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Poem: Broken Object. I see you staring back at me Tell me what you see Is it me or is it the monster that I’ve become. Can you hear me, Tell me do you hear me I want you here and I want your help, But ...
The unexpected importance of the Most Boring Object Ever. Too often, when people think of poetry they think, 'Oh great, another love poem.' Or another nature poem, or another poem rife with socio ...
Much of the poetry I read this year depended on objects, loosely defined. The object might have been a totem animal, a move in gymnastics or a mountain ridge.
The MBOE (AKA, the Most Boring Object Ever) could be a dust bunny, a rock, a twig — whatever a student decides. It's my way of engaging students in a crowd-sourced poem, whereby we ask questions ...
Poems of the Black Object Ronaldo Wilson, . . Futurepoem, $15 (112pp) ISBN 978-0-9822798-0-9. Readers lucky enough to spend time with Wilson's uncommonly varied second book will find achingly self ...
A copy of the poem “Monologue of a Tree Line” by Franz Hodjak, written in the poet’s own handwriting, hangs in the Roger Williams Hall office of Assistant Professor of German Raluca Cernahoschi. It ...
April always brings some of the years' biggest poetry collections. So as it wraps up, we wanted to bring you two favorites — retrospective collections from Marie Howe and Jean Valentine.
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