Tag: Meg Day

Trish Hopkinson's "Letter to Covid-19" and a Reading of Meg Day's "Psalm for July” via 15 Bytes

I’m honored to be included in 15 Bytes: Utah’s Art Magazine for their Poets in Pajamas National Poetry Month series. The series provides audio recordings of each poet reading one of their own poems as well as a reading of a poem by a poet they admire. I […]

Three of my poems published in Nuclear Impact: Broken Atoms in Our Hands by Shabda Press

I am honored to have my poems “The Next State,” “Denial,” and “What” published in this amazing poetry anthology Nuclear Impact: Broken Atoms in Our Hands with so many wonderful writers. Proceeds from the anthology are being donated to the Women’s Center in Downtown Los Angeles. I’m particularly proud of this poem below, […]

“Moving forward with poetry and prose” an offering from espnW to mark the worldwide women’s marches today + more poems

There’s not much more to be said about this exceptional offering of poems and prose presented by espnW. Click on the article link below and spend some time with the words of these honest and masterful human beings, including Meg Day, Ada Limón, Mahogany L. Browne, Allison Glock, and Jessica Jacobs. Also […]

"Moving forward with poetry and prose" an offering from espnW to mark the worldwide women's marches today + more poems

There’s not much more to be said about this exceptional offering of poems and prose presented by espnW. Click on the article link below and spend some time with the words of these honest and masterful human beings, including Meg Day, Ada Limón, Mahogany L. Browne, Allison Glock, and Jessica Jacobs. Also […]

Breath-holding poetry by Katharine Coles via Kore Press

Take a deep breath before reading this poem of poison and love. A shorter poem of only 15 lines that captures longevity in a way that forces every to count. Coles’ poem “Longevity” is meant to be read over and over again. The first stanza begins: In a world […]

Exquisite poetry by Kimberly Johnson via Kore Press

So much richness in this poem, you’ll need some water to wash it down. Not to mention the sounds that bounce to your ears when the poem is read aloud. Lines like: Must be what faith feels like, to drive believing in the persistence of highway lines whose white […]

Have you read award-winner Meg Day's poems? #NaPoMo #AWP

Recently, I signed up for a workshop course entitled The Day After: Poems of Peace, Provocation, and Witness, taught by Meg Day in Salt Lake City. At the time, I was not yet familiar with Meg or her work. It’s been a remarkable experience, as I told a friend of mine, […]

Trish Hopkinson