Kansas Poems
Kansas Poems by Brian Daldorph speaks to the unassuming allure of Kansas; giving voice to the places and people we sometimes overlook.
Continue reading →Kansas Poems by Brian Daldorph speaks to the unassuming allure of Kansas; giving voice to the places and people we sometimes overlook.
Continue reading →These poems declare, “My body/ is mine.”
Continue reading →The walls outlined in Herrera’s poems continue to close in on present day America. Herrera writes to all parts of our humanity in an effort to tear down those barriers.
Continue reading →“African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle & Song” is the centerpiece of Lift Every Voice: Why African American Poetry Matters, a year long national celebration and humanities initiative of African American poetry and an exploration of the perspectives it offers on American history and the ongoing struggle for racial justice. This anthology was made possible with support from The National Endowment for the Humanities, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and Emerson Collective.
Continue reading →This collection of poems brings to the fore, what we have been ignoring for far too long; a looming spiritual and physical demise. Wasserstein reaches…
Continue reading →This work, in its entirety, is a [w]rite of passage – a poet firmly planting their feet in the creative landscape of Kansas.
Continue reading →A review of “Rewriting the Body” by Wyatt Townley
Continue reading →Everyone’s Alone Tonight by James Benger and Jason Baldinger are poems about daily strife that turns into weekly, monthly, yearly and then generational struggle.
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