Episoder
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I love this little love poem by Laura Cronk. It somehow serves as criticism of and appreciation for cats, as well as of the beloved, and of the differences between people generally.
Who among us hasn't known figures like these?I found it in the the Best American Poetry 2019 but you can seek out more of her work in her book
Having Been an Accomplice (Persea Books)
You can find out more about me and my books at www.mischawillett.com
Thank you for listening, and if you come across poems that you like or have suggestions that I should feature on the show, feel free to drop me an email via the contact page on my website.
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To learn more about Anna Akhmatova, you should read Clive James' essays, which are extremely convincing about her stature. This poem of hers was translated by one of my favorite poets of all time, Richard Wilbur.
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Mangler du episoder?
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Thomas Chatterton (1752-1770) wrote tons of moving and intelligent verse all before he was 20 years old. His life-story and scandal is worth investigating for sure, but move past it and actually read some of his Rowley poems. There is a reason the Romantics valued him so highly.
He is also known for the painting of his death by Henry Wallis, the Pre-Raphaelite, which hangs, if I remember correctly, in the Tate Britain and which is among the most moving of images in that whole treasure-horde.
More information about the reader can be found at his website: www.mischawillett.com -
A Lenten poem tracing the 40’s with humor, wit, and good faith from the lovely “Darwin’s Garden” from MoonTide Press.
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"Perilous to be on the street, among the congregations of the afflicted"
If ever there was a time for poems by the metaphysical physician Charles Simic, it's now, as #coronavirus has us all indoors or avoiding on another.
-from Charles Simic
Selected Early Poems
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Available in his Collected Poems: Broken Hierarchies
Oxford University Press, 2014
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Tupelo Press poet drops by the studio after a reading at Richard Hugo House. More information about the reader can be found at his website: www.mischawillett.com
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from "Elegy Owed"
Copper Canyon Press, 2014
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From Jennifer Maier's "Dark Alphabet" on Southern Illinois University Press, a book I recommend without reservation. Those long, interruptive clauses, the doubling, the gratitude!
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A poem about the bravery necessary to the artistic endeavor via c19 whaling practices. Featured in Jeremiah Webster's new book "After So Many Fires," available on Anchor and Plume Press.