Thought, Speech: Dialogue Without Quotation Marks
The author of Discipline (Random House, 2026) reflects on the value of blending interior and exterior language with less punctuation.
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Articles from Poet & Writers Magazine include material from the print edition plus exclusive online-only material.
The author of Discipline (Random House, 2026) reflects on the value of blending interior and exterior language with less punctuation.
“Every poem has work to do in the world, and recognition is the moment that the soul meets the poem it needs at that time.” —Beth Piatote, author of distant water
The author of Discipline (Random House, 2026) reflects on fusing points of view in fiction.
“I think every mistake or every moment of doubt is just part of the process.” —Douglas Stuart, author of John of John
“I had to become a different person in order to write the version of this book that readers will hold in their hands, and for a long time I wasn’t that person yet.” —Emma Copley Eisenberg, author of Fat Swim
The author of Unstuck: A Writer’s Guide (Tin House, April 2026) offers insight on how to make time for writing when it feels like there’s no time to spare.
“I’m looking for my honest response when my eyes first fall upon a poem.” —Bob Hicok, author of Breathe
The author of Unstuck: A Writer’s Guide (Tin House, April 2026) encourages writers to embrace being an amateur in all corners of their lives.
Scams targeting writers remain a threat, and Poets & Writers urges the literary community to be vigilant to avoid falling prey to scammers and frauds.
While writing a novel containing themes of sexual abuse, an author worked hard to earn and sustain her readers’ trust, which was reciprocated by readers in the form of unexpected, personal disclosures at launch events.
A celebrated memoirist considers why putting pen to paper can be so emotionally taxing—and what the rewards are when we persist.
Write a poem using a variety of sounds to convey complex feelings, a story in which the setting reveals the mindset of a character, or a portrait of your life using overheard, seen, or invented language as it occurs throughout your day.
The new executive director and CEO of Little Free Library discusses the power of community organizing and the importance of championing banned and diverse books.
The poet Alan Chazaro highlights journals that have published his poems, which meditate on the “physical and social dimensions” of space.
Founded in 2010 at Indiana University in South Bend, 42 Miles Press publishes “stirring, daring” poetry and encourages authors to submit work they “might be afraid to send elsewhere.”
Poets gather in Black Mountain, North Carolina, to reflect on our climate-changed world.
The first lines of a dozen noteworthy books, including Hungered by Amanda Rizkalla and I Was Bonnie & Clyde by Laura Kasischke.
New Directions, Fitzcarraldo Editions, and Giramondo partner for a new translated poetry prize, connecting literary communities across the globe.
As the California College of the Arts prepares to shut down in spring 2027, students and faculty at the state’s oldest private arts school are left in the lurch.
As the onslaught of scams and schemes targeting the writing community continues, one writer who nearly fell for an e-mail scam herself offers advice and a step-by-step guide to avoid falling prey to the bots.
The author of Best Copy Available takes a close look at the Anthropic copyright settlement and unpacks the ruling of fair use after the company amassed a library of over seven million books to build and train its large language model.
The author of Middlemen: Literary Agents and the Making of American Fiction reveals how every debut author’s dream of landing an agent is matched by the hunger of every young agent to land a successful debut and establish themselves.
The Morgan Library & Museum illuminates the poet John Ashbery’s artistic and personal influences through an exhibition of manuscripts and twenty-five works on paper.
A quick guide to forty of the most inspiring prizes for short work, environmental writing, work by older writers, and works-in-progress.
Writers including CJ Hauser, Nancy Jooyoun Kim, Uttama Patel, and Ethan Rutherford reflect on the quieter wins that have affirmed them as writers, with or without a medal or trophy.