… or 147 poets in 184 days (or so) …
Did I have any idea I’d be this far along a journey through poetry when a bunch of us bookish Twitter friends had the first #todayspoem discussion back in late 2011? What I did know is that I felt very committed from the outset to giving it a concerted try. I would do my best to read and share via Twitter every single day an excerpt from a poem to which I’d given some consideration and reflection. So far, so good. I was still enthusiastic when I checked in after two months, and six months in, I’m still interested, motivated, intrigued, jazzed … and have yet to miss a day.
What I didn’t know when I sent my first #todayspoem tweet on December 25, 2011 was where my poetry explorations would take me. What I also didn’t realize is how many others would be along for the adventure, and how their contributions, comments and insights would send me off on new side trips along the way.
Overall, the exercise (which has never felt like an exercise, actually) has compelled me to revisit and go deeper in my own library. It has also inspired me to go further afield in print and online, with poets with whom I was already familiar, but also very excitingly with poets old and new I was encountering for the first time.
And what of the daily poetry excerpts and selections themselves – my own and those of other #todayspoem contributors? Well, every day is a fresh intersection with where I am and how I’m feeling and what that day’s poem provokes, evinces or confirms. Not a day goes by that those simple tweets and where they lead have amused, amazed, surprised, touched, agitated, intrigued and more. Try it for yourself.
So, without (much) further ado, here is a list of the poets whose work I’ve read and incorporated in #todayspoem tweets since December 25, 2011. For each name, I’m going to link to a biography, article, interview, review or some other resource that might inspire you to go off on a few poetry side trips yourself. Thank you to the poets, publishers, #todayspoem contributors and poetry lovers in general who have filled and enriched the first six months of this venture, and are likely to help me turn this into a lifelong habit.
- Milton Acorn
- Helen Adam
- Simon Armitage
- John Ashbery
- Margaret Atwood
- Margaret Avison
- Ken Babstock
- Gary Barwin
- Linda Besner
- William Blake
- Robin Blaser
“How often I look back
the dew undisturbed and the moss – “
for the moment my footprints
fade from sight
Emily McGiffin, As Air from Between Dusk and Night (2012, Brick Books)
- Roo Borson
- Dionne Brand
- Di Brandt
- Nicole Brossard (translated by Robert Majzels and Erin Moure)
- Suzanne Buffam
- Charles Bukowski
- John Burnside
- Anne Carson
- Ciaran Carson
- Paul Celan (translated by Nikolai Popov and Heather McHugh)
“To crow
would have been
out of place;
and besides
this rooster
wanted to be different.”
Irving Layton, The Laughing Rooster (1964, McClelland and Stewart)
- Chris Chambers
- Geoffrey Chaucer
- Victor Coleman
- John Cooper Clarke
- Kevin Connolly
- Dani Couture
- Lynn Crosbie
- Lorna Crozier
- Michael Crummey
- Victor Hernandez Cruz
“The paper’s still empty, the poem unwritten.
You would have done better to have talked to your mother.”
PK Page, How to Write a Poem from Coal and Roses (2009, Porcupines Quill)
- Lorne Daniel
- John Darnielle
- Joe Denham
- Patrick DeWitt
- Jeramy Dodds
- TS Eliot
- Elaine Equi
- Jon Paul Fiorentino
- Allen Ginsberg
- John Glenday
- Louise Gluck
“For he is tenacious of his point.
For he is a mixture of gravity and waggery.”
Christopher Smart, from Jubilate Agno (written 1759-1763)
- Robert Graves
- Lavinia Greenlaw
- Leslie Greentree
- Kate Hall
- Phil Hall
- Saskia Hamilton
- David Harsent
- Seamus Heaney
- Steven Heighton
- Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Ted Hughes
“Kevin Costner stayed in this hotel
Babe Ruth and Calvin Coolidge too
This is a sacred place”
August Kleinzahler, Sleeping It Off in Rapid City (2008, Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
- Mick Imlah
- Kathleen Jamie
- George Johnston
- David Kirby
- August Kleinzahler
- Ko Un
- Evelyn Lau
- Dennis Lee
- John B. Lee
- Philip Levine
“I started spelling my name backwards,
retreating from the space a name makes.”
Rosemary Sullivan, Sisters from The Space a Name Makes (1986, Black Moss Press)
- Philip Larkin
- Mark Lavorato
- Irving Layton
- Sylvia Legris
- Michael Longley
- Audre Lorde
- Robert Lowell
- Pat Lowther
- Gwendolyn MacEwan
- Randall Maggs
“and the wind began to blow and all the trees began to bend
and the world in its cold way started coming alive.”
John Darnielle, Woke Up New from Get Lonely (2006)
- Derek Mahon
- Missy Marston
- Nyla Matuk
- David McFadden
- Emily McGiffin
- Dave McGimpsey
- Michael McGriff
- Heather McHugh
- Don McKay
- Dunya Mikhail (translated by Elizabeth Winslow)
“It’s the spot where the dogs
always stop overlong, then look at me as if to say,
Explain this, please.”
Chase Twichell, The Park From Above (2012, Plume Poetry)
- Jacob Arthur Mooney
- Edward Moore
- AF Moritz
- Erin Moure
- Paul Muldoon
- George Murray
- Les Murray
- Susan Musgrave
- Eileen Myles
- Eilean Ni Chuilleanain
- Sean O’Brien
- Frank O’Hara
- David O’Meara
“And when Peace here does house
He comes with work to do, he does not come to coo,
He comes to brood and sit.”
Gerard Manley Hopkins, Peace from Poems (1918)
- Michael Ondaatje
- Eric Ormsby
- PK Page
- Dorothy Parker
- Don Paterson
- Carl Phillips
- Al Purdy
- Meredith Quartermain
- Sina Queyras
- Matt Rader
- Lisa Robertson
- Matthew Rohrer
- Valerie Rouzeau (translated by Susan Wicks)
- Tadeusz Rozewicz (translated by Joanna Trzeciak)
- Fiona Sampson
“It was the last conversation I ever had with her.
I told her I liked baseball, to make her happy.”
Dave McGimpsey, What Was That Poem? (2011, Walrus Magazine)
- Gjertrud Schnackenberg
- Ann Scowcroft
- Frederick Seidel
- Charles Simic
- Christopher Smart
- Karen Solie
- Tabatha Southey
- Jack Spicer
- John Steffler
- Rosemary Sullivan
- Wislawa Szymborska
- Matthew Tierney
- Tomas Transtromer
- Chase Twichell
“Outside there are sirens.
Someone’s been run over.
The century grinds on.”
Margaret Atwood, Secular Night from Morning in the Burned House (1995, McClelland and Stewart)
- Priscila Uppal
- Jacqueline Valencia
- Cesar Vallejo (translated by Clayton Eshleman)
- Paul Vermeersch
- Fred Wah
- Bronwen Wallace
- Walt Whitman
- Gillian Wigmore
- Ian Williams
- Julie Wilson
- CD Wright
- Charles Wright
- Dean Young
- Jan Zwicky
See also:
-
#todayspoem contributors (Twitter list)
-
#todayspoem contributions (Pinterest)
-
“a rediscovery and immersion into poetry, specifically the joy of reading poetry aloud” – Audiobook narrator and voice artist Xe Sands discusses how she has expanded her poetry landscape thanks in part to #todayspoem
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If you’re #todayspoem’ing and keeping track, let me know so I can link to your list, too.