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Top 25 Poetry Articles on Substack

Best Poetry Articles


Your July Forever (Poetry) Workshop Is Gonna be Hot and Heavy

Writing love & sex poems that will actually get published and have readers begging for more
Shannan Mann and Shelby Stretton ∙ 37 LIKES
Albe Gilmore
I’m wondering if one can write good love poems while being bad at love - I guess we’ll see. Looking forward to it!
Paul Benkendorfer
I might be the only man here, but I look forward to any opportunity to learn and develop my writing. I've published poetry, but I know I still need a lot of work.

Crushing Hard: The sexy history of love in poetry & how to develop your personal style.

Plus defining what makes a love poem "good", cliche mistakes to avoid, and poets gone wild.
This is class 1 of 8 from Shannan Mann’s Forever Workshop “Hot and Heavy: Writing Love & Sex Poems that will Actually Get Published and Have Readers Begging for More” Chances are, if you’ve come to this workshop, you like love. You think about love, fall in love, fall out of love, roll it up into a little ball l…
Shannan Mann ∙ 34 LIKES
marina ramil
some of my canon: li-young lee makes my writing more lyrical and prosodic, mary oliver helps me love the natural world better, gustavo hernandez' work is a masterclass in loving care for settings, torrin a. greathouse and stacey waite are butch guideposts making my writing better as a femme dyke
Cate
some of my canon, with an eye towards desire, intimacy, sex, love:
Eileen Myles for their unequivocal colloquial style, threaded through with matter-of-fact queer desire and mundane details (e.g. “Peanut Butter”. Frank O’Hara for his rattling off of scenes and names and the intimacy of the scenes he makes here (“having a coke with you” the most obvious, but my favorite, the ode to love and friendship and desire and hope: “Poem Read at Joan Mitchell’s”). Olena Kalytiak Davis (I’ve long been obsessed with her “Shatter Sonnets”) for her sounds and rhythms as an inheritor of Gerard Manley Harris—and in her later work she leans more towards the colloquial rumination of Myles and O’Hara that I love. Jane Kenyon for her lucent, simple, images and subtle sensations. I am also drawn to the fleetingness of love in her poems. Garth Greenwell’s substack introduced me to the most sexy poem: “September Garden Party” and I’m also partial to “Otherwise” as a marriage poem.

For The Love of Black People

On never letting anything steal the essence of Blackness.
In recent days, two occurrences have consumed my thoughts with an intensity that speaks volumes about the reality we live in. One is the harrowing loss suffered by Black progressive Congressman Jamaal Bowman in the New York District 16 primary, where he was defeated by George Lat…
Frederick Joseph ∙ 82 LIKES
Sarah Meysenburg
The photos. Oh, the photos. Such joy.
Reginald Harris
Congratulations on your newest Best Seller!
I want to say that I can't believe that NYPD intruded on your celebration (the old standby "Too loud" no doubt) - but I can't say that. What happened to you is all too frequent and familiar.
Finally: I live in a very diverse - but not over gentrified yet! - neighborhood in Brooklyn and went to Harlem last week to see a friend in a staged reading of two one-act plays. Coming out of the subway at 116th Street. I felt so "at home" and totally felt that "poetry in the way we gather" you mention. It is very real, and wonderful.

Welcome to Four-Fours Poetry

What the f*** is this?
I am setting up this space because I felt helpless. Helpless in the pursuit of my art, of founding a way to be a writer and be of service at the same time. I’ve always just reposted stories, and occasionally donated when I felt moved by a cause (vetted organizations only, of course!). I helped out in my community throughout school, but after graduating …
Sahib J Chandnani ∙ 3 LIKES

A Journey through Old Florida

By: Erik Rittenberry
Make voyages. Attempt them. There's nothing else. —Tennessee Williams I live in Florida, and it’s a beautiful place, especially when you get away from the big cities and the Disneyfication of everything. Whenever I’m not working, reading, writing, or procuring poetic material for this site, you’ll probably find me roaming the backcountry of Old Florida—p…
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 251 LIKES
John Charlton
Love this marriage of words and pictures.
Matt Cardin
Absolutely love it. For some reason, as I was absorbing your combination of selected photos and quotes, Blue Oyster Cult's song "Florida Man," from their sublime 2020 album THE SYMBOL REMAINS, began playing in my head. Though it's about something quite different than the beauty and mystery that are the focus of your post, maybe its lyrics play off the vibe in obscurely meaningful ways? They do for me, at least. Invocation of a mystery of another sort.
"Florida Man" by Blue Oyster Cult (lyrics by the great John Shirley)
Should you settle down in the Sunshine State?
You should know of its tangled fate
How the conquistador came to Florida
Long before it had a name
The medicine man of the Seminole
Knelt by the sacred flame and cursed the soul
Of the conquistador
And his son, and his sons, and the young ones
Of the Florida man
Down at the mall, where the boas crawl
Ted makes love to a concrete wall
His brother Red said his Uncle Ned
Found Elvis in a loaf of bread
High on meth, there's little Beth
The neighbor's cat is on her breath
Dan dreams he's got red wings of fire
He's waking and shaking on a power wire
Slim sees his face on a moonlit wave
He grabs a shovel and digs his own grave
Lee hates plate glass, he drives right through it
Said Alice's caterpillar made him do it
A Miami nurse snatches a purse
And drives down the freeway in reverse
Phil asks the cops to test his drugs
After they find him hiding under a rug
Don't you laugh, it could be you
The Florida curse always comes true
You can jeer, but you don't understand
Any fragile soul can be a Florida man

John Donne: "Death, Be Not Proud"

“This is metaphysical poetry, not the modern novel!"
['Death be not proud' in Donne's handwriting (top half of the page) from the Westmoreland Manuscript of his works in the Berg Collection. c. 1620. From the New York Public Library] The Priory is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Karen Swallow Prior ∙ 66 LIKES
Holly
Could "our best men" be referring to martyrs for the faith? Donne lived right in the middle of the era of Protestant Catholic conflict in Europe.
This sonnet goes so well with Donne's 'Devotions upon emergent occasions', which were written during the severe illness that preceded his own death. Death is a topic that is seldom addressed in modern churches - despite our declared faith that Christ will destroy the last enemy of death - to our great spiritual detriment, I think. Abusive ministers can forget they will one day be called to account, and congregants are left without counsel and comfort for when they face death.
Karen, this study is personally timely. This past week, I saw three specialists who emphasized that I needed some new symptoms investigated as soon as possible. There was an urgency to their words and actions that startled me. As a healthcare professional myself, I know what my symptoms might mean, but I have been trained to not immediately go for the most dramatic diagnosis. It might still be a less dramatic diagnosis, but their urgency was a sharp reminder of my own mortality.
Virginia Franklin
I love the metaphysical poets, and especially John Donne. I think he wrote this after experiencing the deaths of several people he loved, including his wife. Anyone living in that time would be intimately acquainted with death, which makes his brash confrontation of Death all the more meaningful. Thanks for covering these in our class, Karen!

Endings and beginnings and stuff like that.

SALE: 50% off poetry prints and an announcement about the next chapter
IN SUMMARY | 50% off all poem prints through 7/14 and updates about the future of my business (and my work as a writer). At the moment I am sitting at an outdoor coffee space. I have accidentally crashed a party at which dozens of people are wearing the tiniest hats I’ve ever seen, and I am perched at a communal table pondering
torri blue ∙ 12 LIKES
A. Wilder Westgate
I've been wanting to snag a poem for a while now, so thank you for this opportunity! I'm so looking forward to what comes next and so happy for you.
Ashley Bloom
Your custom poem for my queer proposal almost 6 years ago now was read at our wedding and has been proudly framed and displayed in our home for years and years now. It meant the absolute world to me that you wrote such a beautiful poem that made us feel so seen. You’re without a doubt an amazing writer and human and I just feel so damn fortunate to have a Torri original in our family now forever. Like having a Mary Oliver original from her early days 😘 I cannot wait to see what the future brings for you and your family. Thanks for always showing up and being so authentic and sincere. It’s truly a gift to the world, more than you could know.

explosives

disclaimer to the sensitive types - this is not "love and light" poetry:
i am the walking landmine that “shouldn’t be” aren’t i supposed to be better now? rage for things i can’t express because the ears of the world are deaf and its nerves numb now I took the plunge into the abyss, you’re welcome for not adding to your collateral damage, because you would have buried me by now. but isn’t it funny, as they look a…
Tesstamona ∙ 40 LIKES
Jessica J
I found this perfect for the times
The charlatans and obsequious
Those who would not know real if it t bagged them on the nose
The game player, fellow citizen betrayer
The corporate big tech shill
The bullies who are the nihilistic cowards
Don't ever apologize for channeling your anger in such a way
Those who need the sorry and disclaimer are the mentally ill not you
Righteous indignation is what's needed in spades
Not hating ass troll bitches with fat girl energy and clown hair...or the men who try to make them conform into whatever plastic mold they say fuck them any motherfucking ways
Never apologize again for art like this my kindred spirit of a digital friend
Bc you are rightfully pissed off and more people should be
Yet everyone likes their chains and shiny things
Don't rock the boat, don't react bad
You may end up finding the people who they wish you never had
To say we are bound by and constricted and manipulated to be whatever they say you are is an understatement
We all know that nobody knows you but you truly
So get mad and channel it as such
While the world burns down and goes hush.
😁
Seriously you are righteously upset. So am I. The fake are falling off while the old world systems one by one die.
🙏❤️🔥 I agree with you 💯 percent dude.
Victory Palace
Tesstamona is testifying in da house! No need to apologize for your savage rant against the brainwashed masses, against the psychopaths hellbent for global destruction, and all the sycophants who lick their blood encrusted boots.
I can’t think of a better way to battle against this than with the weapons of poetry. Love the memes too. You go soul sister! More poetic power to you!

Jamaal Bowman's Race is a Big Moment for Democrats

It's about more than one seat
Jeff Maurer ∙ 110 LIKES
Lucidamente
That Rep. Bowman, a former middle school principal, pulled a false alarm gives new meaning to the old cliché “I’ve learned a lot from my students.”
Stephen Rodriguez
The cringiest thing. Ever. In all of politics. Is when someone tries to make it “cool and hip and appeal to the kids, man!” Like a 50 year old playing Fortnite.
I can’t believe he went with the “I got confused by the fire alarm” excuse. That is so lame. Man worked at a middle school. Has he not heard that weaponized stupidity from his students before? The whole “you can’t be mad at me because I might actually be that dumb” only works if you have an intellectual deficit or are 12. He would have been better off just saying “yes I did it to delay the vote cus fuck em”. At least that fits his whole cartoon character persona.

Before Things Fall Apart | Black Sheep Poetry

"Slow, then all at once; Lenin knew."
Black Sheep Poetry is a weekly reflection along the lonely road away from collective chaos. Standing tall in a culture pushing us to make our individuality second to the group doesn’t just require intellectual strength, but emotional fortitude. Share your black sheep moments with us. Write a poem and submit it to: submit@wetheblacksheep.com.
Salomé Sibonex ∙ 19 LIKES
Ana Crumpler
This poem reminds me of what many of us lived in Cuba. I was born after the revolution, but many blindly supported that change. A change that sadly changed our lives forever.

poetry corner

ayandastood ∙ 36 LIKES
Kim Buchwald Esposito
"I'd like to live like a river flows, carried by the surprise of its own unfolding" - John O'Donahue. This poem over and over again reminds me to let go of control.
ThandoTalks
For me it's "Still I rise" by Maya Angelou🙌🩷The poem speaks to the ups and downs I often experience in my personal life, giving me hope and hyping me up for a better tomorrow.

Compiling a Poetry Manuscript

a guide to getting started
As I complete my third (!) full length poetry manuscript, Hermit Season, I thought I would take this opportunity to write down some of the things I’ve learned about this process over the past four years. I am no expert in publishing and I still consider myself a relative beginner when it comes to being a professional writer, but I think sometimes it’s …
Alix Klingenberg ∙ 23 LIKES
Caiti Quatmann
I love hearing about the process others go thru when considering and crafting a collection.
I actually tend to start with a concept/story and build it completely around that. My first one was autobiographical and tell the story of my own search for meaning among two tragedies in my life.
My 2nd manaucript which is currently in querying literally ended up being a 3 days hyperfixation on a meme someone posted about poetry and cheese.
I have so many other poems I've written as one off pieces so going thru and finding my strong ones and then seeing what might emerge from them (rather than starting with a pretty good concept of the story or theme) is a totally different way for me and something I'm excited to explore.
Lily Jedynak PhD
This is wonderful Alix thank you! I was so curious as to how to compile a poetry ms and here you’ve outlined it brilliantly🙏

The word homosexual never appeared in any translation of the Bible until 1946

How a translational error has cost the lives of millions all over the world
I had just asked a question at Sunday school. I don’t remember the question; I asked many of them. Unlike when baby Jesus asked the Rabbis questions at the temple, I was not met with praise for my brilliance, and this day was no exception. Whatever the question was, it must have been a good one because the Sunday school teacher did not have an adequate …
Father Nathan Monk ∙ 400 LIKES
Tracy
Thank you Nathan
Lisa Stimson
As a mother of a transgender in the South, I appreciate this article very much. Thank you.

Bookworm, no. 50

Alexander Sallas reviews “Dictionary of Fine Distinctions.” Abhya Adlakha on “The Red One.” Original poetry by Anne Swannell. Inside the July/August issue.
Critique or Analysis? Dictionary of Fine Distinctions: Nuances, Niceties, and Subtle Shades of Meaning Eli Burnstein Union Square 208 pages, hardcover and ebook This piece of furniture I’m sitting on: Is it a couch or sofa? The drink I’m sipping: Club soda or sparkling water? These letters you’re reading: Typeface or font? In
Literary Review of Canada ∙ 6 LIKES

Poem for the Father

By: Alejandra Pizarnik
And it was then that with a tongue dead and cold in the mouth he sang the song others allowed him to sing in this world of obscene gardens and shadows coming at unseemly hours to remind him of songs of his youth in which he could not sing the song he wanted the song they allowed him to sing yet through his absent blue eyes through his absent mouth thro…
Poetic Outlaws ∙ 223 LIKES
Sloan Bashinsky
Poetry Foundation
Alejandra Pizarnik
1936–1972
Alejandra Pizarnik was born in Buenos Aires to Russian Jewish immigrant parents. She studied philosophy and literature at the University of Buenos Aires before dropping out to pursue painting and her own poetry. In 1960, she moved to Paris, where she befriended writers such as Octavio Paz, Julio Cortázar, and Silvina Ocampo. Considered one of mid-century Argentina’s most powerful and intense lyric poets, Pizarnik counted among her influences Hölderlin and, as she wrote in “The Incarnate Word,” an essay from 1965, “the suffering of Baudelaire, the suicide of Nerval, the premature silence of Rimbaud, the mysterious and fleeting presence of Lautréamont,” and the “unparalleled intensity” of Artaud’s “physical and moral suffering.” Pizarnik’s themes were cruelty, childhood, estrangement, and death. According to Emily Cooke, Pizarnik “was perennially mistrustful of her medium, seeming sometimes more interested in silence than in language, and the poetic style she cultivated was terse and intentionally unbeautiful.” Her work has continually attracted new readers since her suicide at age 36.
Pizarnik published several books of poetry during her lifetime, including: La tierra más ajena (1955), La última inocencia (1956), Las aventuras perdidas (1958), Árbol de Diana (1960), Extracción de la piedra de locura (1968), and El infierno musical (1971). She also published the prose essay “La condesa sangrienta” (1971), a meditation on a 16th-century Hungarian countess allegedly responsible for the torture and murder of more than 600 girls. Pizarnik’s work has been translated into English in the collections Alejandra Pizarnik: Selected Poems (translated by Cecilia Rossi, 2010) and Extracting the Stone of Madness (translated by Yvette Siegert, 2016).
Dust
Wonderful.

Poetry submission resources

Free resources to help you get your poetry out into the world
It was fantastic to see so many folks at our Poetry Submit-A-Thon on the weekend! And thank you so much to swim meet lit mag for collaborating with us on this event. Throughout the session, we used a bunch of helpful resources for submitting poetry. We want to make sure these resources are available to all our readers and subscribers for free. And they’…
Uplift Poetry ∙ 2 LIKES

The Poetry Edit - June 19th 2024

This week's newsletter gives you a physics lesson and talks in two ways about bicycles.
Afternoon all! As the days roll into each other I find sharing this space with you to be a wonderful haven - I hope you feel that way reading it, but if you have any suggestions or ideas for improvement, as ever any feedback is gratefully received. I am always looking for new poems to feature (the weeks come around quickly!) so please do send in your …
The Poetry Edit ∙ 8 LIKES
Toni De Luca
Thanks so much for featuring my work. ❤️
The Poetry Edit
A pleasure! Thank you for sharing your poetry with The Poetry Edit!

Welcome to the Gravy Post

A brand new feature from Northern Gravy. News direct to your inbox covering our thoughts on all things Poetry, Fiction and writing for Children. Plus tips on how to get published by us!
Introduction Nothing, in this world, is truly free. How’s that for an opening line? Do anything for you? They do say an opening line should be arresting as well as thought provoking, so that seems to fit that bill at least. It was hard thinking of a way to start this first SubStack email. After all, you’ve come to expect a lot from us, and we don’t want to…
Northern Gravy ∙ 14 LIKES

Jun 21

33 Lit Mags Who Publish (and Pay!) LGBTQ+ Writers

with fee, pay, genre, founding dates, acceptance rates, and more.
Bea Becker and Benjamin Davis ∙ 24 LIKES
Kathrine Elaine
How do they know if the writer is LGBTQ+? I mean, does the author have to prove it somehow or do they just take the author’s word for it? Hey, it’s just a question.
Shyla Ann Shehan
The Good Life Review is open and pays $75 per piece! It's fee free for LGBTQ+ peeps through June 30th. Founded in 2020 and accepts about 3%. Also, only publishes unsolicited work. 100%

The Paris Review

A most challenging publisher
Just this one to read this month. My traveling, and return with a head cold have delayed my posting even though I wanted to write about The Paris Review for the end of June; poetry subs reopen July 1st. Other poetry months are January, April and October. Prose is read in October, February and June. It isn’t easy to get into this esteemed literary journa…
Amy Holman ∙ 7 LIKES
After Dinner Conversation
I think you should include what % of the pieces they publish come from unsolicited submissions.

The Tarot Of Songwriting

The gifts of naivety, filtered Henry Miller and psychoanalysis
Hello and thank you for joining me here at Patterns In Repeat. My name is Laura Marling and I’ve been writing songs and putting out records for nearly 20 years. Recently I’ve felt the urge to talk about the practice that has been the central preoccupation of my adult life - in some ways, as an attempt to explain it to myself.
Laura Marling ∙ 476 LIKES
Kira
Is she gonna write her book someday? ✨❤️
Alianne Valladares-Prieto
As if you hadn’t already done enough for me with album releases such as Semper Femina and Once I Was An Eagle—both of which have made me feel that I was, in fact, not the eldest daughter after all. That, as it turns out, I seem to perpetually have the voice of an older sister, a few steps ahead of me, guiding me one song at a time.
So anyway, thank you for discovering substack and sharing your beautiful words. You’ll never really know how much I appreciate you and all your works in their many formats.

The Emptiness Machine

How generative AI is trying to rip the screaming soul out of the Enlightenment
Brett Scott ∙ 54 LIKES
Michael Haines
Perhaps it may lead to a blossoming of local talent. People learning, and playing and making and doing together... just for that sake of the experience - as people once got together to sing around the piano for no other reason than to sing. Not to make money or to show off their talent for an audience... just to sing, and to dance and to play charades and tell stories to each other. In the end, what's the point of consuming another AI generated image or video or song or article? If it helps to teach you something, well and good. But then what is the purpose of learning? If it is for the sake of mastery itself, and for the enjoyment of company... that seems to me to be a worthwhile exchange :)
Parsifal Solomon
That might be the creepiest advertising yet. Horrible

A Dozen New Personal Essays to Read this Week...

PLUS: Two new workshops from Lilly Dancyger in the announcements at the bottom...
Welcome to Memoir Land—a newsletter edited by Sari Botton, now featuring four verticals: Memoir Monday, a weekly curation of the best personal essays from around the web brought to you by Narratively, The Rumpus, Granta, Guernica, Oldster Magazine,
26 LIKES

Prompt 301. Just Married

& Maggie Nelson on the fingerprints of God
Hi friend, Earlier this week, I sat on the floor of a cavernous gallery at Artyard in Frenchtown, New Jersey, where my joint art show with my mom, “The Alchemy of Blood” is—as of yesterday!—open to the public. My finished paintings were propped against the walls all around the room, a…
Suleika Jaouad ∙ 268 LIKES
Mary McKnight
Cranberry Red
You bring out my vibrance
the shade of it shoves all insecurity to obscurity
my face shines in the blue/red hue of a little berry
reminders of a dress long ago that enchanted me and others who saw me in it
daring me to dress again in this voluminous simplicity
one color, draping me in a vast possibility
perhaps that is why I do not currently have it
and now, I must
why did I give that dress away so casually after one comment
"It calls too much attention to you"
No, I wear it and it becomes me
Well, I wore it and now I must again
And the search begins.
judi
compose an ode to "one of your favorite" colors is one thing...but an ode to "your favorite" color...like asking to pick a favorite child. for me there are 4. one is medium grey. the other two i rarely get to see: peach (one certain rare shade), wine (not maroon), and periwinkle. so here's to peach:
1. why doesn't this country love you as i do? do the people here not want to be happy?
2. the hotel room i am in is entirely black, dark grey, beige, brown, and tan. whoa. seems intentionally cruel to the human spirit. like 'don't you dare feel happy'. good thing there is a huge window from the 7th floor looking out onto an endless forest and sky. but still no peach in sight.
3. the first time we met you were on my mother's lips. some designer of cosmetics decided people would like you and should see you. and some chemist managed to put you into goo on a retractable stick. and my mother liked you. and she looked great with you on her lips.
4. but lipstick was only my thing in 8th grade -- yardley 'pink' so light it was almost white. but i saw your little peach molecules in there. thank you, yardley chemists.
5. so where in the world ARE you, my dear favorite color? probably indonesia.
6. i saw you in chile recently on passion fruit hanging from a giant tree in my friend's yard. i was gobsmacked!! gorgeous peach gems everywhere! my friend kept putting you in my hands to eat -- a flavor as soft and gentle and warm and sweet and miraculous as your color! i could only eat two because i couldn't bear to take you off the tree.
7. i saw you on a dress that will never fit me but i bought it anyway so i can see you every day in my closet. next to the other peach clothes i'll never be able to wear.
8. i see you in my art. that makes me happy. but i want more.
9. turns out you were also my mother's favorite color. she looked great on you.
10. in honor of you i describe wonderful things as 'just peachy'. oh no! almost at 13.
11. i found you yesterday in suleika and anne's art. hi there.
12. mangos! you are almost always somewhere on a mango. and i actually won't buy a mango unless you are there! my grandfather had a huge, prolific mango tree in his front yard in florida. sometimes people came in the middle of the night to steal mangos. when my parents sold the house, they put sign on the lawn "Mango Tree for Sale". but i digress.
13. lovebirds also show you off. that make sense. i love you too.

The modern discourse novel

Novelists who allow the internet to set limits on how they think
Housekeeping My Western Canon salon series with Interintellect continues on 11th July with Goethe. We are discussing The Sorrows of Young Goethe. Second Act was mentioned in David Brooks’ Atlantic essay about late bloomers (an excellent piece) and featured in
Henry Oliver ∙ 117 LIKES
Ben Zalkind
Thanks for this, Henry. It's a perceptive and compelling essay. As I read, I kept wondering, are these characters reflecting our own shallowness back to us? Not just the banality of online discourse and so-called Netflix Realism, but our own inner lives, perhaps impoverished by the internet medium itself?
Rose White
This is excellent. Being a slower reader and selective about what I read as it pertains to my moods and intellectual interests, I've scraped against all of these books dozens of times without any real interest in them, and you've hit the nail on the head why. I am constantly saying to people "I wish I had lived through the seventies, eighties, and early nineties." Not because they were inherently better times, as mindless nostalgia is a place I do not want to live -- but because they were pre-internet. I feel like if I had lived through them, perhaps I could be better equipped to experience life without the internet as cleanly as I would like to. I have never lived without the internet, in fact I grew up with it, but I have always talked in long, winding paragraphs that never fit neatly with the cultural meme-ification of language. I have always felt like the internet robs me of some deeper insight into the emotional psyche of my characters, because I am constantly aware of how those characters may be perceived once discourse gets its hands on it. I'm hoping for the day I move past this, and start to feel that I can write something that has nothing to do with political pedagogy, even if it is applied after the fact.