From “The Necessity to Speak,” by Sam Hamill
Apr 6, 2022
poetry & 2020
“The true poet gives up the self. The I of my poem is not me. It is the first person impersonal, it is permission for you to enter the experience
Reading Mark Nowak’s “Social Poetics:” Thinking About the First Tuesdays Cento and A ‘Flipped Script’ Poetry Reading
Apr 6, 2022
poetry & 2020
I’m just a single chapter into Mark Nowak’s Social Poetics—the chapter is called “A People’s History of the Poetry Workshop: Watts, New York City,
My Year Long Writing Project
Apr 6, 2022
poetry & 2020
So. Thinking it would help prod me to start blogging regularly again—and, specifically, to start blogging about all things poetry and writing—I
When Did You Start Writing?
Jan 15, 2022
my work & poetry & 2022
In March of 2020, just before the pandemic shutdown, I received from John Wisniewski the first two of the seven or eight questions that would
Craft Talk 3: Quincy Troupe’s Rhythm
Apr 19, 2021
2021 & poetry
I’ve been reading The Architecture of Language, by Quincy Troupe, and I have been fascinated by how rhythm and syntax interact in the way he builds
My Response to the Erasure of Antisemitism in Namrata Poddar’s Article in the Recent Issue of Poets & Writers
Oct 12, 2020
poetry & race & jewish & 2020
In an article called ”Return to the MFA: A Call for Systemic Change in the Literary Arts”, which Poets & Writers published in its September/October
Lines That Didn’t Make the Cut: Sometimes It’s Just a Big Mess
Aug 5, 2020
poetry & my work & 2020
I don’t remember where the first two lines of this came from, but somehow it ended up being a very long poem spoken mostly by a woman deciding to
Commonplace Question #2: Are the Poems Part of a Conversation?
Jul 24, 2020
my work & poetry & commonplace questions & 2020
This question, from Commonplace episode #2, Rachel’s interview with Nick Flynn, brought me back to a conversation I had with a friend named Ellie
Lines That Didn’t Make the Cut: Ruth’s Story
Jul 1, 2020
my work & poetry & 2020
It wasn’t like I showed him anything he hadn’t seen before. Besides, he took the ones with clothes, the good ones, only if I did a few from
Commonplace Question #1: How Did You Become a Poet?
Jun 28, 2020
my work & poetry & commonplace questions & 2020
I’ve been listening to Rachel Zucker’s Commonplace podcast for about two and a half years now. If you don’t know it, it’s definitely worth checking
The Ethics of Bearing Witness in Poetry to Violence and Trauma
Jun 13, 2020
my work & poetry & 2020
The issues raised when one chooses to make literary art out of trauma are complex. Over at the Ploughshares blog, for example, Tracy Strauss has a
If You Read Rumi in English, Read This New Yorker Article
Jun 5, 2020
iran & translation & poetry & islam & sufism & 2020
Written by Rozina Ali, the article is called “The Erasure of Islam from the Poetry of Rumi,” and it says something that Iranians I know have been
Lines That Didn’t Make the Cut: Remembering Claudia
Jun 3, 2020
poetry & my work & 2020
The revision process leaves every writer with bits and pieces of work that no longer belong to the poem or story or whatever where they first
Craft Talk 2: Packing Lines With Sound & Meaning - Rosa Alice Branco, Translated by Alexis Levitin
May 29, 2020
poetry & craft talk & 2020
It’s hard to write about craft when you’re talking about a translation, especially if you can’t read the original, because it’s not always possible
Prepping for Fall 2018: The Poetry Workshop
Aug 10, 2018
poetry & 2018
This is from an essay called “Here Today,” in Hayden Carruth’s Effluences from the Sacred Caves. In my early years as a poet, I learned more about
Craft Talk 1: Figuring Out Why a Poem Doesn’t Work for Me
Aug 8, 2018
poetry & craft talk & 2018
A book I’ve been trying to make my way through this summer is Calling A Wolf A Wolf, Iranian-American poet Kaveh Akbar’s first full-length