Showing posts with label poetry month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry month. Show all posts
Saturday, April 16, 2011
A Poem is Found Within
April may be the cruelest month but April is also Poetry Month. A letter from the Northern Women's Bookstore
Hello everyone,
I hope you are enjoying this snowy Saturday and not cursing this return to winter weather. April is the month of the unexpected, bringing us joys and challenges willy-nilly. But you knew that; April is not a surprise to a northerner.
April is also Poetry Month, so if you have forgotten or been to busy to let the muse of poetic sensibility enter your heart, April is here. April reminds you to pull out those poetry books that you love to read over and over again, to search out new books, new poets, old poets with new books, and, of course, to write poetry.
You say you are not a poet? That you can't write poetry? That is not true. Everyone is a poet. Are we not all creatures of oral traditions, parsing the complexities of our lives into economy of language on a daily basis? Are we not women familiar with white sheets?
Mary Oliver, poet of sublime beauty that tugs at your heart, says that to become a good writer of poetry one must read good poetry. This is the heart of the advice from her A Poetry Handbook that I picked up from The Northern Woman's Bookstore at the beginning of April. It's a slim book, a slip of a book, but Oliver teaches her readers many things inside those 130 pages. Like economy of language. Working with white space.
All poetry books at the Northern Women's Bookstore are 20% off for the month of April.
Mary Oliver's New and Selected Poems, vol. one is sitting on the back shelves along with a host of other poetry books by diverse women:
Being on the Moon by Annharte ("Like the moon herself, the language is fierce and beautiful")
It's Hard Being Queen: The Dusty Springfield Poems by Jeanette Lynes ("This is no hagiography. This is no tabloid adventure")
The Door by Margaret Atwood ("written in a sparse, elegiac tone that combines illuminating intelligence with caustic humour")
Cistern of my Body by Rona Shaffran ("simple, sensuous and real, setting down reality in a fresh way")
All Names Spoken by Tamai Kobayashi and Mona Oikawa ("Extremely provocative and uninhibited")
many others, including local writers!
Hello everyone,
I hope you are enjoying this snowy Saturday and not cursing this return to winter weather. April is the month of the unexpected, bringing us joys and challenges willy-nilly. But you knew that; April is not a surprise to a northerner.
April is also Poetry Month, so if you have forgotten or been to busy to let the muse of poetic sensibility enter your heart, April is here. April reminds you to pull out those poetry books that you love to read over and over again, to search out new books, new poets, old poets with new books, and, of course, to write poetry.
You say you are not a poet? That you can't write poetry? That is not true. Everyone is a poet. Are we not all creatures of oral traditions, parsing the complexities of our lives into economy of language on a daily basis? Are we not women familiar with white sheets?
Mary Oliver, poet of sublime beauty that tugs at your heart, says that to become a good writer of poetry one must read good poetry. This is the heart of the advice from her A Poetry Handbook that I picked up from The Northern Woman's Bookstore at the beginning of April. It's a slim book, a slip of a book, but Oliver teaches her readers many things inside those 130 pages. Like economy of language. Working with white space.
All poetry books at the Northern Women's Bookstore are 20% off for the month of April.
Mary Oliver's New and Selected Poems, vol. one is sitting on the back shelves along with a host of other poetry books by diverse women:
Being on the Moon by Annharte ("Like the moon herself, the language is fierce and beautiful")
It's Hard Being Queen: The Dusty Springfield Poems by Jeanette Lynes ("This is no hagiography. This is no tabloid adventure")
The Door by Margaret Atwood ("written in a sparse, elegiac tone that combines illuminating intelligence with caustic humour")
Cistern of my Body by Rona Shaffran ("simple, sensuous and real, setting down reality in a fresh way")
All Names Spoken by Tamai Kobayashi and Mona Oikawa ("Extremely provocative and uninhibited")
many others, including local writers!
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