Miss Flynn reads “White Walls.” Tell us if this evokes any memories. #poetry #PoetryCommunity #poetrylovers #poetryreadings #spokenword

https://youtu.be/-TSxt17BLLo?si=TAc6vZ7G2gx6-UaM

“White Walls” read by Miss Flynn

YouTube

Miss Taylor reads “The Middle is the Juiciest,” a poem about coming to grips with
Aging. #poetry #poem #PoetryCommunity #poetrylovers #MILF #poetryreadings

https://youtu.be/mxYwOpWGKKw?si=RKMiq1M_Eq6J8Yb3

“The Middle is the Juiciest” read by Miss Taylor

YouTube
“Your Silence is my Shore” read by Miss January

YouTube

Miss January reads a poem about guilt, redemption and risk management — oh, and alligators too — “Saturday Morning at the Alligator Farm.” #poetry #PoetryCommunity #poetryreadings

https://youtu.be/iS4tNUDTSHA?si=MVxrJjFA-XFRsHAb

“Saturday Morning at the Alligator Farm” read by Miss January.

YouTube

Miss January reads “The Afternoon Proceeds without Incident.” Tell us what you think of this poem. #poetry #poetrylovers #PoetryCommunity #spokenword #poetryreadings

https://youtube.com/shorts/9CvufngXgZI?si=CicKLDZJV4_WKf6b

Before you continue to YouTube

Her Splendour's Might by Con J Cosby (aka me) ▪️ This the first of a monthly poetry reading series. Hope you all enjoy. 😊🙏 #HerSplendoursMight #MyPoem #MyPoetry #WrittenByMe #PoetryReading #PoetryReadings #ReadingPoetry #PoetryReel #PoetryVideo
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZNdhJKJGe/
TikTok - Make Your Day

Thanks for your interest in our #volunteer #voiceacting gigs! We had to close our applications due to the huge response (over 50 applicants in 24 hours!). When we're ready for more, we'll let folks know! Can't wait to celebrate your talent in our #fictionpodcasts #audiodramas #poetryreadings & more!
I had a great time in Jackson TN this week. It was fun to give a reading, getting ready for my next poetry collection, Tree Fall with Birdsong to enter the world on May 13! I'd love to do more #poetryreadings at community colleges, libraries, and bookstores while I"m on sabbatical this fall.

If you need some good reads, check out the offerings from #MockingOwlRoost! We've got #fiction, #poetry, #bookreviews, #deepdives, #essays, #creativenonfiction, #poetryreadings, #audiodramas, and much more - all for FREE on the blog and in our beautifully crafted #magazine! Enjoy!

https://shorturl.at/CRgiu

The MockingOwl Roost - an Art and Literary Magazine

The MockingOwl Roost is technically an art and literary magazine - but we love creative works of all kinds. Read, share, or submit today!

The MockingOwl Roost

"Several poetry-themed events will also take place in #PortlandMaine. On Wednesday, Bates College Professor Ian-Khara Ellasante and Portland’s Poet Laureate Maya Williams will speak and then featured poet Nathan McClain will share his work at a reading in the great hall of the Portland Museum of Art from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Then starting at 6 p.m. at the Maine Irish Heritage Center, Williams will moderate a poetry slam for poets 18 and younger to celebrate Juneteenth."

#Juneteenth: Poems of Reckoning & Resilience

"Please join the MWPA and the Portland Museum of Art as we honor the legacy and ongoing transformative force of Black America’s creativity, transcendency, and liberation in a Juneteenth poetry reading.

"Two well-loved local poets and Ashley Bryan Fellows, Bates College Professor #IanKharaEllasante and Portland’s Poet Laureate #MayaWilliams, will share their wisdom and wonder, and then our featured poet #NathanMcClain will share his unflinching and lyrical work.

"Multi-award winning poet John Murillo says, 'Nathan McClain's Previously Owned is no-nonsense, meat and potatoes, good gotdam poetry,' and Publisher Weekly calls McClain’s first book, Scale, 'atmospheric and graceful in its depiction of the steady ache that comes when absence permeates a life.'

"The reading is free and will take place in the Great Hall at the Portland Museum of Art."

https://www.mainepublic.org/community-calendar/event/juneteenth-poems-of-reckoning-resilience-21-05-2024-15-05-47

#Maine #JuneteenthEvents #AfricanAmerican #AfricanAmericans #Poetry #Poems #PoetryReadings #PoetrySlam

Juneteenth: Poems of Reckoning & Resilience

Please join the MWPA and the Portland Museum of Art as we honor the legacy and ongoing transformative force of Black America’s creativity, transcendency, and liberation in a Juneteenth poetry reading. Two well-loved local poets and Ashley Bryan Fellows, Bates College Professor Ian-Khara Ellasante and Portland’s Poet Laureate Maya Williams, will share their wisdom and wonder, and then our featured poet Nathan McClain will share his unflinching and lyrical work.<br/><br/>Multi-award winning poet John Murillo says, "Nathan McClain's Previously Owned is no-nonsense, meat and potatoes, good gotdam poetry,” and Publisher Weekly calls McClain’s first book, Scale, “atmospheric and graceful in its depiction of the steady ache that comes when absence permeates a life.” <br/><br/>The reading is free and will take place in the Great Hall at the Portland Museum of Art. <br/><br/>Nathan McClain is a poet, editor, and educator living in Amherst, Massachusetts. He is the author of Scale (Four Way Books, 2017) and Previously Owned (Four Way Books, 2022), and his poems and prose have recently appeared, or are forthcoming, in Poetry Northwest, Green Mountains Review, Poem-a-Day, The Common, The Critical Flame, and upstreet, among others. He is Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and African American Literary Arts at Hampshire College, and serves as Poetry Editor of The Massachusetts Review.<br/><br/>Maya Williams (ey/em, they/them, and she/her) is a religious Black multiracial nonbinary suicide survivor who is currently an Ashley Bryan Fellow and the seventh Poet Laureate of Portland, Maine . Maya's debut poetry collection, Judas & Suicide, is available through Game Over Books. And Maya's second poetry collection, Refused a Second Date, is available through Harbor Editions. She graduated with a community practice-focused Masters in Social Work and Certificate in Applied Arts and Social Justice at the University of New England in May 2018. She graduated with a Masters in Fine Arts for Creative Writing with a Focus in Poetry at Randolph College in June 2022.<br/><br/>Ian-Khara Ellasante (they/them) is a Black, queer, trans-nonbinary parent, partner, poet, and cultural studies scholar. Ian-Khara’s poetry has been published in We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics, Pipe Wrench, The Feminist Wire, Nat. Brut, Hinchas de Poesía, The Volta, Writing the Land: Maine, and From Root to Seed: Black, Brown, and Indigenous Writers Write the Northeast (forthcoming). Ian-Khara is a VONA alum whose awards and honors include the 2023 Cave Canem Fellowship, the New Millennium Award for Poetry, the Ashley Bryan Fellowship, and the Point Foundation Scholarship. Their critical writing, including the essay “Dear Trans Studies, Can You Do Love?,” has appeared in Transgender Studies Quarterly, Ethnic and Racial Studies, and Families in Society. Proudly hailing from Memphis, Ian-Khara has also loved living and writing in Tucson, Brooklyn, and most recently, in southern Maine, where they teach Gender and Sexuality Studies and Africana at Bates College.

Maine Public