Each weekday, the Academy of American Poets curates a new poem by a U.S.-based poet; on weekends, a classic poem. 7TW
The Academy of American Poets, the nation’s largest membership-based nonprofit organization promoting contemporary poets and poetry, publishes and delivers a new poem each weekday by a diverse range of United States-based poets, through Poem-a-Day. Each poem is accompanied by a short biography of the poet and a few sentences written by the poet providing context and insight into the composition. On weekends two classic poems are delivered.
ABOUT THE FEATURE
The Academy of American Poets, the nation’s largest membership-based nonprofit organization promoting contemporary poets and poetry, celebrates its 80th anniversary in 2014. The organization launched National Poetry Month, held each April, and produces Poets.org, one of the leading destinations for poetry on the planet.
Each weekday, the organization publishes and delivers a new poem by a diverse range of United States-based poets, through Poem-a-Day. Each poem is accompanied by a short biography of the poet and a few sentences written by the poet providing context and insight into the composition. On weekends two classic poems are delivered. The poems are curated so that each week readers experience a different but loosely connected narrative of American poetry today.
Poem-a-Day is available for free to news editors beginning April 14. For samples and service, contact John Killian, King Features Vice President, Syndication Sales, at 1-262-521-9222 or email: jkillian@hearst.com.
SAMPLE COLUMN
Lunchtime with Woodwinds
Alli Warren
I wish I could write a song
to make the world
yield to this rushing
lapping what starts
tonguing what parts
any possible other world than this
inertia for pink medallion
inertia for those skeptics
in the building
who think of the unknown
as hemorrhage-quick stop
that thing from surfacing
I want to rub along
the webbing I want nothing but
the cove’s yawning jaw
for how else could possibility emerge
you see that honey
seeping through cracks?
let’s consider unbearable facts
beat this meat against the rocks
you call that virtue? knock knock
is this the proper place for the symposium?
small of my back requests unfolding
requests enveloping entry
call the operators
to open pathways
to vessels which gleam
rightly and rush
to make this here inlet
a humid blue bowl
to resist enclosure
and the loaded laying down
of structure on soft earth
as desire can never perish
blind in the rush of weeds
trying to get a glimpse
of the law
falling away
and in passing breathing lift
About This Poem
“‘Lunchtime with Woodwinds’ fantasizes that we might bring another world into being through sheer force of desire-a world where capitalist time has been wiped from our hearts, a world in some ways already here; if we listen, it seeps everywhere, in the rocks and tides, in our bodies loving and longing and fighting. This poem takes its first line from a song (‘Sweet Clean Air’ by Bobby Brown) and I wrote it on a lunch break sitting on a bench in the sun, staring at a smelly pine in the blazing month of August.”
-Alli Warren
About Alli Warren
Alli Warren is the author of “I Love It Though” (Nightboat Books, forthcoming in 2017). She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
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The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.
(c) 2016 Alli Warren. Originally published in Poem-a-Day, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate