Calgary names Clara A. B. Joseph as its new poet laureate
Calgary has announced its new poet laureate: University of Calgary English professor Clara A. B. Joseph, who has published several poetry collections and books.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/calgary-poet-laureate-named-clara-joseph-9.7180060?cmp=rss

Six American Poets

Daily writing prompt What book could you read over and over again? View all responses

For all the media I’ve consumed over the years, and from what I’ve talked about on this blog about what raindrops from the zeitgeist I keep catching on my tongue, one collection of poetry jumps up in my brain when I saw this question. That collection is Six American Poets. The poets included in this collection are Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Langston Hughes, Robert Frost, William Carlos Williams, and Wallace Stevens.

You can find that collection on Amazon right here

I’ve always enjoyed poetry. At this point in my life I’d call myself a poet. I write poems every week, nearly every day, and I’ve been published enough times to claim this label for myself, despite my midwestern background telling me I shouldn’t ever celebrate any accomplishment. Maybe that could be my self-loathing upbring? Lack of emotional validation when I was kid? All of it perhaps. Pick a card, there are plenty.

Anyways, prose and narrative sort of hit the same beats for me over and over again. Once I experience the story, I often don’t need to go back to it. I mean have on certain books, but they’re pretty seldom. I have my emotional crutches of shows, books, movies, that I rewatch when all my depression and anxiety roars and tumbles within me. Reexperiencing media repeatedly can be a coping mechanism for emotional stress.

Overflowing on that inventory.

I was given this book back in college at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. I was in a class called Textual Analysis Methods, and we thoroughly explored this book in every facet of analysis. My professor at the time had just come from Harvard. He was utterly passionate about examining literature, and he implored us to not only write in our books and not resell them, but to also employee a found writing notebook, where we wrote down stuff that inspired us. This could be a quote from Homer Simpson or a favorite line by Langston Hughes. I still have a found notebook today. It is sitting just a foot away from me while I write this blog post. This has built me up as a writer in countless different ways.

However, the found notebook is a whole different blog post.

When I reread this collection of poets, I see my original notes as the goofy English major who thought he was going to change the world. It brings me joy to see that I still have the same aspirations now as I did back then, despite a myriad of successes and failures in my personal and professional life. I’m brought back to walking across the bridge between campuses, flirting with other writers and poets at parties in crowded dorm rooms, or spoking cigarettes outside Lind Hall arguing with people about using rhyme scheme or free verse.

Nostalgia isn’t the only reason I go back to this book, but it is simply the quality and diversity of voices within this collection. It a wholesale trip through American history in the form of these poets. Each one is different, unique, and represents a different period of time within America. As an American, I am curious about our inherited identity. I do wonder about where I come from. America from my own POV is very much of an experiment. We’re a sort of orphan, forced to raise ourselves in the shadow of older civilizations and nations with stronger historical identities.

Now of course the collection could stand to be more diverse (one woman, one black man out of the group), but the range of voices is still a bit of wonderment. The nature infused rhyme scheme of Frost. The ghostly wanderings of Emily Dickson. The meditative role of identity by Hughes. The precision of William Carlos Williams. The lullaby flow of Walt Whitman. And my person favorite, the bits of imagination and randomness from Wallace Stevens unique diction. Each poet offers a staggeringly good snapshot into their individual style, and why they’re legendary in the halls of American poetry. I have read this collection a ridiculous amount of times, to the point that the plastic is separating from the paper cover.

So yeah, besides my personal relation to the book, this is just a great collection. For any writer for any genre, I implore studying and reading what made these poets standout.

I could read this book everyday and still find something new.

#author #blogging #books #dailyprompt #dailyprompt1902 #fantasy #favoriteBooks #fiction #horror #monsters #patrickWMarsh #poems #poet #Poetry #poetryCollections #theGreenlandDiaries #writing
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The acknowledgments in the preface to Thomas Hardy’s “Poems of the Past and the Present” (1901)

In his Preface to "Poems of the Past and the Present" (1901), Thomas Hardy thanks "the editors and proprietors" of a long list of publications "for permission to reprint from their pages" poems they had previously published. At least in the United States, this is now a conventional statement for

111 Words
Poetry Collection Awards: More Opportunities Than You Think

Hannah Jacobson outlines the range of award opportunities available to poetry collections and how poets can find the right fit.

The Self-Publishing Advice Center
On Writing and Anthologizing Poems

Award-winning author and bestselling editor of poetry anthologies James Crews discusses his process for writing and anthologizing poems.

Writer's Digest

On Writing and Anthologizing Poems

Award-winning author and bestselling editor of poetry anthologies James Crews discusses his process for writing and anthologizing poems.
The post On Writing and Anthologizing Poems appeared first on Writer's Digest.
https://www.writersdigest.com/on-writing-and-anthologizing-poems

#WriteBetterPoetry #anthologies #Anthology #PoetryCollections #WritingPoetry

On Writing and Anthologizing Poems

Award-winning author and bestselling editor of poetry anthologies James Crews discusses his process for writing and anthologizing poems.

Writer's Digest

Today, I’m sharing my top ten poetry collections reads—the ones that made me feel something, think differently, or just stuck around in the back of my mind long after I turned the last page. #poetry #recommendations #poems #bookloversunited #poetrylovers #toptenlist #poetrycollections

https://thepagesof.wordpress.com/2025/05/14/top-ten-poetry-collections-you-dont-want-to-miss/

Top Ten Poetry Collections You Don’t Want to Miss

Today, I’m sharing my top ten poetry collections reads—the ones that made me feel something, think differently, or just stuck around in the back of my mind long after I turned the last page.

Between The Pages of a Book

"As winter loses its grip, nature awakens, making it a season of rebirth and transformation. It mirrors the essence of poetry itself, where emotions bloom, ideas take root, and stories unfold like delicate spring leaves." #bookrecommendations #poetrycollections #booksandauthors #books

https://thepagesof.wordpress.com/2025/04/20/book-review-of-the-month-april-2025/

Book Review of the Month: April 2025

“As winter loses its grip, nature awakens, making it a season of rebirth and transformation. It mirrors the essence of poetry itself, where emotions bloom, ideas take root, and stories unfold…

Between The Pages of a Book
📚January 2025 recap📚

I read eight books in January: one cyberpunk eARC, three science fiction novels, one poetry collection, one fantasy debut from last year, one science-fiction novella, and one ebook of a problematic classic.

💛💛💛🖤🖤 Nytho - Sheri Singerling
💛💛💛💛💛 Network Effect - Martha Wells
💛💛💛💛💛 System Collapse - Martha Wells
💛💛💛💛🖤 The Stardust Grail - Yume Kitasei
💛💛💛💛🖤 Blue Horses - Mary Oliver
💛💛💛💛🖤 So Let Them Burn - Kamilah Cole
💛💛💛💛💛 The Cybernetic Tea Shop - Meredith Katz
💛💛🖤🖤🖤 Breakfast at Tiffany’s - Truman Capote

I also read the short story ‘Counting Casualties’ by Yoon Ha Lee.

My husband and I finished watching the first season of ‘Only Murders in the Building’. We got caught up with the latest ‘Doctor Who,’ started watching season two of ‘The Apothecary Diaries’ and also started the first season of ‘Sakamoto Days’ as a family, and I watched season two of ‘The Rig’.

#bookreview #scifibooks #fantasybooks #poetrycollections #catsandbooks #booksandcats #readingbuddy #bookishcommunity #bookishcommunityuk
The power of poetry in the real world

 Most of the time when you start thinking about poems in art , you will ask yourself questions like these , do poems sharpen life ? Do poems...

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