"'Grief for Breakfast' was inspired by a conversation a friend and I had during the recent Black Lives Matter protests. We imagined a 'Black womxn paradise,' a place where we could exist free from grief. A place where we could love and be loved out loud. A place where we could reclaim agency over our bodies and our existence. This poem is an obverse—a poetic form created by the poet Nicole Sealey." Honora Ankong on "Grief for Breakfast: An Obverse" |
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17th Annual Palm Beach Poetry Festival January 18-23, 2021 We are pledged to create an extraordinary week of virtual poetry workshops and events for you in the safety of your home. Workshop Faculty: David Baker, Laure-Anne Bosselaar, Traci Brimhall, Eduardo C. Corral, Vievee Francis, Kevin Prufer, Martha Rhodes & Tim Seibles, and more! Apply today! |
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"Michael Kleber-Diggs Wins 2020 Max Ritvo Poetry Prize" Judge Henri Cole noted, "He gives voice to the experiences and aspirations of middle-class Black America, and though the promised land is faraway, he finds grace in the natural world, long marriage, and fathering. These supple, socially responsible poems seem to me a triumphant, paradoxical, luminous response to a violent time in our history." viaMILKWEED EDITIONS |
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| Poetry Daily stands with the Black community. We oppose racism, oppression, and police brutality. We will continue to amplify diverse voices in the poetry world. Black Lives Matter. |
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What Sparks Poetry: Brian Teare on "Star Thistle" "What is a weed in one cultural context is medicine or food in another; what is invasive in one ecosystem is native to another; and plants, like matter, as William James would wisely say, have no ideals. What I brought to the Star Thistle was what Adam Phillips in his marvelous book Darwin’s Worms would call the problem of grieving in a secular age." |
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