• Maggie Nelson (Bluets and Something Bright, Then Holes) • Victoria Chang (Obit) • Heather Christle (The Crying Book) • bell hooks • June Jordan • Mary Oliver • e. e. cummings • Melissa Broder • Chen Chen • Mary Oliver  • Jacqueline Suskin • Andrea Gibson Some of the above poets have twitters/insta you can follow to keep up with their work! I also suggest following some publishers and presses that publish poetry to hear about new poets and their collections! I really like: • Copper Canyon Press • Graywolf Press • Coffee House Press • Wave Books • Button Poetry Happy reading, from one poet to another 💗
May 7, 2024

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Also: Natalie Diaz, Frank Bidart, Henri Cole, Mary Oliver, Elizabeth Bishop, and Adam Zagajewski, to name just a few. Highly recommend checking out the Poetry Foundation’s daily poem to make reading poetry more of a habit. It has helped me to discover lots of great poets.
Mar 7, 2024
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and don’t feel pressured to enjoy everything contemporary or all the classics or what’s popular or what we’re taught in school. there’s truly no right or wrong way to enjoy poetry—but not everything appeals to/resonates with everyone so if ur feeling like ur bored or not “getting it” that might be an invitation to try a different style! like i didn’t really like ocean vuong’s time is a mother, but i love richard siken’s crush. i love mary oliver, lucille clifton, and frank o’hara; but i don’t like ts eliot, emily dickinson, and allen ginsberg. there are no rules and there are plenty of kinds of poetry to explore! you maybe just haven’t found what you like yet. i also suggest finding accounts on other social media that post poetry and/or sign up for poetry fdn’s “poem of the day” emails. and when you find a poem you enjoy, check out that poet’s collection(s) at the library and read through them! :)
Jul 4, 2024
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The first thing I think of with Sara Teasdale's poetry is their steady beat. You really feel your heart with them. Some stand out lines of hers: ☆ "My thoughts like steady incense rise;" ☆ "—But oh her hair the sun sifts thro'—" ☆ "And all his words I keep As rose-leaves hold the dew" ☆ All of her shorter poem 'LESS THAN THE CLOUD TO THE WIND' ☆ All of her shorter poem 'Rain at Night' ☆ 'When I am dead and over me bright April Shakes out her rain-drenched hair,' ____________________ As for extra ideas! 1. Get an Everyman's Pocket Poetry book. Choose a theme you enjoy, like say rivers! Get that collection, read through it and discover a load of new poems and potentially new favorite poets. Ofc you may know them already, but it fits nicely in a large coat pocket or small purse and is very cute so it's no loss if you've already familiarized yourself with everything they offer. 2. Read translated poetry! ESPECIALLY if it has the original text!! This will be incredibly rewarding: It'll introduce you to imagery that might appear as often in English, it'll open up for you whole new world of poetry AND it might ever make you new/deeper friendships! (It did for me!) The book 'Chinese Poetic Writing' by François Cheng was one I found and enjoyed a lot! (With original text included! Unfortunately a rarity!)
Jan 27, 2025

Top Recs from @chickeninshoes

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touching grass, blades between toes, dappled shade beneath the trees, reading a book or quietly painting or people-watching or picnicking with a friend...babes, there is nothing like it
May 12, 2024
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This could change when I hit 40 (lmao), but the older I get, the more confident I know who I am. I feel more and more sure of myself, and less and less concerned with how others view me. My life is my own, and comparing it to other's is a disservice to myself and the path I'm now on. Do I still experience guilt, regrets, doubt? Of course I do. Do I know what I'm doing with my life? I might have less of a clue than I did in my twenties. Do I still feel like a weird little freak, like I did in my teens? Hell yeah, some stuff just never changes. I still enjoy things I loved as a child, like video games, Pokemon, stuffed animals, and giggling. I still enjoy things I loved as a teen, like pop punk music, being annoying, and singing whenever the mood strikes. I still enjoy things I loved in college, like dancing enthusiastically, writing amateurish poetry, and crushing on women who will never, ever be into me. But now I'm just...30. More health issues. More scars. More silvery hairs that sparkle in the sun like some vampiric trope made real. But also...more memories that sweeten with time. More time spent in awe and revelry. More reveling in the beauty of nature. More of my own innate nature revealed to me as I sit with myself more, alone. I feel thirty, flirty, and thriving. I also feel as a child, as a teen, as a drunken young adult, bumbling around without knowing if what I'm doing is right. I'm just doing my best. That's all you really can do; embrace how you are now, and how you are tomorrow, and again, and again, and again.
May 13, 2024
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she is cute and sleepy
May 8, 2024