Sally Bliumis-Dunn Q&A on the pleasure and pain of writing
Sally Bliumis-Dunn talks about the most pleasurable and painful aspects of writing.
Sally Bliumis-Dunn talks about the most pleasurable and painful aspects of writing.
Alexander Long talks about determining the form a poem will take.
Alexander Long talks about lines of poetry he wishes he’d written, by W.H. Auden, Gerald Stern, and Larry Levis.
Michael Morse talks about the poems he submitted to Fishouse, part of a manuscript-in-progress titled Void and Compensation.
Michael Morse talks about how he first became interested in poems.
Elizabeth Bradfield talks about her recent poetry projects: her new book of poems, Approaching Ice, about Arctic and Antarctic exploration; poems about Arctic explorer and Provincetown, Massachusetts, native Donald B. MacMillan; and poems about her work as a naturalist.
Elizabeth Bradfield talks about her experience discovering From the Fishouse.
Elizabeth Bradfield talks about the genesis of her poems “Against Solitude“; “Roughnecks and Rakes One and All, the Poet Speaks to Her Subjects, Polar Explorers“; and “Mirror 1: Mac and I Reflect on Distances.”