Geoffrey Brock Q&A on the genesis of his poem ‘The State of Virginia after Southampton: 1831’
Geoffrey Brock discusses the genesis of his poem “The State of Virginia after Southampton: 1831.”
Geoffrey Brock discusses the genesis of his poem “The State of Virginia after Southampton: 1831.”
Geoffrey Brock talks about form.
Adrian Blevins, author of The Brass Girl Brouhaha, winner of the 2004 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, and professor at Colby College, offers some advice to young writers.
Douglas Woodsum, a rural high school English teacher and a winner of the Bread Loaf Poetry Prize, discusses the form of his poem, Fourteener 279.
Douglas Woodsum, a rural high school English teacher and a winner of the Bread Loaf Poetry Prize, discusses the genesis of his poem, Carving Your Future.
Douglas Woodsum, a rural high school English teacher and a winner of the Bread Loaf Poetry Prize, talks about how he began writing poetry.
Ross Gay, a Ph.D. candidate and Cave Canem fellow, discusses two poets he recommends.
Ross Gay talks about a stanza of poetry he wishes he’d written, from William Matthews’s poem, “Why We Are Truly a Nation.”