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Tag Archives: Poet

Celebrating Michelle Bonczek’s New Chapbook

05 Friday Apr 2013

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2013, amazon, art, award, Bonczek, books, Chapbook, entertainment, Internet, literature, mentor, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, writers, Writing

81MN5omo2FL._SL1500_Michelle Bonczek, Poet’s Billow editor and poetry mentor, is celebrating the release of her new chapbook The Art of the Nipple (Orange Monkey Publishing, 2013), and we are celebrating with her. Pick up a copy if you would like to support and read some great poetry.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0615758266

Interview with Poets Billow Editors on Doutrope

21 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, writers, Writing

Doutrope has posted their interview with The Poets Billow editors Michelle Bonczek and Robert Evory on their website. Get a behind the scenes look at how we run our poetry competitions, who our favorite writers are, and what our judging process is like.

Link to the Interview

Interview with Francine Witte

14 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, loss of memory, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, surreal image, writers, Writing

Your poem “Breaking Sky,” which won the 2012 Atlantis Award, opens with an imaginary, surreal image and progresses into the tangible, real world of birth and death. The tone shifts from something that at first seems playful and distant into an elegy for the speaker’s mother and loss of memory. How did this poem develop for you in the writing process itself? Did you know that the poem was moving toward the death of a mother? Or is it something that surprised you in the process itself?

I’m not really sure how the poem “started” in my head, but yes, this sudden appearance by my mother does happen often when I’m writing.  My mother’s slip into dementia was one of the most stunning occurrences in my entire life.  That first encounter with her when I knew she wasn’t in touch with reality was a gut punch for sure.  The memory of it doesn’t get dim either.  I think in this particular poem it came from talking about the piece of the sky, how you were once like a piece of sky falling from the mother’s thighs to my mother.  It just happened.  And no, I didn’t know when I began writing the poem.

Click to read the full interview

Pangaea Poetry Prize Submission Period Now Open

18 Friday Jan 2013

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2013, award, contest, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, writers, Writing

The Pangaea Prize is awarded for the best series of poems ranging between two and up to seven poems in a group. Judging will be based on poems as individual entities as well as their cohesiveness – that can be in terms of common themes, images, narrative or however else you would like to group your poems. All poems must be previously unpublished.  There are no restrictions to length or style.

The winning poet receives $100 and will be featured in an interview on The Poet’s Billow web site. The winning poems will be published and displayed in the Poet’s Billow Literary Art Gallery, at least one of the winning poems will be nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Finalists will also be considered for publication and nomination. If the winning poet qualifies, two poems will also be submitted to The Best New Poets anthology.

Pangaea Prize Guidelines.

Pangaea Poetry Prize Submission Period Now Open

18 Friday Jan 2013

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2013, award, Chapbok, collection, contest, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading, writers, Writing

The Pangaea Prize is awarded for the best series of poems ranging between two and up to seven poems in a group. Judging will be based on poems as individual entities as well as their cohesiveness – that can be in terms of common themes, images, narrative or however else you would like to group your poems. All poems must be previously unpublished.  There are no restrictions to length or style.

The winning poet receives $100 and will be featured in an interview on The Poet’s Billow web site. The winning poems will be published and displayed in the Poet’s Billow Literary Art Gallery, at least one of the winning poems will be nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Finalists will also be considered for publication and nomination. If the winning poet qualifies, two poems will also be submitted to The Best New Poets anthology.

Fragments for the End of the Year

31 Monday Dec 2012

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2012, 2013, aviation, climate, Jennifer, literature, nature, new year, new years, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, reading, science, Sweeney, transportation, wedding, writers, Writing

Fragments for the End of the Year

by Jennifer K. Sweeney

On average, odd years have been the best for me.

I’m at a point where everyone I meet looks like a version
of someone I already know.

Without fail, fall makes me nostalgic for things I’ve never experienced.

The sky is molting. I don’t know
if this is global warming or if the atmosphere is reconfiguring
itself to accommodate all the new bright suffering.

I am struck by an overwhelming need to go to Iceland.

Despite all awful variables, we are still full of ideas
as possible as unsexed fruit.

I was terribly sorry to be the one to explain to the first graders
the connection between the sunset and pollution.

On Venus you and I are not even a year old.

Then there were two skies.
The one we fly through and the one
we bury ourselves in.

I appreciate my wide beveled spatula which fulfills
the moment I realized I would grow up and own such things.

I am glad I do not yet want sexy bathroom accessories.
Such things.

In the story we were together every time.

On his wedding day, the stone in his chest
not fully melted but enough.

Sometimes I feel like there are birds flying out of me.

 

Taken from: http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/fragments%20for%20the%20end%20of%20the%20year

A Winter Poem

24 Monday Dec 2012

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christmas, December, entertainment, light, literature, nature, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, reading, reading poetry, robyn sarah, winter, writers, writersalmanac, Writing

Bounty

by Robyn Sarah

Make much of something small.
The pouring-out of tea,
a drying flower’s shadow on the wall
from last week’s sad bouquet.
A fact: it isn’t summer any more.

Say that December sun
is pitiless, but crystalline
and strikes like a bell.
Say it plays colours like a glockenspiel.
It shows the dust as well,

the elemental sediment
your broom has missed,
and lights each grain of sugar spilled
upon the tabletop, beside
pistachio shells, peel of a clementine.

Slippers and morning papers on the floor,
and wafts of iron heat from rumbling radiators,
can this be all? No, look — here comes the cat,
with one ear inside out.
Make much of something small.

 

Taken From http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/

Announcing The 2012 Atlantis Award Winner and Runner-Ups

14 Friday Dec 2012

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2012, award, awards, coffee cup, contest, entertainment, food, literature, news, people, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading poetry, writers, Writing

See all the poems

Francine Witte – Atlantis Award Winner

Breaking Sky

A piece of the sky breaks off
and falls into your coffee cup.

It makes you wonder how shabby
heaven might be getting and what will

it look like when you get there, if,
in fact, you do.  You spoon

the piece from your cup and hold
it between your fingers.  It is perfect
Click to finish the poem

 

 

A Thanksgiving Poem

21 Wednesday Nov 2012

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Children, first thanksgiving, Holliday, literature, Parenting, poem, Poet, Poetry, Thanksgiving, writers, Writing

First Thanksgiving

BY SHARON OLDS

When she comes back, from college, I will see
the skin of her upper arms, cool,
matte, glossy. She will hug me, my old
soupy chest against her breasts,
I will smell her hair! She will sleep in this apartment,
her sleep like an untamed, good object,
like a soul in a body. She came into my life the
second great arrival, after him, fresh
from the other world—which lay, from within him,
within me. Those nights, I fed her to sleep,
week after week, the moon rising,
and setting, and waxing—whirling, over the months,
in a slow blur, around our planet.
Now she doesn’t need love like that, she has
had it. She will walk in glowing, we will talk,
and then, when she’s fast asleep, I’ll exult
to have her in that room again,
behind that door! As a child, I caught
bees, by the wings, and held them, some seconds,
looked into their wild faces,
listened to them sing, then tossed them back
into the air—I remember the moment the
arc of my toss swerved, and they entered
the corrected curve of their departure.

National Book Awards Winners 2012

18 Sunday Nov 2012

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2012, Article, award, books, entertainment, literature, National, national book awards, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, writers, Writing

Check out the winners of this years national book awards

http://nationalbook.org/

Young People’s Literature: 
William Alexander
, Goblin Secrets
(Margaret K. McElderry Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing)

Poetry:
David Ferry, Bewilderment: New Poems and Translations
(University of Chicago Press)

Nonfiction:
Katherine Boo, Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity
(Random House)

Fiction:
Louise Erdrich, The Round House (Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers)

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