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Harriet: News & Community

A literary blog about poetry and related news

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Showing 11 to 20 of 375 Blog Posts
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By The Editors November 8, 2022

    If you’re new to the app, now is a great time to check it out since the October issue (our 110th anniversary issue) is currently FREE!

  • From Poetry Magazine
    By The Editors October 3, 2022

    Poetry magazine was founded 110 years ago this month, and in celebration of this milestone, we’re offering our readers lots of special content and freebies.

  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Anthony Cody September 28, 2022

    In my insistence on being the poet/essayist, I had managed to make myself the hero, to assume that I knew better than the poem. Perhaps this is in the western...

  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Yaccaira Salvatierra September 26, 2022

    I had not been writing and, truthfully, I was contemplating abandoning poetry after decades of coming back to it time and time again.

  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Jessica Kim September 7, 2022

    Although love is less frequent in my mother tongue, it lasts longer. 

    An Asian woman with a white t-shirt and red dress standing in a field
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Hajar Hussaini May 25, 2022

    I have developed affinities for poems that provide a space to rest. This is not to say that poetry can or should avert one’s eyes from political realities, but it...

    Brown, white, and beige buildings in the foreground with tall mountains in the background and low, white clouds behind the mountains. The sky is very pale blue with some soft pink accents.
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Sarah Ghazal Ali May 17, 2022

    When my father explained that I was named for an elevated poetic form, that an entire region’s poetic pride was embedded in my name, ghazals became a source of wonder...

  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Holly Amos April 27, 2022

    We invited contributors from the April “Exophony” issue to tell us about a favorite poem in their “original” language, or in their “adopted” literary language.

    The text, "I am the plural / who walks to you / as a singular one" appears in gray on a white background and is credited to Dunya Mikhail.
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Holly Amos April 19, 2022

    We invited contributors from the April “Exophony” issue to tell us how they began writing poetry in a “non-native,” or second, or other language, and why (in 100 words or...

    The text, "I am the plural / who walks to you / as a singular one" appears in gray on a white background and is credited to Dunya Mikhail.
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Holly Amos April 12, 2022

    We invited all contributors from the April “Exophony” issue to tell us the story--or a story--about learning the language that they’ve adopted for poetry (in 100 words or fewer). 

    The text, "I am the plural / who walks to you / as a singular one" appears in gray on a white background and is credited to Dunya Mikhail.
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