Any good bookstore is likely to offer a half-dozen different editions of Emily Dickinson's poetry. But the reason to consider buying "Dickinson: Selected Poems and Commentaries" lies, of course, in ...
American poet Emily Dickinson was born 193 years ago, and to celebrate the Deseret News has collected five of her poems to read on her birthday. Born on Dec. 10, 1830, in Amherst, Massachusetts, ...
DOTHAN, Ala. (WTVY) - News4 and Chris Warren, Director of the Dothan Houston County Library Systems, celebrated National Poetry Month with The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson for April’s Chapter ...
Emily Dickinson famously wrote “tell all the truth but tell it slant.” A characteristically enigmatic phrase, it’s both striking and open to multiple interpretations. Still, it might suggest that ...
THE verbal genius of Emily Dickinson was concerned with the single, word rather than the whole music. Her rhythms present small variety. On page 13 of the Further Poems, for instance, the rhythms ...
AMHERST — Amherst will once again become the center of a vibrant poetry community this month as the Emily Dickinson Museum hosts its annual Tell It Slant Poetry Festival, running Sept. 15 through 21.
Smith’s Boutelle-Day Poetry Center has a mission “to help make poetry something that resonates and is relevant to people’s lives,” says center director Matt Donovan. The colloquium, co-presented by ...
I’m Ann Fisher-Wirth, the Poet Laureate for Mississippi 2025-2029, and I want to tell you about my new podcast series called “The Favorite Poem Project,” available through the Mississippi Arts ...
Dickinson, arguably the greatest nature poet (and religious poet and love poet) of the American 19th century, didn’t just ...
The Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst, Massachusetts reopened this week after more than two years of renovations—and flocks of visitors are expected to come, with all immediately available tours ...
Our critic A.O. Scott forages the world’s most poetic fruit. By A.O. Scott The dodo is both a victim of humans and a symbol of our own power, carelessness and avarice. By Renée Bergland The writer ...