…into my life as I read about the materials that the instruments weremade of – silk strings, skin, bamboo, bronze, wood, clay, stone, and gourd. They have no known musician,…
…And really, the only thing that’s ever really been is an opportunity to provide space so that community can come together and build its own organic, beautiful fuckin… Sounds so…
…that we’re really about community, and the gift of this place is its community. And I want to be in that gift-giving space with my colleagues, with our poets, who…
…but it always had this small, compared to other Indian metros. It’s not like the big Bombay or Delhi. It’s always considered the smaller city and I’ve never lived in…
…fact that we have recurring dreams, repetition, and that we often have them in common. (03:18): So I have it in common with myself. My packing dream is a variation…
…me come up with some kind of new ways to enter the poems and those things and our previous intern, Vero Silva, who’s just a absolutely fabulous human being wrote…
…And we were… So I was a weird combination of things. So I never actually saw my weird combination of what they call now, identities in any other literature. But…
…who come back, those who come back. And that was strictly sort of an oral lexical kind of just trouble I had with how there was something so compact and…
…of Occasional Poetry), Sonia Sanchez (Shake Loose My Skin: New and Selected Poems), Pulitzer Prize-winning poets Jericho Brown (The Tradition) and Tyehimba Jess (Olio), and many more.” Register here: https://www.eventbrite.
National Book Award finalist Alberto Ríos explains the world not through reason but magic. These poems—set in a town that straddles Sonora, Mexico and the state of Arizona—are lyric adventures,…
The Human Line startles with its precise detail, intimate images, and wild metaphors. Ellen Bass brings attention to life’s endearing absurdities, and many of the poems flash with a keen sense…
ββ[To] The Last [Be] Human collects four extraordinary poetry books—Sea Change, Place, Fast, and Runaway—by Pulitzer Prize winner Jorie Graham, presenting a body of work that stands as a “lyric…
Winner of the James Laughlin Award from the Academy of American Poets for the best second book of poems by an American poet, Brenda Shaughnessy’s Human Dark with Sugar revisits…
…Sarah Byrne during the course. COURSE REGISTRATION & BREAKDOWN OF SESSIONS: www.thewellreview.
…the National Book Critics Circle Award. Gander’s translations include Alice Iris Red Horse, Poems by Gozo Yoshimasu and Then Come Back: The Lost Neruda Poems. Matthew Zapruder is editor at large for Wave Books,…
…reads “Searching for the Ox” and “Catching the Ox” from The Disappearing Ox: https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Hyde-reads-from-The-Disappearing-Ox.
…the course. COURSE REGISTRATION & BREAKDOWN OF SESSIONS: www.thewellreview.
…human. Through the creative, succinct, and melodious use of language, poets render into words their joys, their challenges, their vulnerabilities, and their discoveries, thus providing shape and meaning to the…
“It’s a hard time to be human. We know too much and too little.” —Ellen Bass, from “The World Has Need of You” Dear Friends, After much deliberation, the team…
…included, let alone make space for intimate commentary on the role that poem has played in their own journey. The entries that comprise this anthology serve as micro-biographies of the…