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Category Archives: Ana Maria Caballero

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A Chat about the Future of Poetry

August 5, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

The founding editors of three of today’s most well-respected online poetry journals had a talk about the future of poetry with “The Review Review.” Here’s the link. Rob MacDonald of Sixth Finch Journal,  Matt Hart who edits Forklift Ohio Journal and Gale Marie Thompson who runs Jellyfish Magazine spoke about how the masses perceive poetry and how this is affected by the way that poetry is taught.  This discussion is not new within the very self-conscious poetry world, but the up-and-coming poets […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR

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lynn emanuel poetry writing

Mother is Drinking to Forget a Man

July 29, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

“Mother is drinking to forget a man / who could fill the woods with invitations”is perhaps one of the best poem openers I have come across. Sure, it is simple. But it is also grotesque. The phrase is already a poem before the poem even begins. This line opens Lynn Emanuel’s poem “Frying Trout While Drunk.” Emanuel is a well-established poet, whose work won a Pushcart Prize, one of the most important prizes awarded in the literary world. Today, she teaches […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: books, literature, poetry, reading, writing

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I, too, am America

July 22, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

 “Langston Hughes, although only twenty-four years old, is already conspicuous in the group of Negro intellectuals who are dignifying Harlem with a genuine art life. . . .” wrote author Du Bose Heyward in the New York Herald Tribune in 1926. Despite such praise, Hughes was derided by his fellow black writers of the time for allowing race to be a main character in many of his works. The Poetry Foundation’s site has a terrific summary of Hughes’s historical relevance. […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: History, literature, poetry, writing

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Mark Strand Poetry

Mark Strand in a Colombian Páramo

July 15, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

 I am writing this week from Roldanillo, Colombia, a tiny town toward the west of the country.  I will be here all week attending the Colombian Women Poets Festival for the first time ever. The people I’ve met are astounding in their talent and their kindness. Please check back next week as I plan to share my experience participating in this encounter. For now, I leave you with a poem by former U.S. Poet Laureate Mark Strand, taken a few […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: hiking, literature, nature, poetry, writing

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Chanel Brenner Poet

“A Poem for Women Who Don’t Want Children”

July 8, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

I come across all sorts of poems in my continuous hunt for poetry contests and literary journals that might house the verses I wrestle to write. Yesterday, I came across a jewel. A simple, stunning jewel. The poem was a finalist for Rattle Poetry’s 2013 Contest and was written by Los Angeles-based poet Chanel Brenner, pictured to the right. To read more poems by Ms. Brenner, click here. Below is the poem that left me stunned. A POEM FOR WOMEN […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: children, death, grief, literature, poetry, writing

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Slam Poetry

Ivy League Sex Education

July 1, 2014 by William Eaton

  On a recent trip to New York City a made an obligatory stop at The Strand bookstore, quite possible the world’s best. Their poetry section is so rich with options that it is almost impossible not to make an interesting discovery.  Among the discoveries I made is Taylor Mali’s book “What Learning Leaves.” I picked it because the cover looks like a classic composition book, the type that are sold in drugstores all over the country, which I happen […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, writing

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Plath in Bali

One Candle Power

June 24, 2014 by William Eaton

Poems that soothe, that create a mellow mood can be difficult to find, particularly so in a collection of Sylvia Plath poems. For this reason, I was so thrilled to find the poem “By Candlelight.” Its backdrop is one of recent abandonment and of deep cold. But there is a candle well lit and a “small love” that shine throughout. I find it a very intimate, maternal poem. Perhaps this is why I like it, having had a baby not […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, reading, Sylvia Plath

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Poetry Plath

Suicide off Egg Rock

June 17, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

I dislike mentioning suicide when speaking about Sylvia Plath. But, today, it’s truly inevitable because the poem I chose for this week is in fact about suicide. Not hers, however. The suffering soul here is a nameless man who is disgusted by life, its sounds and waste, “that landscape / Of imperfections his bowels were part of.” Surrounded by the cacophony and filth of living, the man views death as a legitimate and desirable way out. Nor does he glamorize death. It […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, Sylvia Plath, writing

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Singapore Sylvia Plath

Small Birds Converge

June 3, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

  I feel that there is always something dark and sinister looming over the poems of Sylvia Plath. Sure, her personal story, ending in suicide, hangs heavy. But, take this one pictured to the right, “The Manor Garden.” From the title, one could simply expect a poem about a garden, perhaps succumbing to fall.  But the season isn’t entirely clear throughout the nature imagery. Things are dying but there is also a bee abuzz. Finally, it becomes apparent that something larger […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, Sylvia Plath, writing

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