Literary Love, Knausgaard’s Road Trip Through Russia, and More
Children’s publishing industry reckons with sexual harassment; Audre Lorde’s poetry of self-care; a call to protect the National Endowment for the Arts; and other news.
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Children’s publishing industry reckons with sexual harassment; Audre Lorde’s poetry of self-care; a call to protect the National Endowment for the Arts; and other news.
Poetry Out Loud offers high school students a new way of seeing the world.
The author of We Play a Game on the retreat in New York City.
The author of Shahid Reads His Own Palm on the retreat in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.
A London-based initiative works to collect and archive poems in endangered languages.
Split This Rock’s outgoing executive director on the intersection of poetry and politics, and the organization’s upcoming festival.
The author of Don’t Call Us Dead on the retreat in Austerlitz, New York.
A literary organization brings new life to Langston Hughes’s house in Harlem.
American Library Association announces winners of Newbery and Caldecott Medals; controversy over Francisco Cantú’s memoir; Washington Post launches best-seller list that accounts for Amazon data; and other news.
In one of the most famous cat poems published, “Jubilate Agno, Fragment B, [For I will consider my Cat Jeoffry],” eighteenth century English poet Christopher Smart uses anaphora (each sentence in the poem begins with the word, “for”) to thoroughly meditate upon his cat, Jeoffry. More recently, the poet Chen Chen borrowed this form for his own poem “For I Will Consider My Boyfriend Jeffrey.” This week, try joining the tradition by writing a poem with the same form that begins with the words: “For I will consider.” Use the form to explore the behaviors and characteristics of a beloved person or pet in your life.