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Harriet: News & Community

A literary blog about poetry and related news

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  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Suzi F. Garcia August 21, 2023

    I now realize that growth cannot happen overnight, nor should it. It must be built with the goal of sustainability. As anyone in nonprofit work can tell you, burnout plagues...

    Cover of the Jan 2022 issue of POETRY, front and back, shows a large quote on the left and the word "POETRY" in a grid on the right, with unicorns, birds, and people flying through clouds.
  • Foundation News
    August 15, 2023

    In 2016, poets Sheila Black and Kathi Wolfe had a conversation discussing the barriers faced by poets with disabilities. Kathi questioned why there couldn’t be a non-profit focused specifically on...

    Collage featuring (clockwise) Liv Mammone (Fellow), Leslie McIntosh (Fellow), Kay Ulanday Barrett (Faculty), Maurice Moore (Fellow), Ricky Ray (Fellow), Alayna Powell (Fellow), Kimberly Jae (Fellow), Meg Day (Faculty), and the Zoegossia logo (a yellow squ
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Su Cho August 14, 2023

    I don’t know how to make a home. It feels jarring to say that, but I realize I’ve always had my eye on the next thing, the next project, and...

    Cover of the October 2021 issue of POETRY, front and back, shows a large quote on the left and the word "POETRY" in a grid on the right, with with zebras running through the letters.
  • Featured Blogger
    By Chen Chen August 14, 2023

    Nearly everything I know about football can be summed up in two profoundly funny and funnily profound poems by Mary Ruefle “Elegy for a Game” and “Super Bowl.” Though neither explicitly mentions it, these poems...

    Surreal image of two outsized football players on a field, limbs askew. Hovering over them is the  a woman's upper body, her face seemingly masked. In the backdrop are flags and other spectators. Lithograph, black and white.
  • From Poetry Magazine
    By Ashley M. Jones August 7, 2023

    And so now, here I was, shouldering all that and now shouldering an enormous magazine. How could I make a safe space for myself, for others?

    Cover of the June 2021 issue of POETRY, front and back, shows a large quote on the left and on the right the word "POETRY" in a grid, in the style of theater marquee lights.
  • Featured Blogger
    By Andrea Cohen August 7, 2023

    My father used to read to me at bedtime when I was a kid. One of my favorite books was Louis Untermeyer’s anthology, The Golden Treasury of Poetry, with Blake, Dickinson,...

    Abstract painting, gouache on paper, swirls in black, purple, green, with a horn-shaped sliver of blue sky and field shining through, as well as a larger pocket of light with curved lines in orange, greens and blues.
  • Foundation News
    August 1, 2023

    The Poetry Foundation is excited to announce the 12 finalists for the 2023 Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowships! Thank you to everyone who applied and shared their work...

  • Foundation News
    July 31, 2023

    When Francisco Aragón joined the University of Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies (ILS) in 2003, there was no literary component. To address the gap, he established the Andrés Montoya...

    This image features the poets at the Afro-Latinx Poetry Now gathering In September, 2022, whose writing will be featured in the post-gathering folio at Chiricú Journal. Six poets are sitting casually on a couch and smiling.
  • Featured Blogger
    By Aisha Sasha John July 31, 2023

    The first time I went to New York, or maybe the second, I read for the Segue series in the Zinc Bar: low stage, red velvet curtains—a windowless sexual basement,...

    Black and white image of trees along a river bank, shrouded in morning mist.
  • Featured Blogger
    By Chen Chen July 17, 2023

    “Oh, he’s getting deported,” said my mother with a big, bright smile, right as my father was leaving the house to meet with an immigration lawyer. For years I’ve ruminated...

    Photo of an art installation, eight red clay bowls with many cracks running through them, set against a a red clay backdrop that is also cracking, within a wooden frame.
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