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Best Poetry Blogs: A Baker's Dozen: Poetry Blogs Help Poets Expand the Horizons of Their Art
Boston Review — Stephen Burt: The New Thing
The object lessons of recent American poetry
Archives Hub: dom silvester houédard Papers
dom silvester houédard (1924-1992), or dsh, as he is correctly known, was a Benedictine monk of Prinknash Abbey, Gloucestershire who made significant contributions in many fields, including theology and poetry
Stoning the Devil: Uncategorizable: Jordan Stempleman's String Parade
I love the little twists and turns that Stempleman throws in, so that even though the feeling (of ambivalence and looking for solid "personal" ground to stand on) remains consistent, we are never quite sure what the next line will hold or where it will take us.
Home-Schooled By a Cackling Jackal
First of all, the inauguration wasn't about poetry, prayers, Yo Yo Ma or Aretha's big ass bow, it was about setting the new tone for the incoming administration and our country.
Haiku of Kobayashi Issa
Kobayashi Issa was one of Japan's most prolific poets. He left in his journals over twenty thousand one-breath poems—then called haikai but today known as haiku. This website offers an archive of 9,000 of these haiku.
TheStar.com | U.K. embraces Canadian's book about vowels
Eunoia – which means "beautiful thinking" and is the shortest English word to include all five vowels – became an unlikely hit in Canada after its 2001 publication by Toronto-based independent Coach House Books. The book is in its 21st printing here, having sold more than 20,000 copies, an extraordinary feat for a poetry collection. It also won the 2002 Griffin Poetry Prize.
Relics of the Material Age - David Bunn turns library catalogue into poetry1 - Bibliography | Art in America | Find Articles at BNET
The catalogue enables Bunn to narrate what he calls "a whole constellation of stories," some focused on a particular moment in time or a brief thread of plot, others conjuring the grand, seamless narrative of existence, without beginning or end, shape or evident purpose.
Fugitive Sparrows
Art by Zachary Sifuentes working with the poetry of Emily Dickinson and related material.
Des Imagistes
Des Imagistes was first published in the periodical The Glebe in 1914. It was reissued later in 1914 by The Poetry Bookshop in London and by Charles and Albert Boni in New York. This online edition is a transcription of the Boni edition.
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