of the poems I share in this newsletter, a bit of context. At Richard&#8217;s memorial, speaker after speaker got up and remarked on his humour and playfulness and irrepressible verve, but I noted how a handful of remarks&#8212;mine included&#8212;commented on the seriousness with which he regarded poetry, in both his teaching and his own work. A young woman who&#8217;d been his student remembered being advised to set a draft in blank verse, and that it had unlocked an entirely new dimension in her writing, and so, for both of them, this one is blank verse as well: five beats per line, which alternate between rising&#8212;the iambic da DUM&#8212;and falling&#8212;trochaic: DA dum&#8212;rhythms. I didn&#8217;t undertake the last part consciously, but I&#8217;d hazard that my ear was appreciating the tension between fear and acceptance: the pounding of the fearful heart, the gentle acquiescence of the resting.</p><p>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/elegy-for-richard">&#8220;Elegy for Richard&#8221;</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>January was a blast, despite the year&#8217;s first rejection winging its way to me on only the 5th: I&#8217;ve been far more productive, poems-wise, than usual. That may in part be due to reading the long, elegant, syntactically-gorgeous lines of C.K. Williams&#8217;s poetry at bedtime, which seems to have unlocked a part of my brain hitherto securely bolted. I&#8217;ve been to two fantastic weekend workshops, at both of which the other participants wrote amazing, inspiring poems. In editing my own, I&#8217;ve found, not for the first time in the last year or two, that I&#8217;ve spent at least as much time <em>adding to</em> the poems as I have deleting or tweaking phrases and lines; for me, that&#8217;s a very happy place.</p><p>I&#8217;ve been delighted to see some poetry pals buoyed by recent successes, a reminder, if one were needed, that the poetry world has room enough for everyone with flair, imagination and a willingness to work hard at their craft.</p><p>Something else which has made me think a lot about the use of language is learning Italian: I&#8217;m in the second year of evening classes and I&#8217;m at the point now where I relish the challenge of rendering Italian into idiomatic English. (Or even idiotic.) I can&#8217;t say that I&#8217;m speaking Italian with great confidence, but I like having a go and I enjoy how the words flow into one another more seamlessly than English words do.</p><p>Matthew Paul, <a href="https://matthewpaulpoetry.blog/2026/02/03/february-update/">February update</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Jayanta Mahapatra is one of the architects of post-independence anglophone poetry in India. With 18 books of poetry over 5 decades, his work is exemplary in the way it is located in his immediate landscape - physical, social and political - and in its ability to overcome all linguistic hurdles to evoke deep Indian sensibilities. But he was also unsparing of himself, bringing a brutal honesty to his poetry. His poem &#8216;A tale, to begin with&#8217; is one of his many attempts to articulate what he saw within. It starts with this line:</p><p>&#8220;<em>Jayanta Mahapatra never did anything worthwhile</em>&#8217;</p><p>When did a line like that not make the reader hold their breath till the conclusion? When did the end of such a poem not become the beginning of a thought experiment? I was moved to write something that was not as much response as it was salutation, not as much &#8220;<em>shalI I</em>&#8221; as it was &#8220;<em>do I dare.</em>&#8221;</p><p>Here&#8217;s the poem I wrote. I hope you will be kind to it!</p><p>*</p><p>The poem expands in the hollows inside me<br>like sacredness slowly builds up to ten-<br>dimensional rapture. Silence echoes like <br>a refrain. I imagine the poet must have dipped<br>his pen deep into atmosphere and amygdala,<br>into myth and maelstrom, into singularity<br>and solitude, to find these words. Or he<br>writes like the river flows: through physics<br>and compulsion and irrepressible love.<br><br>I become a figure by his window, behind<br>his retina, inside his nights. I can see where<br>my shadows intersect with his shadows. [....]</p><p>Rajani Radhakrishnan, <a href="https://rajaniradhakrishnan.substack.com/p/of-love-and-self-and-a-poet-and-poem">Of love and self and a poet and poem</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve written a lot of poems based on fairytales in the past. In fact, I often chide myself for doing so almost too heavily in my early work (things like literature, folklore, art, and history are great subject matter when you haven&#8217;t yet lived enough or learned to harvest your own life for poetic material). In some ways, it felt like a crutch. In others, writing about cultural touchpoints can be a great way to connect with readers and explore retellings of stories they already know. These iterations can sometimes offer more in-depth examinations of themes--those drawn out by the author or already there in abundance. I tend to also gravitate to works, both as a reader and editor for the dgp series, that work and re-work fairy tales and folklore. One of my first artist book projects was a series on Little Red Riding Hood called THE BOOK OF RED. My third full-length book THE SHARED PROPERTIES OF WATER AND STARS had, at its heart, the Goldilocks tale. Later, I wrote a more witch-sympathetic interpretation of <em>Hansel and Gretel</em> with PLUMP. There are also other loose poems that do similar things with existing stories.</p><p>As someone newly married, Bluebeard has been on my mind. Probably because the first couple years we were seeing each other, I had not been to J&#8217;s home and was completely convinced he was too good to be true. So obviously had to have a basement full of dead women he was hiding somewhere. It&#8217;s also especially funny since he actually eventually moved in with me, so all the secrets and locked rooms had to be mine. (I did tell him to avoid the entryway closet with its ever-avalanching mounds of press and art supplies I shoved in there when I moved out of my studio space and just haven&#8217;t found a home for elsewhere in the apartment.) For this project, I was also a little inspired by the musical SIX, which details Henry VIII&#8217;s wives and their mishaps, which, while all did not die at his hand, can be an interesting correlative in terms of the powerlessness of women historically.</p><p>The poems are going well, and I will be sharing bits from them in the coming weeks. They will also be part of the Patreon offerings for February (still working on what that will look like. I decided the epistolary was a perfect form for them, as in letters from the last wife to Bluebeard himself, though she becomes a chorus of other fragmented voices of dead wives.</p><p>Kristy Bowen, <a href="http://kristybowen.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-abattoir-letters.html">the abattoir letters</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>In stories, you&#8217;ve learned that the blackbird of what holds all of us together sings when we&#8217;ve lost our voice.</p><p>That the blackbird of our shared joy lends us wings when we&#8217;ve forgotten how to fly.</p><p>Sometimes in sleep, you see your other half.</p><p>You ask one another what the weather is like in your different states of being.</p><p>You ask one another what the world looked like before guns, before hate,</p><p>before all those broken mirrors ago.</p><p>Rich Ferguson, <a href="https://richrantblog.wordpress.com/2026/02/05/somewhere-in-the-world/">Somewhere in the World</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Before yesterday, I had planned a snow/winter weather theme for my Advanced Creative Writing class, and having snow drifting by the window was the perfect touch. On Tuesday, I read Dave Bonta&#8217;s <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">Poetry Blog Digest</a>, on his Via Negativa site, as I do most Tuesdays. He linked to<a href="https://kristybowen.substack.com/p/january-paper-boat-a35"> this post</a> by Kristy Bowen, which concluded with ten wonderful poetry prompts for winter. They&#8217;re the best kind of prompts, the kind that work not only for poetry but for all kinds of creative thought.</p><p>I put each prompt on a slip of paper and had them put the slips of paper face down on their desks. Every five minutes, they turned over another slip and wrote for five minutes. At the end of five minutes, they could keep going, or they could turn over a new slip.</p><p>They were all writing on laptops, which was fine with me, although I did realize that I had no way of knowing if they were really working on prompts. But from observing them, they did seem engaged, and they did turn over slips. At the end of the process, I had them select one line from their writing and put it on a blank slip--and then I read all the slips as one poem, an interesting experiment.</p><p>I did a variation of the writing too, although since I was the timekeeper, I couldn&#8217;t lose myself in my writing the way I might have. I did come up with some interesting lines that I hope to continue to work into a unified poem.</p><p>By the time I got on the road to drive home, the sun was shining, and while it wasn&#8217;t warm, I wasn&#8217;t afraid that the roads would freeze--it&#8217;s the best kind of winter weather, the kind that doesn&#8217;t disrupt but does inspire.</p><p>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/02/winter-weather-and-writing-prompts.html">Winter Weather and Writing Prompts</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I haven&#8217;t posted a good stuff round-up in a while&#8212;and frankly, the news feels like a relentless round-up of bad stuff, so I need to shift my attention. Last night was some very, very good stuff, between Bad Bunny&#8217;s joyful celebration of the Americas and Brandi Carlile&#8217;s moving performance of &#8220;America, the Beautiful.&#8221; I don&#8217;t know about you, but I needed that. My kids did, too.</p><p>What else is good these days? My birthday is this Friday, and my fifth book of poems, <em>A Suit or a Suitcase</em>, is out next month! [...]</p><p>That opening couplet of &#8220;A Suit or a Suitcase&#8221; has me thinking a lot about my country right now.</p><blockquote><p>You ask what I&#8217;ll miss about this life.<br>Everything but cruelty, I think.</p></blockquote><p>The cruelty has been devastating to witness. We have a long way to go and a lot to learn&#8212;about ourselves, our history, and each other. In these harrowing times, I&#8217;m so grateful for writers, artists, and educators, and for their work&#8212;films, plays, books, and music&#8212;that teaches us about ourselves, our history, and each other, and that reminds us of what it is to be human.</p><p>Maggie Smith, <a href="https://maggiesmith.substack.com/p/the-good-stuff-985">The Good Stuff</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>i am the idea of a limb.<br>you can chew on me<br>until you&#8217;re bored. you can<br>give me a little hat. tear the clouds<br>out of my chest. make a sky.</p><p>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/02/05/2-5-5/">dog toy</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve given myself a difficult task. Yet we learn through difficulty, do we not? Often, too, the unlovely poems are those that deal with how rotten human beings can be, or illuminate the worst of times and offer us insight and information that we had not been taught, hidden horrors, trauma, all of the above. I have written many lovely poems about lovely things. The world, however, manages to be far more complicated than beautiful, a mixed bag of joys and miseries, and it seems to me that literature and art ought to reflect that fact sometimes.</p><p>What I&#8217;m posting below is a very rough draft, just to demonstrate how I begin a difficult poem, a poem based upon historical facts that I&#8217;m learning myself. It&#8217;s a completely different process from when I write from an image or observation of my own. For example, the &#8220;Librarian&#8221; poem, which is about 15 pages long, took me a couple of years and a visit to the United States Army Heritage and Education Center <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Army_Heritage_and_Education_Center">(USAHEC</a>) at Carlisle Barracks, PA! First I pull some quotes, make a lot of notes, highlight images or place names that seem most resonant. Then I develop these into what I call &#8220;jottings&#8221; and fragments, and start setting them into an initial sequence&#8211;which I often change later.</p><p>Stanzas? Line breaks? Metaphors? Meter? All of that can wait; I like to work on structuring the narrative first when I try something in this vein, and I want to find images that might speak to a reader. So it is clear to me that this poem is not one I&#8217;ll have finished before the end of the 5-meetings-long workshop. Assuming I ever do finish it. Yes, poetry is hard work.</p><p>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/02/03/unlovely-drafts/">Unlovely drafts</a></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And the seeds under our steps sleep in vernalization.<br>It is a patience I wish I had, staying hard until things turn.<br>Until the snowmelt and soil-shift are messages beckoning warmth.<br>And the smallest tendrils inside us crack through the crust of ourselves,<br>and shove granules aside, one instant at a time.</p><p>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/vernalization">Vernalization</a></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 5]]></title><description><![CDATA[yellow plastic whistles, white matter, inhabiting unfamiliar thoughts, eating ice, and much more]]></description><link>https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-5</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://davebonta.substack.com/p/poetry-blog-digest-2026-week-5</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Dave Bonta]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2026 00:03:37 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/8c4698d2-8c73-4a37-8c62-5ff04bce2861_456x640.webp" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A personal selection of posts from the <a href="https://ofkells.blogspot.com/p/poetry-blogging-network-list-of-poetry.html">Poetry Blogging Network</a> and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/category/smorgasblog/">blog digest archive at Via Negativa</a> or, if you&#8217;d like it in your inbox, <a href="https://davebonta.substack.com/">subscribe on Substack</a> (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).</em></p><p><em>This week: yellow plastic whistles, white matter, inhabiting unfamiliar thoughts, eating ice, and much more. Enjoy.</em></p><blockquote><p>February this year started with a full moon, and it felt good to turn the calendars over to welcome in a new month before taking time to take a stroll under the Snow Moon. Cloud meant I could not see it, but I knew it was up there somewhere and I sent it a gentle howl!</p><p>On the last day of January I took a walk before going to the last session of <em>January Writing Hours </em>with Kim Moore and Clare Shaw. It felt good to clear my head in anticipation of the final session and to give a gentle nod to all the hours I had spent in their zoom room with my writing. It was important to me to mark the ending of this particular daily practice and to think what I am taking forward with me. As well as writing poems in my own style (it&#8217;s always right in there!) I have enjoyed experimenting with different forms and approaches in response to the poems and prompts provided. I have some lovely drafts to work on over the coming month and that feels wonderfully celebratory as does the recognition that carving out this daily space has given me the chance to write poems that were definitely waiting inside me.</p><p><strong>Sue Finch, <a href="https://suefinch.co.uk/2026/02/02/snow-moon-and-gratitude/">SNOW MOON AND GRATITUDE</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>And when I reach<br>the grounds of the gym the heat of the sun<br>slanting through the branches of the giant oaks<br>is raising wisps of steam from the icy ground,</p><p>like wishes, like dreams. Small moments<br>of pause, when we allow ourselves to notice<br>the ordinary beauty in our lives, are always<br>welcome, aren&#8217;t they? Especially after a few<br>days of despair at the inhumanity we have all<br>now seen, the terrible darkness of a man shot</p><p>in a city street, killed for witnessing and caring.</p><p><strong>Lynne Rees, <a href="http://www.lynnerees.com/2026/01/poem-what-we-remember-for-alex-pretti.html">Poem ~ What we remember (for Alex Pretti)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s 5:00 pm, and there&#8217;s still pink light making the rising clouds of steam blush in the distance beyond our windows, and turning the glass and steel surfaces into mirrors. We&#8217;ve noticed, just this week, that the days really do seem to be getting longer &#8212; and what a welcome thing that is. Winter will last two more months up here, but there will be more bright days like this one from now on.</p><p>I will gratefully take all the brightness I can find. We are all struggling for words, for focus, for stability. I hope that you can see that our biggest reason for hope is each other. I am so heartened by the steadfastness and courage of the ordinary people of Minnesota, and all those who are speaking out with their words, their feet, their presence. And I hope you can also see that the nefarious forces are afraid of this power. I do think that those closest to the struggle can feel the support of the millions of us who cannot be there in person. So please do hold them in the light of your consciousness, or whatever way you describe this act of intention that we humans do. I wish we had more of a solidarity movement here in Canada, with a symbol like putting a candle in our window after dark, but maybe doing it anyway is a gesture that can help us.</p><p>And please do your own creative work, as much as you can. If we are aware of the plight of others, and do what we can to help, it&#8217;s an act of resistance to also continue to make things, to allow the creative life force to flow through us. I&#8217;ve had a busy week full of dental and eye appointments, a dead car battery, and days that seemed to dissolve without much to show for them. But I&#8217;ve drawn a little bit, and reworked the recent oil painting so that I&#8217;m more satisfied with it.</p><p><strong>Beth Adams, <a href="https://cassandrapages.substack.com/p/longer-days">Longer Days</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Somehow, the new year seems to be both dragging and chugging along. Both brisk and slow, as January is wont to be sometimes. We&#8217;ve had quite a bit of snow and cold in Chicago so far, which feels unduly personal when the digital world feels so jagged and depressing. I am trying to stay focused even when the constant barrage of terrible news is unceasing and overwhelming&#8212;working more on poems in the SWINE DAUGHTER series (which you can catch in some #workinprogress snippets on IG) as well as some more edits on the second act of the play, on which I vacillate between its genius and its ordinariness (sometimes all in the same hour.) Of course, perhaps at a time when I most need art to function, it fails me sometimes. It occasionally feels like yet another thing we have to continue to do as the ship goes down (playing the violins and making the beds on a Titanic full of water already. ) I don&#8217;t have answers on how to navigate it&#8212;the decline and disillusionment we all feel. The drag of it on our limbs. I look for moments of lightness: a few sunny and clear but cold days. A slice of lemon pie. Good coffee. Covers to design and collages to make.</p><p><strong>Kristy Bowen, <a href="https://kristybowen.substack.com/p/january-paper-boat-a35">January Paper Boat</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Recently, someone commented on a poem of mine, &#8220;I wish we could force the president, and these ICE agents, to read poetry every day.&#8221; As if maybe, just maybe, if they read poems, they couldn&#8217;t keep doing what they&#8217;re doing. As if the poems would change them. I thought of the wise words of Richard Blanco, who was the fifth Presidential Inaugural Poet for President Barack Obama.</p><p>Poems may not change the world directly,<br>but a poem can change a person<br>who can change the world.<br>&#8212;Richard Blanco</p><p>YES. Poetry changes <em>us</em>. Poetry has certainly changed me. But I approach poems with openness, expecting to be changed. I approach it with gratitude for what I know it has to offer. I approach it as someone who is interested in humanity. It&#8217;s hard for me to imagine not being interested in humanity. If I found myself in that dark, narrow space, could poetry reach me there? Can poetry reach the people among us whose hearts have been hardened? I don&#8217;t know, but we can try. I&#8217;m not ready to give up on us yet.</p><p>I&#8217;ve also been thinking about something I read in the <em>New Yorker</em>, from the writer Philip Pullman.</p><p>Poetry is not a fancy way<br>of giving you information;<br>it&#8217;s an incantation.<br>It is actually a magic spell.<br>It changes things; it changes you.<br>&#8212;Philip Pullman</p><p>We&#8217;re transformed by our experiences&#8212;the people we meet, the things we try, the places we go, and the art we engage with. Poetry can be part of that transformation, if we let it. It&#8217;s my hope with every episode of <a href="https://www.slowdownshow.org/">The Slowdown</a>: that a poem might reach someone where they are and work its magic.</p><p><strong>Maggie Smith, <a href="https://maggiesmith.substack.com/p/pep-talk-04d">Pep Talk</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not smart enough to come up with solutions for how to fight this,&#8221; I said to my husband Brian over Bluetooth as I drove home from work. While talking with him, I took stock of my surroundings, how they look now, before the storm would arrive later in the night. The river, mostly covered in ice from the below-zero temperatures, was black mottled with white. &#8220;And the people smarter than me,&#8221; I said to my husband, &#8220;don&#8217;t seem to be doing anything besides posting online about how horrible things are.&#8221; I feel my voice crack. &#8220;And everyone is full of so much hate.&#8221;</p><p>969 miles away from Minneapolis, I imagined myself as a dot on a map of a huge country. Zooming in on the map in my mind, I became a dot in the lowlands of a precipice, contour lines surrounding me. Zooming in further, I was suddenly a moving dot, meandering along River Road in some small Pennsylvanian town, angry and helpless. Zooming in further, I was a human distraught in the driver&#8217;s seat with thoughts volleying between <em>this country is fucking itself</em> and <em>I wonder how the animals are preparing themselves for the storm.</em></p><p>And then,</p><p>&#8220;Brian, thanks for being who you are.&#8221;</p><p>And then,</p><p>&#8220;I might go take a walk in the wetlands this evening, even though it will be getting dark when I get there.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Sarah Lada, <a href="https://myheadtheforest.substack.com/p/go-feed-the-birds-about-it">Go Feed the Birds about It</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This last couple of weeks have also reminded me of the power of community. In Minnesota, community protests have meant a little boy released from ICE detention, a change of leadership of ICE in town, and even friendly National Guardsmen handing out hot chocolate to cold members of the community. I hope this means that ICE will back down (Trump noticing his poll numbers shrinking, too, no doubt helps), and we&#8217;ll have no more horrendous human rights offenses or trying to take away Constitutional rights (freedom of speech and assembly, the right to due process for all on American ground, the right to bear arms, which the GOP is usually quite quick to defend, and birthright citizenship). People are making a lot of noise&#8212;and though sometimes it feels like nothing is being accomplished, if enough Americans make enough noise, occasionally we can change things for the better.</p><p>In my own life, a gathering of poets reminded me of the small, good things we can do for each other. I noticed that in encouraging each other, there is power&#8212;more success that seems to follow meeting together. That has been the case in my own writing life&#8212;and at least, things are more fun to celebrate (and commiserate) in a group. And the scary things of life don&#8217;t seem quite as scary.</p><p><strong>Jeannine Hall Gailey, <a href="https://webbish6.com/happy-february-snow-moons-unusual-birds-cancer-scares-and-big-birthdays-the-power-of-community-and-more/">Happy February! Snow Moons, Unusual Birds, Cancer Scares and Big Birthdays, the Power of Community and More</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It&#8217;s a chilly full moon Saturday here, so I&#8217;ve made a little world of my own for a few: Alice Coltrane&#8217;s Journey in Satchidananda is playing my headphones &#8211; it&#8217;s long been one of my Saturday albums. And I&#8217;m just reviewing recent photos that I&#8217;ve made some exploring the &#8216;Democratic Forest&#8217; style, and others where I&#8217;ve really been looking at composition that holds shadow and light. So I thought I&#8217;d share another batch of Democratic Forest shots with you. These are a mixture of X100VI and iPhone shots &#8211; you use the camera you have to hand, though I do find myself wishing I&#8217;d also packed my small Leica, which is so easy to throw in a bag I&#8217;d use it over the iPhone, so I&#8217;ve used the Leica app on the phone to make the phone shots, so that I get some of that feel.</p><p>One thing I&#8217;ve sworn to myself with my photography here is to deliberately circumvent my own internal impulse that is endlessly informed by the western gaze. We&#8217;ve seen so many photos of India in the last century from that angle, that I realised that it is just too easy to make the &#8216;Indian&#8217; photograph. My question always is what actually interests the artist I am, and how to let the writing or the photography serve my deeper eye.</p><p><strong>John Siddique, <a href="https://johnsiddique.substack.com/p/full-moon-in-the-democratic-forest">Full Moon in The Democratic Forest</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>That night, as I was feeling alone, I thought of that line, <em>Tell me your despair and I&#8217;ll you mine</em>. But my despair is not so great. I live in a house. I publish books. Sometimes it feels like a wild prayer keeps us afloat. I have a life. I can make magic. Life outside the house is a good story. The press is a good story. Finding sleep in February is a good story. It&#8217;s imaginary, more a fantasy, but fantasy is a well-loved category these days.</p><p><strong>Kate Gale, <a href="https://galek.substack.com/p/toward-the-winged-horse-on-the-stories">Toward the Winged Horse: On the Stories That Lift Us</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Whatever normal or paranormal trigger gave me the dream, the commission and its deadline gave me the daydream, what Gaston Bachelard calls reverie: &#8220;Instead of looking for the dream in reverie, people should look for reverie in the dream.&#8221; In The Poetics of Reverie he describes it as a space one can inhabit, like a secret hideout, &#8220;a phenomenon of solitude&#8221; that helps us also to &#8220;escape time.&#8221; It is a state, he writes; it exists. In reverie I was able to return to an experience that was &#8211; ironically, given the mandate of the discount store &#8211; rich, multidimensional with fear and comfort, awe and novelty. In my memory it&#8217;s always busy, it&#8217;s always winter, puddles on the floor from snow tracked in, people visiting, smells of cold air and cigarettes on their coats. As I remember it, we arrive in the morning and leave in the late afternoon as new snow falls and streetlights blink on. Which isn&#8217;t, of course, true. Writing on house images in The Poetics of Space, Bachelard notes that &#8220;The phenomenology of the daydream can untangle the complex of memory and imagination; it becomes necessarily sensitive to the differentiations of the symbol.&#8221; I&#8217;m generally wary of nostalgia; but the poem is definitely nostalgic.</p><p><strong>Karen Solie, <a href="https://northseapoets.substack.com/p/reverie-and-deadlines">Reverie and Deadlines</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I dreamt of my anger:</p><p>An animal wrapped up in a bright red shawl.</p><p>It looked me straight in the eye as I anticipated its rapid advance.</p><p>It was raining. We were in my garden. [&#8230;]</p><p>I celebrate my birthday in winter now. Valentine&#8217;s. I was born on a Saturday at noon. It was Carnival.</p><p>It snows in January. A boy&#8217;s prayer has been finally answered, slowly over time.</p><p>And suddenly, it thaws. In between snowing and thawing, our footsteps printed on the path towards and back from the field where we laid down on the cold and soft snow, laughing. Our arms spread out, flapping. We left angels in our trail.</p><p>Further along, index finger to the snow, he traces one of his favourite characters from a Nintendo video game.</p><p>A few moments earlier, he had spotted Blackbird pecking on a snow-less patch, under the protection of very tall pine trees.</p><p>Everywhere else and around was covered in winter white. It was as if Blackbird had its own force field.</p><p><strong>Luciana Francis, <a href="https://lucianafrancis.substack.com/p/chiaroscuro">Chiaroscuro</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The Age of Aquarius has long ended,<br>the music we heard then replaced</p><p>today with yellow, plastic whistles<br>purchased cheaper by the box,</p><p>dangled from the neck on string,<br>worked like ancient talismans</p><p>to ward off our daily troubles.<br>Whistles shrill, like an out-of-tune chorus</p><p>from some Shakespeare play<br>we didn&#8217;t get at the time, portending</p><p>Fate&#8217;s own black hands on our backs.</p><p><strong>Maureen Doallas, <a href="https://maureendoallas.substack.com/p/no-one-is-going-ice-fishing">No One Is Going Ice-Fishing</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>You would think that with two snow days this week, three actually counting cancelled church on Sunday, I wouldn&#8217;t feel desperate for some early morning writing time. And yet, at 1:30 when I couldn&#8217;t fall back asleep, I decided to get up for a bit. I&#8217;ve enjoyed this early morning writing time so much that I didn&#8217;t go back to sleep. [&#8230;]</p><p>I turned my attention to a poem I&#8217;ve been revising. I first started writing it on January 15. I was inspired by<a href="https://paintedprayerbook.com/2008/12/"> Jan Richardson&#8217;s poem </a>about wise women also coming to the baby Jesus. [&#8230;]</p><p>This morning, I decided that it was time to actually finish the draft. I was partly inspired by the end of the month approaching and my intention to end the year with 52 finished drafts. I was successful, and then I thought about revising another poem&#8211;that would mean I am on track for the year, not slightly behind.</p><p>I&#8217;ve decided that my intention to finish drafts can extend to rough drafts written before 2026, so I went back to my folder of rough drafts. I pulled out a rough draft from December, about Noah&#8217;s wife looking at Realtor.com and seeing her old house. I should be able to finish that revision by tomorrow. I&#8217;m waiting to see if some final lines come to me today as my brain works on the ending.</p><p><strong>Kristin Berkey-Abbott, <a href="http://kristinberkey-abbott.blogspot.com/2026/01/yearly-intentions-report-poem-revision.html">Yearly Intentions Report: The Poem Revision Edition</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>As a creative, it helps to have clear objectives for your creative work that are not about validating your work through publication of course, but that&#8217;s a lot easier to say than do. Writing is a conversation, it needs an audience. This is our evolutionary creative drive &#8211; to share experience, to share stories about what it is to be human. It&#8217;s hard then to say to oneself, <em>just don&#8217;t think about it, let the creativity itself be the reward.</em></p><p>Self belief, and the desire to achieve, will get you so far, but I don&#8217;t believe that confidence in the work is the key here. I believe that tenacity is the key: a kind of blind refusal to give up. It&#8217;s that, rather than confidence, that will keep you going when the odds are against you. However, the truth is that there might not be a successful outcome at the end. Not everybody&#8217;s work fits into a traditional model, and it&#8217;s worth considering if the traditional route to publishing is the correct vehicle for your work. There is more than one way to reach an audience and often we only see the one that involves agent-publisher-bookdeal. But let me also remind you that you have reached a place in this particular journey that is hard to get to. Turn around and look behind you, the road to a completed MS and an active submissions plan is littered with writers that have fallen at the wayside, writers that gave up when they got stuck at 30,000 words, writers who let rejection frame how they value their own work. You have already beaten those odds to get to where you are.</p><p>I also think that there is something else to consider here. You cannot control how your work is received. You cannot control whether a publisher or an agent says yes or no, or whether they say anything at all. But you can control your own reaction to it. If you can, and it seems like you are already doing it, make the part of the process at which you seek representation less of an end goal, make it just another part of the process. Scale it down, don&#8217;t make that one response the thing on which you hang your potential. Get on to the next project while you wait to hear about that one. It defuses the feeling of all eggs being in one basket.</p><p>This is what we do. We push on, push forward, we keep writing and refining and reaching out into the dark. We keep throwing our work into the abyss, and we keep the blind faith of our tenacity. One word at a time, one submission at a time.</p><p><strong>Wendy Pratt, <a href="https://wendypratt.substack.com/p/how-do-youwe-maintain-confidence">The awful abyss into which you throw your years of work</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I consider myself lucky to have had an immensely talented partner who had a deep passion for poetry.</p><p>I have abundant books and poems, videos and photos of readings to always dive into. And my grief tending / legacy building happens incrementally each night, as I am working on compiling an almost 500 page post-humous uncollected works to be published in mid-late 2026 and tag-team editing his Canadian book due out in 2027.</p><p>It is a meditation, this experience. Like a sacred ritual, it has carefully shuttled me through the cycle of this first year without him. (I don&#8217;t call it a process. The way the word minimizes grief and loss, that it is step-related, chronologically based, that it will &#8220;end&#8221; is a patently false, limited way to think of it. Much like the word &#8220;widow&#8221;, it&#8217;s a word I really make a concerted effort to avoid.)</p><p>So every night, for months, at first, I would sit by the small altar I created and read his work aloud to him by candlelight. Then it became clear, once all the poems were read&#8212;all nearly 3,000 of them, hardcopy&#8212;it was time to begin grouping them, detecting themes/tropes/patterns and arrange them in some sort of book form.</p><p>The love poems were first. Countless bittersweet moments I relived: our first poem exchanges after we met, our first kiss, our intense physical attraction, the unwavering devotion to one another. My heart broke in a million pieces reading each intricate etching to me.</p><p><strong>Lina Ramona Vitkauskas, <a href="https://linaramonavitkauskas.substack.com/p/the-nightmare-of-normal">The nightmare of normal.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve been reading John Rowlands-Pritchard&#8217;s glorious Hymns of the Worcester Monastic Antiphoner (circa 1230), with painted inscriptions, and Beowulf in the verse translation by Seamus Heaney, which usefully has the Old English text facing.<br><br>Together, these influences have shaped my writing in response to the terrifying world of 2026.</p><p><strong>Te Deum laudamus</strong></p><p>Only a dictator would demand<br>only an egomaniac could enjoy<br>the tedium of tireless praise.<br><br>Lord lend us mercy<br>rescue us from the ravening<br>world-wounder over the water.<br><br><em>Sanctus sanctus sanctus<br></em>the hymn of the heavenly host<br>hallows a world of wonders.</p><p><strong>Ama Bolton, <a href="https://barleybooks.wordpress.com/2026/02/01/reading-and-writing-in-january/">Reading and writing in January</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I&#8217;m rereading Etel Adnan, her<em> SURGE</em> (2018), as part of an acknowledgment of her centenary. The Poetry Project in New York is running a symposium on her work that begins tomorrow night, &#8220;Etel Adnan: In the Rhythms of the World.&#8221; As the website for the event offers: &#8220;Etel Adnan&#8217;s oeuvre did not follow a masterplan; it expanded and shape-shifted ceaselessly. Each book invented its own genre. And yet her tone is unmistakable, combining sharp observation with the associative logic of dreams.&#8221; I would have been curious to attend, if such had been possible. &#8220;Organized by Omar Berrada and Simone Fattal on the centenary of Etel Adnan&#8217;s birth,&#8221; the text adds, &#8220;this symposium gathers together old friends, confirmed specialists, and younger disciples of Adnan&#8217;s. They will offer talks, poetry readings, and musical performances in response to multiple aspects of her literary and visual work.&#8221;</p><p>I admire the ways in which Adnan&#8217;s long sequences extend across books through small moments, as her work explored violence, culture, power and memory. She composed her books across small abstract moments that accumulate in a way that echoes for anyone even faintly familiar with contemporary French writing, but in a way that also reminds me of the work of the late Eastern Townships, Quebec poet and translator D.G. Jones (1929-2016), another poet who stretched out the sequence from accumulated small abstracts, as well as one influenced by French writing. You can see it, whether through his poems, or through his translations of the work of the late Quebec poet Anne H&#233;bert (1916-2000), a writer born a decade earlier than Adnan.</p><p>&#8220;Etel,&#8221; what my phone attempts to autocorrect to &#8220;Ethel.&#8221; Cellphone, I&#8217;m onto you.</p><p>A circling of sentences. A simultaneous circling and straightforward line. The silence of a Wednesday evening, reading Etel Adnan in my usual St. Laurent and Innes Road sportsbar corner, an hour-plus awaiting Rose in the first session of her nearby gymnastics class.</p><p>The logic of dreams, and of temporality. I first caught Adnan&#8217;s work through <em>TIME </em>(2019), as translated from the French by Sarah Riggs, a collection constructed out of six extended lyric sequences, each of which are clearly situated, whether in time or place or both, tethered to the ground so the abstract of her lyric thinking won&#8217;t float away completely. Since then, I&#8217;ve read at least a half dozen titles, maybe more, still so clearly behind. Not enough to begin to wrap my head around the largesse of her accumulated short lyrics, short sentences. From <em>SURGE</em>:</p><blockquote><p>A radical pain traversed my life from end to end&#8212;a large band of light crossed the moon&#8217;s hidden face. That kind of motion alters the world.</p></blockquote><p>There is something comparable, to my mind, between the prose poems of Etel Adnan and Rosmarie Waldrop: their use of the prose sentence via the poem, and the potential shared factor of utilizing sentence structures and syntax from their individual mother tongues across English language lyrics.</p><p><strong>rob mclennan, <a href="https://robmclennan.substack.com/p/the-green-notebook-9a7">the green notebook,</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>At the start of 2025, I had a slightly-used date book from the Field Notes <em><a href="https://fieldnotesbrand.com/products/index">Index</a></em> quarterly edition (now sold out). I prefer a much larger notebook for keeping track of my schedule, so while I&#8217;d made a few halfhearted attempts at using it, I couldn&#8217;t get traction. Then I got inspired to use that notebook to help me observe and track the seasons as I experienced them.</p><p>The goal was to write down three simple observations about the day, and at the end of the month, type them into a single file. Over time, that computer file would be filled with enough daily entries that I could track my perception of the seasons&#8211;especially in relation to climate change&#8211;over the long term. I typically recorded the high and low temperatures as a baseline, and whether there was sun, rain, or snow. I also noted whether I observed wildlife or indicated the time of sunrise and sunset. Over time, I tried to pay more attention to the night sky, and occasionally added cultural events and holidays, as those human aspects are a way of tracking the seasons as well.</p><p>While I missed my goal of recording every single day, I still made observations more days than most. In addition, I&#8217;ve continued the practice into 2026, and I&#8217;m happy to report that I have not yet missed a day in January. The old Index book ran out, so now I&#8217;m using one of the notebooks from the <em><a href="https://fieldnotesbrand.com/products/is-a-river-alive">Is a River Alive?</a></em> quarterly edition. I&#8217;ve set up a single page for every day, which has usually resulted in me recording more than three observations. More page room means that my mind naturally stays open to finding more to record.</p><p>My biggest takeaway from the first year of this project is that a daily walk is vital not just to my phenology practice, but to my writing practice as well. Between last winter&#8217;s prolonged cold and last summer&#8217;s persistent, record-breaking heat, I walked less in 2025 than I had since . . . probably 2014. (It doesn&#8217;t help that walking is <em>not </em>Maybelle&#8217;s favorite activity.) But the days I didn&#8217;t walk were the days I was most likely to skip recording anything, and these were days I was most likely to skip writing. I wasn&#8217;t expecting that this would be the lesson of the year, but as a result, I&#8217;ve tried to get back in the habit of daily walks. (Though this week&#8217;s snow storm has really put a damper on that.)</p><p>I imagine that in the second year of this project, as I begin to gather build up my observations, I&#8217;ll start to have some insights about the seasons in St. Louis. Or maybe I&#8217;ll have a different insight altogether. Only time will tell, and I look forward to reporting and reflecting in January 2027.</p><p><strong>Allyson Whipple, <a href="https://allysonwhipple.com/2026/01/28/personal-phenology/">Personal Phenology</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#26543;&#33609;&#12398;&#32218;&#27784;&#40665;&#12398;&#39592;&#31354;&#12398;&#32819;&#12288;&#23550;&#39340;&#24247;&#23376;</p><p><em>karekusa no sen chinmoku no hone sora no mimi</em></p><p>a line of withered grass<br>a bone of silence<br>an ear of the sky</p><p>Yasuko Tsushima</p><p>from <em>Gendai Haiku</em>, #728, January 2026 Issue, Gendai Haiku Kyokai, Tokyo, Japan</p><p><strong>Fay Aoyagi, <a href="https://fayaoyagi.wordpress.com/2026/02/02/todays-haiku-february-2-2026/">Today&#8217;s Haiku (February 2, 2026)</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I have met new friends in Sweden and Shropshire in the past year: friends who know about water, and who know about trees. The words on my autumn bowl encapsulate what I&#8217;ve learned about my Willow nature, which seeks water, and my need to be around the dependability of Oak. And I have learned to respect in myself the natural rhythms of needing to go underground, to seek rest and stillness, in order to grow again.</p><p>&#8220;I fall into earth-life.<br>Acorn. Willow-seed.<br>We are the making of ourselves.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Liz Lefroy, <a href="https://someonesmumsays.blogspot.com/2026/01/i-paint-my-year.html">I Paint My Year</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>This one came back to me as a single phrase: &#8220;Troy after Troy after Troy.&#8221; If you&#8217;ve been around here for any length of time, you know I love repetition, whether it be the anticipated patterns of a <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-waking-by-theodore-roethke?r=9w2">received form</a>, or a rhetorical device unique to an individual poem&#8217;s argument or emotional arc&#8212;<a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/the-simple-truth-by-philip-levine">anaphora</a> or epistrophe or something looser and organic&#8212;or simply a sequence of <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/bereft-by-robert-frost?r=9w2">matching sounds</a>, regular or not, that chime between the lines.</p><p>It was this repetition that sent a shiver down my spine the first time I read &#8220;Things Seem Strong,&#8221; so it was no wonder that that&#8217;s what called me back to it this week. What was terrifically surprising was discovering that what was in my memory a pivotal moment actually occurs early on&#8212;it&#8217;s an exposition, the aria&#8217;s opening gesture, and not the thunderclap I carried in my memory, which had become a kind of stand-in or synecdoche for the poem as a whole. Some words and phrases cling to a consciousness like burdock to a cuff. I&#8217;m tempted to say it&#8217;s just some fascination of the pattern-loving mind, that the scraps that stick are, if not arbitrary, perhaps without much significance, though if you asked a magpie, I imagine you&#8217;d find that every shiny treasure in her nest was somehow meaningful to her.</p><p>What&#8217;s to love about &#8220;Things Seem Strong&#8221;? Hirshfield is a Zen Buddhist, a translator of Classical Japanese poetry, and these practices carry into her own poems in ways that I find captivating. She is a poet of presence, observation, direct experience, connectedness. What I love in this poem is the way that the poet&#8217;s philosophical concerns are born out by its making: how the form enacts habits of mind&#8212;until, of course, it doesn&#8217;t&#8212;and, likewise, the music of its construction regulates tone, until it is subsumed by it.</p><p><strong>Vanessa Stauffer, <a href="https://amomentarystay.substack.com/p/things-seem-strong-by-jane-hirshfield">&#8220;Things Seem Strong&#8221; by Jane Hirshfield</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Earlier this week my middle son was surprised and even a bit indignant to discover that the words in English for <em>le compas</em> (which you use to draw a circle in maths) and <em>la boussole </em>(which you use to find which way is north) are the same. But aren&#8217;t they at least <em>pronounced </em>differently? he asked, crossly. I don&#8217;t use either kind of compass very often these days, though I do have to remember to <em>buy </em>the mathematical type depressingly often as for some reason it is the most frequently lost or broken element of the older boys&#8217; <em>fourniture scolaire</em> &#8212; the baroquely complex list of school supplies that French schools send you in mid-summer and which you have to assemble (and label) in time for the new school year. This is a ritual element of French family life, part of the preparation for the grand <em><a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/anticipating-nostalgia-back-to-school">rentr&#233;e</a> </em>at the start of September,<em> </em>and poorer families get a special grant to help with it.</p><p>We moved to France in the summer of 2021, when the older children were 6 and 8, so one of my first challenges was taking them to the vast &#8220;back-to-school&#8221; section of the nearest Monoprix, clutching two very long lists, in both of which I recognised, at best, about 50% of the vocabulary. The boys were already bilingual but only in the sense of chatting to their Dad and reading <em>Tintin</em>: they&#8217;d never been to school in France before and they didn&#8217;t have any more idea than I did of the difference between <em>pochettes</em> and <em>classeurs</em>, or paper that&#8217;s in <em>feuilles simples</em> rather than <em>feuilles doubles</em>, with <em>grands </em>or <em>petits carreaux</em> &#8212; though they were naturally very anxious <em>not </em>to turn up at a new school in a new country with all the wrong kit. As a result the whole thing was a bit stressful. Much as I love a good vocabulary challenge, I remember feeling literally dizzy in the aisles &#8212; though that might also have been because I was in fact already pregnant with the next one.</p><p><em>Le compas</em>, though, was one word I did recognise, and because I read Jonson pretty much continuously for five years or so in my 20s, I can never think of a compass without remembering that for him it was the perfect emblem of a life well lived:</p><blockquote><p>Stand forth my Object, then, you that have been<br>Ever at home; yet have all Countries seen:<br>And like a Compass, keeping one Foot still<br>Upon your Center, do your Circle fill<br>Of general Knowledge; watch&#8217;d Men, Manners too,<br>Heard what times past have said, seen what ours do:</p></blockquote><p>These lines are from his epistle to John Selden in <em>Underwoods, </em>and they draw upon a common Renaissance emblem of the compass as an image of <em>labor et constantia</em> &#8212; an ethically ideal combination of wide-ranging effort and psychological constancy. Jonson&#8217;s verse letters, by the way, are both a triumph and a lasting consolation &#8212; I wrote about why I love this aspect of Jonson so much in <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/when-i-am-down-at-hackney-brook">this piece</a> last year.</p><p><strong>Victoria Moul, <a href="https://vamoul.substack.com/p/love-and-compasses">Love and compasses</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>A funky used bookstore. A local coffee shop. The living room of a brownstone with people on the floor and homemade biscuits in the next room. A little bar that has jazz musicians ready to start after the poets are done. An art studio. Another small bar with cozy tables and a little stage (that from the outside looks like it&#8217;s not even open.) Another bar with neon pinball decorations. A small local theater. A brewery. These are just a few of the places I have read or have attended a reading in the past year.</p><p>Like most writers since the pandemic, I have consumed and participated in most of my poetry readings online, but there&#8217;s something about a live reading that cannot be replicated online. Don&#8217;t get me wrong, I LOVE the availability and scope that online events provide, the exposure and access to so many writers that would be geographically impossible to achieve otherwise. It&#8217;s why I love to curate <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@ahundredpitchersofhoneyrea8442">A Hundred Pitchers of Hone</a>y and why I&#8217;m a regular listener to many other series.</p><p>But a real live reading, even to just a handful of people, creates a different kind of magic. You can see and hear people respond in the audience. You can connect eye to eye with someone while reading and/or listening. You can appreciate the unplanned laughter or appreciation from a reader&#8217;s remarks and demeanor. But one of my favorite parts of being a part of live readings is meeting poets/curators I have never met IRL and being exposed to their work.</p><p>For example, as an audience member, I recently attended my first Neon Nights reading in Chicago, curated by <a href="https://open.substack.com/users/3766575-benjamin-niespodziany?utm_source=mentions">Benjamin Niespodziany</a>, a celebration of Johannes Goransson&#8217;s translation of Aase Berg&#8217;s <em>Aase&#8217;s Death</em> from Black Ocean featuring Johannes and Black Ocean editor Carrie Olivia Adams (and curator of <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poetryandbiscuits">Poetry &amp; Biscuits</a>), Nathan Hoks, Paul Cunningham, and Hedgie Choi. I had heard Hedgie&#8217;s work before and love her book award-winning book <em>Salvage, </em>and I have long admired the work of Johannes and Carrie and have attended and read for Carrie&#8217;s series in her lovely home But I hadn&#8217;t heard Johannes or Carrie read from their work before, nor was I familiar with the other readers. The evening was full of surprises &#8211; Ben&#8217;s intros which include fictional erasure bios, Nathan fashioning antlers from sticks onto his glasses in honor of reading from Aase&#8217; Berg&#8217;s <em>With Deer, </em>Hedgie turning in a circle each time she ended a poem. Everyone was at ease.</p><p><strong>Donna Vorreyer, <a href="https://donnavorreyer.substack.com/p/irl">IRL</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Also, I&#8217;m suddenly obsessed with &#8211;</p><p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Half-Finished-Heaven-Poems-Tomas-Transtr%C3%B6mer/dp/1555973515">The Half-Finished Heaven by Tomas Transomer, translated by Robert Bly</a><br>Everytime I love a poet in translation, I inevitably hear from someone that I am reading the VERY WORST translation &#8211; so if I am, let me know. Actually, I like to read poets in multiple translations and see which one I like best.<br>Read &#8220;<a href="http://janushead.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Transtromer.pdf">The Bookcase&#8221; </a>on page 4 (I am sorry I could not lift this from the internet somewhere- but this is a good link!). I have been thinking about this poem for weeks. First off, a prose poem &#8211; those I read less often than the lineated variety &#8211; but also the breath on the glass&#8230; ah it is so good! So please stop reading this and go read that, it is much better than anything I have to say here.</p><p><strong>Renee Emerson, <a href="https://reneeemerson.substack.com/p/snow-books-fullmetal-alchemist-theo">Snow Books, Fullmetal Alchemist, Theo of Golden, Time of the Child, &amp; more</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>&#8220;A translation,&#8221; I thought as I&#8217;d paused on the ski trail to catch my breath and look around, listen around. (No sound. No birdsong, no human sound: no gear shift or metal grind or churn of airplane overhead.) I looked up. A complex skeleton of tree overhead, each limb outlined in thick white. A translation of a tree, those thick white lines underscored by thin lines of black beneath. A white tree version of the damp-black tree beneath, a bit cumbersome, a bit heavy, but beautiful, the two kinds of lines living together. I love side-by-side translations, love to eyeball the disparate marks between the two, to see how the translator handled the line break, the punctuation. Love to examine the original for repeating words or ideographs or glyphs. When they live side by side on a page or set of pages, the original and the translation can reside like limb and snowshade.</p><p>I may be flirting with the limits of free use here, but I&#8217;ve just had such an enjoyable time poking through Wickerwork, poems by Christian Lehnert, translated by Richard Sieburth, published by Archipelago Books, 2022, and messed around with by me, with help from a certain unmentionable online translation program, and some German-English dictionaries. Again, I realize, given Lehnert&#8217;s interest and careful attention to form, rhythm, and rhyme, I am guilty of the treason of translation. Sieburth&#8217;s translations are perfectly fine. I mean no disrespect to this lovely volume. It&#8217;s just that I poked around and found some little gems in the language that delighted me. So. Here are two more poems from this intriguing collection, and the results of my meddling.</p><p><strong>Marilyn McCabe, <a href="https://marilynonaroll.wordpress.com/2026/02/02/der-nebelgang/">der Nebelgang</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>At a recent translation slam, three translators read their remarkably different translations of the same passage of prose in Ukrainian, each explaining their process and choices. All three were faithful to the original. None made anything up. And yet each translation had a distinct sound, rhythm, and feel. Prompted by a question from the audience, one translator likened the practice of translation to a dance. The voice of the text, she explained, is what activates the emotion, energy, and movement of words and sentences in translation, what guides her in delivering the author&#8217;s intention and text&#8217;s meaning.</p><p>The audience of translators, writers, and readers nodded in unison and for me, as a bit of all three plus a social salsa dancer, her analogy had special resonance. It echoed the playful negotiation between rules and artistry, the formal steps and the ways dancing bodies interpret them. Though the translator was speaking about what it feels like to translate, the metaphor applied just as well to the experience of reading translated literature. Reading a story in translation is like being pulled into a dance by a poised, mysterious stranger&#8212;the translator&#8212;inviting us to follow their lead into an unknown.</p><p>When I first moved from the drills of salsa class onto a real dance floor&#8212;loud music, no talking, no step-count chants&#8212;I could only surrender to the rhythm and attune to my partner&#8217;s cues. To enjoy the dance I had to both pay attention and give into abandon. Neither myself nor my partner knew ahead of time how the dance would go, but we were willing to be in it together, trusting that wherever it took us&#8212;whether seamless compatibility or, more likely, awkward steps salvaged from a mortifying fall by clumsy grasps at each other&#8217;s bodies&#8212;it would be an adventure.</p><p>Translated literature guides me into inhabiting not only inner worlds of people, places, and cultures I know little or nothing about, but different ways of organizing thoughts and ideas. It makes me experience the words of a language I know&#8212;its order, sounds, and textures&#8212;in unfamiliar ways I might otherwise overlook when reading the smooth, intuitive syntax of a native speaker.</p><p><strong>Bergita Bugarija, <a href="https://litmagnews.substack.com/p/the-beautiful-dance-of-literary-translation">The Beautiful Dance of Literary Translation</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Today&#8217;s Poem by Babette Deutsch (1895&#8211;1982), taken from her 1925 second collection, <em>Honey Out of the Rock</em>, feels in some ways like a poem we&#8217;ve seen before. Or if not exactly that, it feels of a piece with a kind of poem we&#8217;ve come to identify with women poets of the 1920s: brief, imagistic, lyric, and characterized by what Elinor Wylie identified as a &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-velvet-shoes?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">small clean technique</a>.&#8221; If we were going to identify a school of women poets of this era, we might well call it the Small Clean School and include in it not only Wylie, but also Sara Teasdale, whose &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-there-will-be-stars?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">There Will Be Stars</a>&#8221; we&#8217;ve recently examined as an exemplar of this minimalist technique.</p><p>While these poets don&#8217;t absolutely eschew events relayed chronologically, as narrative, (see Teasdale&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-summer-night-riverside?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">Summer Night, Riverside</a>&#8221; and &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-a-winter-blue-jay?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">A Winter Bluejay</a>,&#8221; for example), their defining concern is with the isolation of a particular moment, suspended outside time &#8212; though even that suspension may be transient or illusory. The context of Wylie&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-a-crowded-trolley-car?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">A Crowded Trolley Car</a>&#8221; is, as the title suggests, a trolley, moving from stop to stop in a linear progression. Yet once the clanging bell and the swaying of the car are dispensed with, that movement never again intrudes on the view of hands clutching the rail and the omniscient speaker&#8217;s meditation on what those hands reveal. Time stills; its movements are of no concern. What matters is the image of each hand and the associations that unfold from it.</p><p>Deutsch&#8217;s own technique shares both Wylie&#8217;s predilection for imagistic miniatures and Teasdale&#8217;s intimations of rapture. But where Teasdale&#8217;s joys <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-blue-squills-01f?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">verge on pain</a>, Deutsch&#8217;s literary persona &#8212; as we&#8217;ve previously seen in her 1919 poem, &#8220;<a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-silence?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">Silence</a>&#8221; &#8212; seems, to a great extent, genuinely and generatively open to happiness. It&#8217;s easy to think of happiness as inimical to art, or even to interest: &#8220;Happy families are all alike,&#8221; and so forth. It&#8217;s easy to think of the definitive bitterness of Edna St. Vincent Millay and Dorothy Parker, as well as the veiled despair of Sara Teasdale, and to forget that some women of the same generation were relatively happy in love, did not live their lives continually on a precipice, and declined to nurse a continual state of regret as energy source and fodder for art. And those women &#8212; <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-austerity?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">Janet Loxley Lewis</a> and <a href="https://open.substack.com/pub/poemsancientandmodern/p/todays-poem-with-child?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&amp;utm_medium=web">Genevieve Taggard</a>, for example, as well as Babette Deutsch &#8212; made good art.</p><p><strong>Joseph Bottum, <a href="https://poemsancientandmodern.substack.com/p/todays-poem-ballet-school">Today&#8217;s Poem: Ballet School</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p><strong>Greetings Dr. Vaishnavi Pusapati. Thank you for taking the time to do this interview. Let&#8217;s start with your background. Where did you grow up in India? What was the landscape like? What kind of wildlife did you see there? What was one of your favorite experiences in Nature as a child?</strong></p><p>Thank you so much for having me. I have been reading the Haiku Poet interviews for a long while now and it has introduced me to many poets I admire in the haiku community.</p><p>I grew up in many states such as Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Telangana, among others, sometimes changing cities within the same state. I currently reside in Bangalore in Karnataka state. The landscapes I grew up in were like sand dunes, always changing, and I witnessed the uniform loss of nature in the face of fast urbanization.</p><p>The first two places I grew up in were beach towns, and there is a certain awareness of nature in that. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Hokusai">Hokusai</a>&#8217;s paintings of the wave must have come from a reverence of a natural place when residence changes to resonance and belonging. I believe the rhythm of the wave was internalized for me, then.</p><p>The wildlife was flame of the forest, coconut groves and Ashoka trees, bougainvillea, poison ivy, bee hives, barnacles on oars, woodpeckers, ant hills, mushrooms, shallow ponds, old wells with tadpoles and lily pads, scurrying squirrels, wasp nests, occasional monkeys, weaver birds, parrots, butterflies, abandoned pets, migratory birds, a lot of pigeons, and a few sparrows.</p><p>Then, when we moved to the northern arid areas, it was sad to see the occasional tree, the dry wells, and thinning rivers. I saw the concrete and glass buildings begin to take over the silhouette of old sleeping cities, the slow stripping away of individualism of a place, and the sprouting of matchbox apartments.</p><p>My favorite adventure into nature was to the mountains in Ooty where I touched a cloud for the first time and watched it dissipate and saw my first waterfall. [&#8230;]</p><p><strong>When and how did you discover haiku and Japanese poetry forms?</strong></p><p>When I started writing poetry seriously, I was searching for a form that resonates with my minimalism and the themes I find myself most comfortable with. Then, I chanced upon online haiku journals. My initial haiku were no good, without that haiku moment or the technique, but it was a fun way to write, much like having a conversation with nature. The draw was perhaps the scale of the ambition, intentional refrain, and the insistence on not having a title or rhyme but rather aiming for musicality. It was radical and non-anthropocentric, an antithesis to everything I believed poetry to be. Reading contemporary haiku really helped me advance. I did not expect to write more than a few, alongside my longer forms, but I have found a routine of attempting to write haiku frequently. The haiku sequence form, or linked haiku, is an enticing hook, too. The other Japanese forms came much later and although I read them, haiku remains ideal in my poetic approach.</p><p><strong>Jacob D. Salzer, <a href="https://haikupoetinterviews.wordpress.com/2026/02/01/vaishnavi-pusapati/">Vaishnavi Pusapati</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Addiction is not romanticised, the addict knows she&#8217;s abusing herself and it&#8217;s not a solution even if it brings temporary relief. However, it is also buying her time to fix and work on herself. The first step there is to accept that the speaker now has to become the parent she wanted as a girl and parent herself into an adulthood where she gives herself the permission to feel and emote which she should have had as a child.</p><p>[Bonnie] Tobias uses plain, pared back, stripped down language to reflect the place she had to start from. A minimal place free of distractions where no euphemistic phrases were allowed to gloss over the problems that were being avoided. A place where emotions can be expressed and acknowledged instead of buried. A place of safety but not dishonesty. At its heart that&#8217;s what &#8220;about this&#8221; focuses on. How emotionally neglected children have to adjust to adulthood without the confident and support from parents. Its plain speaking may lack poeticisms, but it underlines authenticity and emotional honesty.</p><p><strong>Emma Lee, <a href="https://emmalee1.wordpress.com/2026/01/28/about-this-bonnie-tobias-warren-publishing-book-review/">&#8220;about this&#8221; Bonnie Tobias (Warren Publishing) &#8211; book review</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>I like the mandala of everything in a poem, the leaching in, the leaking on, the letting out, the marginalia, the parts that don&#8217;t fit, the honouring of non-story, of no-conclusion, of clustering bits, of oblique, of pointing at wonder and neutrality and grief in everything.</p><p>If no pattern, why gather, why present it?</p><p>But there&#8217;s white matter connecting under. It is not as obvious as a true or false sonnet or multiple choice haiku, or an isolate mood or depiction of diorama of traipsing a crying figure along a seashore.</p><p>It is open to inference instead of deduction. invitation to look together instead of echo each other.</p><p>It&#8217;s another kind of reportage, reflection, assembly of things that hang together and matter in a similar inclusive ample way.</p><p>What draws suspense through a poem&#8217;s frame?</p><p><strong>Pearl Pirie, <a href="https://pearlpirie.com/blog/2026/01/28/further/">Further</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The poem must do more than complete or fulfill: it must <em>defy</em> the given order that makes us feel comfortable. Or secure.</p><p>More than anything, we want to feel safe, and <em>secure in that</em> feeling.</p><p>Our sense of security warms its feet by a fire that thinks it knows what needs to be known. Warmed by prediction and the coziness of predictability, we reify contingent things as if they are known and graspable. But what exists is always in dialogue with what may be otherwise. Poetry knows this better than prose, I think.</p><p>To quote Dean [Young] again:</p><blockquote><p>To be only comprehensible is to be fully known is to be already seen, predictable. The next poem must shake us, must wake us, must entice us toward the denied, the disallowed. It is what wasn&#8217;t. Someone had erased a YES out of the charcoal Nos. The new is always scrawled over the old. Anything fully known offers us no site of entry, no site of escape, no site of desire. In the morning we mistook the roofers on the hill for flames. Desecration is the mix of opposites, that field of contact, the tear that draws us. [&#8230;] Some of them chased each other, some of them fell to the ground. Coyote vanished into the smoke. The clash of the seen with the unseen, the broken seam, the unmasked with the masking that amazes us, sticky-out red thing, outrages and liberates us, embodies possibility.</p></blockquote><p>This possibility inheres in each word. Increasingly, the word &#8220;content&#8221; appears as noun that designates slop or world-salad spliced by the energy of bots. I miss the gist of light happiness of in it, miss the absence of <em>contentedness</em> as a cultural frame of reference, miss the slower pace of time prior to the hustle-economy.</p><p>And I was made even more of this missing in Washington DC last week, with only a few hours to spend exploring the National Gallery of Art, trying to find a place to squat and scribble notes in my notebook.</p><p>&#8220;I think one could spend one&#8217;s life having this desire to be in and outside at the same time,&#8221; said Willem de Kooning, &#8220;content as a glimpse.&#8221;</p><p><em>Content as a glimpse</em>&#8212; yes. This is the content I dearly miss.</p><p>The idea must be unfixed from its iconostasis. One must <em>unhinge</em> it a bit.</p><p><strong>Alina Stefanescu, <a href="https://www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2025/12/2/stills-7lync">&#8220;To comprehend is to complicate.</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><blockquote><p><strong>&#26408;&#34030;&#12398;<br>&#33853;&#12385;&#12367;&#12384;&#12369;&#12354;&#12426;<br>&#23490;&#20809;&#22303;</strong><br>&#65288;&#24029;&#31471;&#33541;&#33293;&#65289;</p></blockquote><p>Petals falling all at once<br>&#8212;Magnolia flowers<br>Reborn in the Pure Land</p><p>&#8212;Kawabata B&#333;sha (&#24029;&#31471;&#33541;&#33293;, 1897&#8211;1941)<br><br><strong>&#26408;&#34030;&#12398; Magnolia flowers<br>&#33853;&#12385;&#12367;&#12384;&#12369;&#12354;&#12426; petals falling apart completely<br>&#23490;&#20809;&#22303; the land of Quiescent Light</strong><br><em>Mokuren no / ochi-kudake ari / jakk&#333;-do</em></p><p>It&#8217;s hard to capture in English what this poem conveys about magnolia petals falling. Unlike sakura blossoms, for example, that scatter on the wind like snowflakes&#8212;sometimes floating away in great clouds&#8212;magnolia petals fall heavily and directly, &#8220;falling&#8221; not &#8220;scattering,&#8221; more like peonies. Their descent feels deliberate and weighty. You could almost hear them land. Thud.</p><p>What is so brilliant about this poem is how it evokes the seeming <em>willfulness</em> of their descent. As if the flower had undergone spiritual training like a Buddhist anchorite walling himself up to await death with perfect resolution. Climbing up a tree or tower to pray. Or sitting in meditation like Daruma until his legs and arms and eyelids fell off&#8212;an admirable commitment to self-cultivation.</p><p>My writing mentor says, &#8220;the writer is the last person standing.&#8221; Perseverance and resolution are everything.</p><p>Magnolias, ancient like conifers and waterlilies, must be tenacious indeed, since they&#8217;ve been around since Tyrannosaurus was traipsing around in forests filled with ferns.</p><p>In Tendai Buddhism, <em>jakk&#333;do</em> (&#23490;&#20809;&#22303;) refers to the &#8220;Pure Land of Still and Radiant Light,&#8221; the highest paradise where Buddhas reside. I love how this poem entangles human emotions with flowers&#8212;As the Nirvana Sutra teaches, all beings have a Buddha nature. In just seventeen syllables, you feel the flowers striking out on their path toward becoming a Buddha.</p><p><strong>Leanne Ogasawara, <a href="https://dreaminginjapanese.substack.com/p/magnolia-flowers">Magnolia flowers</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>It follows us like a shadow, dragging its roots along&#8212;this garden.</p><p>It&#8217;s there behind us in the coffee line, at our workstation,</p><p>beside us when we&#8217;re looking in the bathroom mirror, scrutinizing our appearance.</p><p>In bed at 3 AM, it hogs the covers.</p><p><strong>Rich Ferguson, <a href="https://richrantblog.wordpress.com/2026/01/30/the-garden-that-follows/">The Garden That Follows</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>when others were in bed,<br>i would go to chew ice in the kitchen.<br>groaning mechanism. bowls &amp; bowls.<br>all kinds of feast. no one ever caught me.<br>i learned to take only what will<br>not be missed. the ice maker, refilling<br>before anyone else was awake. water coming<br>&amp; going. the rain on the roof. barefoot july<br>eating a hole through the wall. now, i still<br>keep a mouthful of the cold. bite down<br>harder. years of practice. they think<br>i am scared of creatures that eat our flesh<br>but i eat bone. i devour the cold.</p><p><strong>Robin Gow, <a href="https://robingow.com/2026/01/31/1-31-5/">ice maker</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>The other day, we noticed a coyote limping down the meadow. We hear them now and then, at night, but we seldom see them; and this one was out at noontime. A bit unusual. I felt concerned about it as it moved off into the undergrowth at the field&#8217;s edge.</p><p>Out of curiosity, I guess, the next day I traced its tracks from the treeline between our property and the next one, down through our meadow, into the woods beyond our lot. [&#8230;]</p><p>The average cat weighs 10-12 pounds, the average red fox 30-ish pounds, and eastern coyotes in our region can be 45-55 pounds. This one was, I think, a male because it left quite heavy tracks, though possibly it was putting more weight on three legs because the front right paw was injured badly enough it never set that paw down. I recall once when our family dog got caught in a neighbor&#8217;s &#8220;soft-paw&#8221; fox trap. As soon as I got her loose, she ran for the house, and I noticed her prints in the snow&#8211;three heavy prints and a lighter one since she was favoring one foot. This coyote wasn&#8217;t using its leg <em>at all</em>. In a few places I could see a swash on the snow surface where the snow was deep enough that the coyote&#8217;s foot had skimmed it. The circuit led into the woods and I pressed no further.</p><p>That&#8217;s about the extent of my animal-tracking knowledge. It was, however, an interesting departure from my usual winter walk, and a nice day for walking. Everyone else in the county was out buying gasoline and groceries because a big storm was in the forecast for the weekend. Which did arrive (the storm, I mean. Well, also the weekend.).</p><p>I&#8217;ve been working on new poem drafts lately, after weeks of barely any new writing, focusing on revision instead. What do you bet that coyote, or its tracks, or at very least, the snow, will show up in at least one new draft?</p><p><strong>Ann E. Michael, <a href="https://annemichael.blog/2026/01/27/tracks/">Tracks</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>Heaps of snow on the chaise longues <br>are body shaped. Aha! There lie the outsiders<br>who live outside. Others, unwanteds, the ones <br>they now see, are said to be among us. <br>If only we knew who the &#8220;we&#8221; is.</p><p>If only shadows didn&#8217;t seem doomed. <br>The drip-drip of the faucet, shoe-sized. <br><br>They can&#8217;t even let the full moon off the hook.</p><p><strong>Jill Pearlman, <a href="https://blog.jillpearlman.com/?p=3646">UltraViolet Night</a></strong></p></blockquote><div><hr></div><blockquote><p>We try to gather our</p><p>courage into kindling:<br>speaking and naming,<br>watching and witnessing.<br>We know we can hold</p><p>silence and words in<br>the same hand, that knees<br>can sing on the hard<br>streets packed</p><p>with snow. The child<br>sleeps with his mouth open.<br>Look at that kind of trust<br>his body still has.</p><p><strong>Luisa A. Igloria, <a href="https://www.vianegativa.us/2026/01/the-child-sleeps/">The Child Sleeps</a></strong></p></blockquote>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>