July 3, 2020 Say Thank You Say I’m Sorry Jericho Brown The New York Times “I’d like us to rethink/What it is to be a nation,” writes the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet.
June 26, 2020 Health & Wealth Peter Neil Carroll San Francisco Chronicle The coronavirus reveals evils of our economic systems, the poet suggests maybe it's time for confiscating some wealth.
June 19, 2020 Rage Karen Hewitt Cultural Weekly “White hand on trigger/Black body on pavement”: Ohio poet Karen Hewitt speaks clearly, simply, one word, Rage.
June 12, 2020 On Social Distancing Jacki Rigoni California poet Jacki Rigoni responds to the phrase social distancing, just added to the dictionary in March, and how much we were doing without naming it.
June 5, 2020 Hydroxychloroquine Pete Seidman Pete Seidman, Florida activist, has his own version of the moral arc of history.
May 29, 2020 At the Mall, There’s a Machine That Tells You If You Are Racist Karen Skolfield Split this Rock Racist: takes a machine to know one? Poet Karen Skolfield parodies the obsession of skin color.
May 22, 2020 So Much for America Amaud Jamaul Johnson Southern Review In a time when the murder of African Americans in plain sight terrifies the news, Poet Amaud Jamaul Johnson captures the feeling of capture.
May 15, 2020 On the Dry Sea of Sonora Lollie Butler Chiron Review Arizona-based poet Lollie Butler’s poetry captures the horrors of refugees crossing the Sonora desert.
May 8, 2020 Quarantine Christine Hamm “Even Andrew Cuomo finds time to call his mother,” explains Oregon poet Christine Hamm, addressing the emotional impact of the long quarantine.
May 1, 2020 Goliath Judith Mahoney Pasternak Mondoweiss The Paris-based poet Judith Mahoney Pasternak puts the story of David & Goliath into a contemporary un-Biblical perspective.
Spread the word