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Top 25 Poetry Articles on Substack

Best Poetry Articles


Potential Voice Loss: A Side Effect Of New Chemo

Making peace with this as a SPOKEN word poet
My oncologist knows what I do for a living. I figured that out a month ago as she was telling me about the potential side effects of a new chemotherapy I’ve since begun. “One of them can be voice loss,” she said gently. “I know why this would be particularly scary for you, Andrea.”
Andrea Gibson ∙ 975 LIKES
Jeannie Ewing
Andrea, when I read your words today, I thought of my favorite excerpt from Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet:
"Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart
and try to love the questions themselves,
like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue.
Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now.
Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it,
live along some distant day into the answer."
You are a breathing testimony to what it means to live the questions. Thank you for being a witness of how to show up authentically every day. ❤️
Lizzy Co
Thank you for sharing how you move through hard things. Your writing brings me comfort in times when few things can, and I’m so grateful you exist. Congratulations on the success of your new treatment!

Becoming a Big Boy Author

Big changes afoot for BOYS LOVE POETRY
Hi boys. It feels like forever since we’ve talked. I know that can’t be true because somehow I’ve managed to stay true to my biweekly publishing cadence despite moving across the country, getting engaged, cohabitating with my parents again (what) … but this past month has felt like an enti…
Dusty Brandt Howard ∙ 12 LIKES
Marmite
Congrats! I will definitely continue subscribing - looking forward to seeing whatever surprises are in store :)
This essay has also lowkey got me looking at creative writing courses that are on offer near me. I've always wanted to write more. So thank you for that too!
ashley molesso
yay!!!!!!

Do we Choose to be Born...and be Born Ismaili? Why Come to this World at all?

A short article of prose and original poetry reflecting on our birth and purpose as Ismaili Muslims advancing on the esoteric path of the Manifest Imam.
Khayal ʿAly and Ismaili Gnosis ∙ 12 LIKES
Rahmatullah Khairzada
YAM,
Thank you so much for sharing this!
Can you please shed some light regarding what are the ‘highest points’ in this world?
I am referring to “Without going to the final spiritual sphere there will be further triumph before the highest points are reached, unless those highest points are reached in this world and on this earth by the general rules of the Ismaili faith beginning with kindness, gentleness, etc. and going up to highest love of union with Imam”

Pure Blood Primal: The Poetry of Kell Robertson

By: Todd Moore
I’m listening to Kell Robertson sing ‘When You Come Down Off The Mountain.’
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 100 LIKES
Richard Blaisdell
Theresa: a poet’s view of a woman an death’s door that survives the elements to continue life’s uneasy trail. Another woman I met named Ski-mo Mary comes to mind. Her teeth wound down from chewing leather and dark a pyramid of 3.2 beer to point of staggering; then blew the service men for one one swig on an isolated base that no one knew where she lived, but was assumed somewhere in Happy Valley, Labrador, Canada. One more poem to be waiting to be told. Thanks for memories.
sol s⊙therland 🔸
"His voice sounds like his throat has been sandblasted raw, gravel over gravel, bourbon through phlegm."
What a description alright! 🗿👍🏻

Hollis Robbins: literature makes you a mind reader

AI poetry, the non-crisis in the humanities, slavery, the 1850s, Walter Scott...
I always enjoy corresponding with Hollis Robbins (@Anecdotal) and was therefore delighted to talk to her about poetry and literature. It’s a wonderful conversation that ranges across so many books and ideas. We covered why there is no crisis in the humanities, why you should read Walter Scott, our favourite modern poets (Hollis:
Henry Oliver ∙ 27 LIKES
Tom Janiak
FOUR WORDS (and one comma): fantastic voices, fantastic language.
Tom Janiak
Two words: great discussion. Thanks

Steady
Aug 24

Now THAT was a Convention

Dems have new life after Kamala Harris stuck the landing
It is no secret that I have seen a few things, been around not just the block but the whole damn city. I can tell you all about national political conventions. I’ve covered 32 of them, going back to 1960. Here’s my takeaway from Chicago 2024: It wasn’t just well done, it was a spectacularly produced event. Frankly, I can’t recall a c…
Dan Rather and Team Steady ∙ 4644 LIKES
Bob Morgan
In a piece I wrote yesterday, I summed up A Tale of Two Conventions with this:
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.
....................DEMOCRAT..........REPUBLICAN
.......................Winning..................Whining
.........................Vision.....................Division
........................United.....................Untied
........................Justice.....................Just Us
edith fusillo
As a seriously old person who cast her first ballot for JFK, I can tell you that I have rarely felt the sheer JOY and excitement that this convention and this ticket inspires. I admit to being unduly excited working on Obama's campaign, but I think I never really believed he would prevail. ( I remember walking out to get my morning paper the morning after the election--I couldn't bear the stress and suspense of waiting up to learn the results), and at the headling "OBAMA WINS I stood in my driveway and wept. This is a new and exciting opportunity to change the course of America. And BTW, thank you, Hillary, for your graciousness toward the woman who, God willing, will take the job you should have had in 2016.

When Reading Poetry...

By: Jean Klein
Tagore said that the aim of a true work of art is to give a form to what escapes definition. Then the viewer will no longer be seduced by the material used nor even by the anecdotal content; instead he will be immediately plunged into a non-state which is the aesthetic experience.
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 302 LIKES
Matt Cardin
"The words are merely a catalyst to the real formulation which takes place in the reader." So beautiful, and so true. Jean Klein was not only one of the best teachers of real spirituality in the nondual tradition, but also one of the best commentators on art and literature. His perspective and words on our real nature, and on awakening, were inseparable from his perspective on artistic and creative practices and productions. And he was of course himself a musicologist and an accomplished musician. I find this combination of qualities to be utterly winsome.
A similar case is found in Rupert Spira, who was one of the most widely renowned modern ceramicists before moving into full-time spiritual teaching. His art and his teaching both flow from the same source and understanding, and mutually illuminate each other. Just yesterday, btw, he released a short video titled "Poetry: Expressing the Inexpressible," that might be of interest. It shows him in private conversation with a Chinese poet who asks for some advice regarding his attempts to translate one of Rupert's poems into Chinese. Rupert says things like this: "A poem is much more than just the meaning of the words. Don’t think of my version as something static. It's fluid, and therefore the translation should also be fluid. In your translation, you are really trying to do the same as I was in the original: to express the inexpressible....If you feel that in order honor the incantatory aspect of the poem, that you have to depart from the original language, the original form, the original structure, the original order of verses, then feel free to do so." https://youtu.be/CVEMHXpp9rk?si=bEm0nN_DzYz0Y0j9
Monica Sharpe
Thank you! This post struck a nerve within me of how the reader interacts with the words of a poem. Fifty-six years ago sitting in my high school English class, I had a teacher who was as narrow minded as they come. He asked for our interpretation of a Robert Frost poem. When he called on me, I gave him an answer how I interpreted the meaning to be. Without any question to why I thought what I said, he abruptly cut me off to tell me I was further from the truth than anyone could possibly be. I replied by telling him that poetry was meant to invoke different perspectives to many people. He then began to admonish me in front of the class after turning to the notes for teachers at the back of his manual, and read what Frost's real interpretation of the poem was, written by another academic. One other time, for an assignment, we had to write a poem expressing an inner pain we felt. I did. It was about rape. He said it was garbage. It went something like this:
My never forgotten lover,
Broken by that four letter word f-u-c-k.
The sun rose, when it set, my world turned black
And was left no day.
Words upon words, I lay on once more
Promises of a life all gone with the morn
When that day arrived, a boy came with promises in poem,
He was wild with rage, crazy and scorned.
Telling me of his world where I will not mourn.
The boy made me a woman, the boy killed my life
Flying in mid-air he slashed my soul with his knife.
Crude I know, I was 17, but this teacher's words and actions almost completely destroyed my ability to ever write again. ✍️
I'm glad to have found platforms such as yours where people are not admonished to express their inner selves.

These Small Things

from Out With Lanterns, a daily poetry practice
What if I decide my life is fine? What if there’s nothing to fix, no huge changes to make? What if there’s just a little goal each day to appreciate the ripe strawberries in the refrigerator, or notice the yellow butterfly flying alongside me for half a block? Is it less of a life if the best part of my day was melting salty butter on warm sourdoug…
Julie Barton ∙ 19 LIKES
Julia Fehrenbacher
Dear Julie,
One of the dear women in my writing community sent this poem my way and it touched me deeply. I loved it so much, I shared it this morning with my writing community and we used it as a "spark" for our own writing. Such beautiful words.
And reading a bit about your story moves me to tears...
Thank you so much for showing up. It matters so much.
Maria Anderson
Yes, and yes.

The Black Art

By: Anne Sexton
A woman who writes feels too much, those trances and portents! As if cycles and children and islands weren't enough; as if mourners and gossips and vegetables were never enough. She thinks she can warn the stars. A writer is essentially a spy. Dear love, I am that girl. A man who writes knows too much, such spells and fetiches! As if erections and cong…
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 344 LIKES
David Dayson
Great choice — someone who struggled, but through the alchemy of poetry turned her ordeals into art.
angelica van clarke 🌈
wow, i love this!

All Lit Mags Had To Do Was Stay!

Aliases of a serial plagiarist; closing of two lit mags; Poetry Foundation fellows; Ireland's flourishing lit scene; red flag lit mag; workshops & classes; and more
Welcome to our bi-weekly news roundup!
Becky Tuch ∙ 26 LIKES
D. P. Snyder
This "John Kucera" person's story might be a novel waiting to be written. However, I have a feeling that he's just an a**hole who is trying to prove that literature is not all that, or something along those lines. And morons like that don't make good protagonists. On the other hand, perhaps our actual protagonist is a woman who looks a lot like Becky Tuch who goes nuts trying to track down the plagiarist only to find out that he's... (I'm not giving away the ending!) Of course, the novel's title is The Plagiarist.
Donna Shanley
A feared Bueller resurfaces! I’m pleased to report that the Fairy Tale Review, where I’ve had a submission languishing for over a year (with no responses to polite queries) appears to be at least alive, if not fully awake. My sub’s status on Submittable, showing as “Received” for 14 months, suddenly changed to “In Progress” a week ago—on the very day I’d finally resolved to withdraw the story. The literary cosmos moves in mysterious ways.

The Big Fall Book Guide

28 heavy hitters, buzzy books, and personal deep cuts to look out for
We’re less than a week away from my personal fall (Sept 1; I will not be taking feedback), and it’s time to discuss the upcoming releases on my radar. We have grieving siblings (lots of them!), horny vampires (ditto!), all the romance (always!), scammers, rockstars, and even a peek into Taylor Swift’s closet.
Becca Freeman ∙ 232 LIKES
Sarah Hartley
Welp, there goes my TBR.
Molly Cimikoski
Shira had it coming 😂

Can Poetry Have a Place in Our Yoga Practice?

Many of us read a poem before or after our yoga practice, but interweaving poetry inside of our yoga practices can bring presence and magic into our studios and into our lives
** This article was originally published in Om Magazine, but I wanted to share it with you all here **
Corie Feiner ∙ 22 LIKES
Patty Townsend | Embodyoga
The wonderful thing about your yoga poetry is that it always offers something new - often hidden - in the posture. Your yoga poems are truly written from the inside out. You give compelling and beautiful words to what_you_feel, reminding us all to continue to turn the arrow of inquiry internally. Very beautiful. Thank you.
Janine Agoglia
So Corie, when's your Yoga Poetry book coming out? It would be lovely to have them all in one place! 😘

The Soul's Secret Wishing

A photo-poetry booklet for you!
As a small way to say thank-you to my paid subscribers, I periodically send them snail mail, including a small poetry booklet. I had hoped to finish the most recent one by June, but the summer became quite busy with travel baseball. When our family went to Grand Bend for a few days last week, I made it a goal to spend a few hours every morning working o…
Sarah Kivell ∙ 1 LIKES

When the student is ready, the teacher will appear

10 things worth sharing this week
Hey y’all,
384 LIKES
Louise B.
I purchase soap erasers from Dick Blick 1”x2”x1/2”. They come in boxes of 12. I carve them for stamping on my art work. If you several together on a piece of plexiglass you have a larger stamp! I use ink pads, fiber paints and dyes.
judy
And don't forget the noble pencil. Both Hemingway and Steinbeck wrote with pencils. I have some friends who do paper restoration, and they say pencils are much better to use than the ball point pen.

The Good Stuff

Joy is absolutely a strategy
Hi, Friend.
Maggie Smith ∙ 139 LIKES
Gila Pfeffer
what an absolute honor to be in your read/TBR stack Maggie!! Lord knows I’ve got all of your books in mine (READ obvs) thank you!
Thomasin LaMay
Joy - my fig tree is full of figs. Yum! Joy - all my city students showed up for the first day of class on Monday and yesterday, even in the heat! Joy - I am loving Danusha Lameris' poem Small Kindnesses, which I have read a million times but we are practicing being those little temples in my class and it's so much fun! (and my kids are 16-17). AND, I have to say every time I see pictures from anywhere in Ohio I remember how flat it is :) I used to drive regularly from here in MD to Ann Arbor MI, and on the way to MI it was, oh man I'm tired and OH is so flat, but on the way to MD it was, wow, just gotta get through OH and there will be mountains to keep me going! thanks for the music!

Playing Hide and Seek With Jesus

7935/20876
Richard Herring's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Richard Herring ∙ 29 LIKES
Emma Kennedy
I will never forget the fear and terror coursing through me when we did the one off with Perkins and then she was word perfect with zero rehearsal. *applause* I also remember that Edinburgh as the one where one person in the flat (and I never discovered who) used an unnatural amount of toilet paper.
Bruce Dessau
Such an evocative picture. Hard to tell whether first-show euphoria or last-show relief. Apart from the Guinness logo it could have been taken last week when I was there - though you'd either have to use de-ageing software or find a new, much younger cast.


Against lists of books

We've all got such good taste
Once you’re done being US President, I think they should kill you. You get four or eight years to kill anyone you want, destroy entire countries at will, throw around billions of dollars at whatever cretinous idea catches your fancy—but once it’s all done, once the White House dog’s being carried away by helicopter and the next guy is giving his inaugur…
Sam Kriss

on the shelf, episode seven

postcard 22: esje (seigf.read)'s favorite books
‘I've always just drawn with a pencil and I've never used a ball of putty, for whatever reason, so I just keep the mistakes and let them be wrong, because it's often the mistakes that eventually lead…
Elle ∙ 160 LIKES
Petya K. Grady
Oh, I love the agony of not wanting a book to end. It's an exquisite kind of pain.
I know it's not a new Sally Rooney, but Ocean Vuong's new book is scheduled for early next year, which I personally am VERY excited about.
Kayli
Loved this issue + that we're going to start hearing from more people! Esje's recs were great. I've read every Patti Smith book except Woolgathering, which I plan on picking up this Fall. Excited to read!

3 Brief Poems By Gary Snyder

“As a poet I hold the most archaic values on earth . . . the fertility of the soil, the magic of animals, the power-vision in solitude, the terrifying initiation and rebirth, the love and ecstasy of the dance, the common work of the tribe. I try to hold both history and the wilderness in mind, that my poems may approach the true measure of things and st…
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 218 LIKES
Scott Brumenschenkel
Finding magic and meaning in the mundane.
Martin Mc Carthy
I have always considered Gary Snyder to be the best of the Beat poets because his poems are well-crafted and focus, as he said himself, "on the true nature of things" that truly matter.
The second stanza of the first poem, "After Work" is a particularly beautiful depiction of ordinary, domestic daily life and love:
"we'll lean on the wall
against each other
stew simmering on the fire
as it grows dark
drinking wine."
Does anyone know if he is still alive? The last I heard of him, he was somewhere in Sierra Nevada.

Revisiting Larkin.

The strength and pain of being young.
stylish defiance
Henry Oliver ∙ 117 LIKES
David James
An excellent essay, and that comparison with Keats is fascinating. Whenever I teach The Whitsun Weddings I linger over this line: 'sun destroys/The interest of what’s happening in the shade', because I think Larkin is preoccupied with the shadows, and clarity, sunshine, reduces that ambiguity to something more exposed and less complex.
Tyndall Brandon
Thanks for this lovely essay. If you haven’t done so already, I would highly recommend listening to his recording of his poems on “The Sunday Sessions,” which is available as an audiobook. Despite his reservations about reading poetry aloud, he was a magnificently sensitive reader, and one of the rare poets who was an ideal reader of his own poetry. His readings of the handful of poems from “The North Ship” are particularly touching for their sense of fondness and regret for the earlier poet who wrote them, a nascent Keatsian (and Yeatsian) poet that Larkin had long since lost. You can tell he knows the poems are not as good as his more recent work, but that he still feels “the strength and pain” of them. Hearing it adds a lot to one’s sense of the man.

"If--," Then (and Now)

Don't let the hard days win.
People always think they’re smarter than Rudyard Kipling’s “If—.” In literary circles it’s a rule that admiration of the poem must be qualified, usually with disclaimers to show you are aware of the author’s moral and literary defects. T.S. Eliot condensed this attitude perfectly in one phrase when he called Kipling “a good bad poet”—the kind whose poet…
Spencer Klavan ∙ 85 LIKES
Ned Tamburini
I think we all know instinctively that as fallen creatures we can never live up to what this poem asks of us, at least not nearly as often as we would like to. Yet we also instinctively know that it’s what we should constantly strive for. I believe that’s why it appeals so much to the common man and chafes the elites.
Cam
As a member of the unwashed masses that likes IF, highly recommend this version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7G_Bun6Aecg

Apocrypha
Aug 28

Introducing… APOCRYPHA

BTMU is dead; long live Apocrypha!
apocrypha (noun): writings of uncertain authenticity.
M. E. Rothwell ∙ 141 LIKES
Tom Fish
You declined the snake?! Come on man
Feasts and Fables
Sounds amazing … I’ll have mine hand scribed on snake skin, please. Constantly putting the ‘origin’ into ‘original’ in this world of words, Mikey

Book Post
Aug 23

Talk with us! Virtual Book Post conversation next Thursday

April Bernard, Elizabeth Bishop, poetry, and reading together
Elizabeth Bishop and April Bernard, drawings by Nicholson Baker, from photographs by, respectively, the publisher James Laughlin and the poet Mary Jo Bang. Nicholson Baker’s book Finding a Likeness: How I Got Somewhat Better at Art, was published this spring.
Ann Kjellberg and April Bernard ∙ 4 LIKES
Susanna
What time will this event be, and how do I get the link? Susanna Lang

Drinking from another fountain

A small reflection on a poem by RS Thomas
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama ∙ 228 LIKES
Lyn Taylor Hale
Many years ago, when I was still immersed in conservative theology, I began to struggle with the notion that my little sect of belief was THE one that knew THE truth about a god even we claimed was unknowable. One day, as I was walking across City Hall Park in my hometown, an Hassidic man passed me dressed in all his garb. I had the thought, "I am going to tell HIM that I know the real truth?" Nonsense. (Yawn)
These days I'm still drawn to the vastness of the universe (more darkness than light). So many things call me to worship.
That is where my mind goes when I read this poem.
Beyond Xistence
I sense...tiredness. Exhaustion from the mental banter. The one in the corner wants more than intellectual discourse, even as the mind swings to and fro. There is a search for stability, something that holds it all together, something worth holding it together for. In the darkness, light spins hope from sources long gone (I think of Jeremiah Burroughs, George Macdonald, George Herbert). In the spinning, the lonely one knows answers won't fill every crack of darkness, but it is enough to have some light, and the rest...received by faith.