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Africa anthology Asia Berlin Cambodia capitalism Cartagena Charity Travel children Consumerism death Delhi education essay freedom hitchhiking India Kenya Kisumu language Laos life love Malaysia meaning meditation memory Miru Money music Nairobi pain Philosophy poetry power refugees religion resistance Thailand time Tiruvannamalai Trump Vientiane Vietnam writing
4 January, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Anseo by Paul Muldoon

Today Paul Muldoon (19 ). Seamus Heaney has called him one of the greatest poets. I read a poem called Anseo. It’s the Irish way to say ‘present, sir, yes, sir’: Anseo When the Master was calling the roll At the primary school in Collegelands, You were meant to call back Anseo And raise your …

anthology, Ireland, Paul Muldoon 1 Comment
3 January, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Tattoo by Ted Kooser

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning poetry book “Delights & Shadows” by Ted Kooser (b. 1939) today the poem ‘Tattoo’. Kooser was a life insurance executive for many years. He is now retired and teaches poetry part time at the University of Nebraska. He gets up at 4:30 in the morning and writes. Every day (which is …

anthology, Stories, tatoo, Ted Kooser
2 January, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Turtle by Kay Ryan

Today I read a poem by 2011 Pulitzer Prize winner Kay Ryan (b. 1945). Turtle is a poem with her signature ‘recombinant’ rhyme and mordant wit: Turtle Who would be a turtle who could help it? A barely mobile hard roll, a four-oared helmet, she can ill afford the chances she must take in rowing toward …

anthology, Kay Ryan, patience, turtle 1 Comment
1 January, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Pentecost by Derek Walcott

A challenging poem by Derek Walcott (1930-2017), the magnificent poet and social activist from St. Lucia who received the 1992 Nobel Prize for literature. I read a complex poem entitled Pentecost: Pentecost Better a jungle in the head than rootless concrete. Better to stand bewildered by the fireflies’ crooked street; winter lamps do not show …

anthology, Derek Walcott, Pentecost 1 Comment
31 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: The Calves Not Chosen by Linda Gregg

Linda Gregg (b. 1942) lives in New York. The biography on Poetry Foundation only mentions the many awards she won and we don’t really care about awards. I found a poem of hers that I find interesting. Here goes: The calves not chosen The mind goes caw, caw, caw, caw, dark and fast. The orphan heart cries out, …

anthology, calves, Linda Gregg 1 Comment
30 December, 2017
Poetry

“Religions are big slow poems, while most poems are short, fast religions.” – Les Murray

Les Murray
30 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: What Marked Tom by Tyehimba Jess

Tyehimba Jess (b. 1965) is the winner of this year’s Pulitzer Prize for his poetry book ‘Olio’. Born in Detroit, he currently teaches at the College of Staten Island in New York City. I was impressed with some pages of Olio, a complex and beautiful poetic journey into the life of African American performers from the Civil …

African American, anthology, Pulitzer, slavery, Tyehimba Jess 1 Comment
29 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Ellis Island by Peter Balakian

Today I read a poem from Armenian-American poet Peter Balakian (b. 1951). He won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 2016 and has been vocal about never forgetting the 1909 Armenian Genocide (death and expulsion of 1.5 million people in what was then the Ottoman Empire). Here’s a poem called Ellis Island, the island of …

anthology, Ellis Island, New York, Peter Baldakian, Pulitzer 1 Comment
28 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Lydia You Old Whore by Leonard Nathan

Leonard Nathan (1924-2007), a fine poet and translator who was an important figure at the University of Berkeley, California. I read a graphic poem about the oldest profession because I found something appealing in its language: Lydia, you old whore after Horace Loaded, pubic boys no longer tap Your windows with their palms and beg …

anthology, Horace, Leonard Nathan, Lydia 1 Comment
28 December, 2017
Laughs
English confusion #1

The venerated veal reared to reveal a real venereal ordeal.

1 Comment
28 December, 2017
Laughs
Semicoloncancer

[PDF]

Semicoloncancer
27 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: A Dirge by Thomas Merton

Thomas Merton (1915-1968) was an American poet and Trappist monk in Kentucky who published over 70 books including a very popular autobiography. I selected a poem about the victims of war (Merton was a social activist) because I like its powerful language: A dirge Some one who hears the bugle neigh will know How cold …

anthology, death, Thomas Merton, war 1 Comment
26 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: The Unborn by Sharon Olds

Sharon Olds (b. 1942) is an American poet and a leading voice according to Poetry Foundation. She writes about the body and its pleasures and pains. She has won a Pulitzer prize (for Stag’s Leap, 2013) and the British T.S. Eliot prize. She (or her work?) is widely anthologized, if that’s the info you need. Today, I …

anthology, children, Sharon Olds, unborn
25 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: For The Anniversary Of My Death by W.S. Merwin

W.S. Merwin (b. 1927) is an American poet who became famous as an anti-war poet in the 1960s. He later developed an interest in buddism and deep ecology and moved to an old banana plantation on Maui, Hawai, which he restored to its original rainforest state. I read a timeless poem about celebrating the anniversary …

anthology, death, nature, W.S. Merwin
24 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Ships by Tomaž Šalamun

Tomaž Šalamun (1941-2014) was an adventurous, I think people say ‘avant-garde’ poet from Slovenia. I like what I see (or could we say: read) because it is mysterious and our world feels sometimes like mystery has been painted over. Here’s ‘ships’ in a translation by Brian Henry: Ships I’m religious. As religious as the wind …

anthology, religion, Tomaž Šalamun
24 December, 2017
Poetry

“Poetry for me is not work but pleasure, not a career but a second life—a play within a play.”- Peter Davison

Peter Davison, poetry
23 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Strange Fruit by Seamus Heaney

Seamus Heaney (1939-2013) was a giant of Northern Irish poetry. He translated Beowulf into lively,  modern language. Heaney was an immensely popular ambassador of poetry. Today, I read ‘Strange fruit’ – what a muscular and earthly use of language: Strange Fruit Here is the girl’s head like an exhumed gourd. Oval-faced, prune-skinned, prune-stones for teeth. …

anthology, death, garden, history, Seamus Heaney 1 Comment
22 December, 2017
Poetry
To my child

today I stage a rebirth of my desire to see the world through your eyes if you see the flowers stare at you from their blushing fields you are like a sun to them so I invited myself to your dream and do you know mine about the thankfulness of a well, the divine right …

child, life, love, memory, thankfulness 1 Comment
21 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Old Couple by Charles Simic

Charles Simic (b. 1938) is an American poet born in Servia. His early childhood during World War 2 informed some of his poetry, that is said to be haunting and agonizing, but replete with gallows humor. He also wrote a lot of poems about everyday objects, such as spoons, knives and forks. I found this …

anthology, Charles Simic, love
20 December, 2017
Poetry
A dream in the office

they hover over their plastic faces to greet you and shake you with their immaculate prosthetics do not to disturb the raging polyps of trust you came here, dressed in a thin illusion to overdose your mind on fluorescent dayshifts to do jawflips for a crustaceous boss who wanks silently under his desk in the …

office, purpose 1 Comment
19 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: The Envoy Of Mr. Cogito by Zbigniew Herbert

Today, another Polish giant, Zbigniew Herbert (1924-1998). He has been called the most beloved Polish poet of his day, ahead of Milosz and Szymborska. I read a revolutionary poem set in a key that affects me, a poem about the stubborn messengers of our hollow truth, in a translation by Bogdana Carpenter: The Envoy Of Mr. …

anthology, Herbert, meaning, oppression, Poland
18 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: The Harbor by Carl Sandburg

Carl Sandburg (1878-1967) was a very American poet. He wrote a Lincoln biography and was the only poet who spoke for Congress. He was insanely famous in the US so we have to read one of his poems. Her goes: The Harbor Passing through huddled and ugly walls, By doorways where women haggard Looked from …

America, anthology, Carl Sandberg, harbor 1 Comment
17 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Impossible Friendships by Adam Zagajewski

Adam Zagajewski (b. 1945) is another famous Polish poet. Browsing his poetry, I found this endearing list of impossible friendships, and I quote: Impossible friendships For example, with someone who no longer is, who exists only in yellowed letters. Or long walks beside a stream, whose depths hold hidden porcelain cups—and the talks about philosophy …

Adam Zagajewski, anthology, friendship
16 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: On The Mountain by John Haines

John Haines (1924-2011) was a poet laureate of Alaska so imagine snow and huskies and winter cabins. I read a poem about a mountain that is praised for its precision. If you’ve ever walked on a serious mountain, this might remind you: On the mountain We climbed out of timber, bending on the steep meadow …

anthology, John Haines, mountain, nature 1 Comment

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