Poetry news via Google, MSN, and Yahoo!
- Contest gives Blue Ridge students new appreciation for poetry (The Greenville News)
"Do not weep, maiden, for war is kind," began Dylan Cole, a freshman at Blue Ridge High School. As he recited Stephen Crane's poem to his English I class, Cole said he found that the words were flowing through him.
- Out and About: Nov. 12 - 23 - Abington Mariner
Free networking event. 6:30 to 9 p.m., Sunrise Assisted Living of Plymouth, 97 Warren Ave., Plymouth. For information or to RSVP contact Candita, 781-834-2728 or candita@thehealthylivingguide.com . Technology training workshop. 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m ...
- 1-25 of 186 results - Seattle Weekly
Category Art Exhibitions Art Openings & Events Books & Authors Cabaret/ Burlesque/ Variety Classical/ Opera Club Events Comedy Dance Family Events Fashion Festivals/ Parades Food Events Lectures LGBT Local Film/ Arthouse Museums Music Poetry/ Spoken ...
- The Santa man cometh! - Newington Town Crier
The Santa man cometh!Newington Town Crier, CT - 26 minutes agoThere would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. ...
- Blinded by Science - PopMatters
Blinded by SciencePopMatters, IL - 56 minutes agoHer poetry has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and she has published articles on various pop-culture-related subjects including the night she almost ...
- Your weird, wild New Year's resolutions (The Courier Mail)
EAT more yak, learn to belch the alphabet, get my comma problems under control - these are just some of the weird New Year's resolutions made by bloggers.
- Billy Collins, 'sociable guy' and ace ambassador for poetry (San Diego Union-Tribune)
Let's be frank: Popular poets who also attracted critical acclaim were a rarity in the 20th century. They still are. Robert Frost had both a large audience and approval from critics and scholars. Allen Ginsberg ultimately did too, though they had divergent audiences.
- News in brief (West Salem Coulee News)
Here are a selection of brief news items from this week's paper edition, and possibly a few news briefs that didn't make it in the paper.
- Overbooked: A rebirth of reading with The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop ... - Isthmus Daily Page
Overbooked: A rebirth of reading with The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop ...Isthmus Daily Page, WI - Dec 17, 2008The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop got me thinking about some of the famous bookstores I’ve loved browsing in -- City Lights in San Francisco; the Grolier Poetry ...
- Fund started to help stampede victim's family - Newsday
The Oregonian - OregonLive.comFund started to help stampede victim's familyNewsday, NY - 5 hours agoFriends describe him as an easygoing man who loved poetry. "Here was a guy who worked overnight, and shoppers didn't even seem to care that he was trampled. ...Friends: Wal-Mart victim was easygoing, helpful Newsdayall 18 news articles
- Poetry awards and conflict of interest (not what you think…) - Quill & Quire
Poetry awards and conflict of interest (not what you think…)Quill & Quire, Canada - 6 hours agoApparently, Canada isn’t the only place where poets get their dander up about awards and perceived conflict of interest. The New York Times’ Paper Cuts blog ...
- This week's calendar of events Boynton Beach - Sun-Sentinel.com
This week's calendar of events Boynton BeachSun-Sentinel.com, FL - 16 hours agoFree. Mary Blomgren of the Florida Writer's Association invites all to bring your own works of fiction, nonfiction or poetry to share and hear feedback on. ...
- Menier Chocolate Factory, SE1 - Times Online
Menier Chocolate Factory, SE1Times Online, UK - 1 hour agoWebster is Shakespeare’s true successor: more than any of his contemporaries, he can use poetry as a psychological language, and he knows you shouldn’t ...
- The unflinching eye (Guardian Unlimited)
Goya, a man of the people, found success as a portraitist to the Spanish aristocracy. But, writes Robert Hughes, it was his depictions of war and his pessimistic Black Paintings, reflecting the turbulence of 19th-century Europe and his own experience of madness, that changed art for ever
- Northborough author's latest book takes the cake (The MetroWest Daily News)
When Dorothy Johnson was a little girl, her mother would send her down to the cellar for potatoes. Distracted by the piles of newspapers there, she'd forget the errand and end up lost in a world of words.
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