poetry Kay Ryan, "Poetry is a Kind of Money" "Poetry is a kind of money." I can't imagine writing that and not saying to yourself man I wish.
poetry Mara Pastor, "Left" I would advise you to read this poem by the prominent Puerto Rican poet Mara Pastor a few times, inhaling its ferocity.
poetry Rae Armantrout, "Decor" This text serves as the intersection of a few complicated themes: the cheapness of capitalism, relationships, and identity.
poetry Emily Dickinson, "I had no time to Hate" ...this little poem starts with trying to look into a quiet, lush landscape painting and wish yourself there.
poetry Kay Ryan, "The Elephant in the Room" I don't want to admit I'm being squeezed. I don't want to admit I lack room. I want to pretend like everything's normal.
american politics I wish I could tell you that I had a shortcut for getting people to care about solutions I had just finished writing about Robert Frost's "The Gift Outright" when I started doubting its utility.
dungeons and dragons Bonus content: On Playing Dungeons and Dragons at 44 Years of Age It's dramatically distinct from my teenage years, when DnD was nothing but bad combat scenarios.
poetry Jane Kenyon, "Evening Sun" Jane Kenyon's startling starting question, immediate and personal for us all: "Why does this light force me back / to my childhood?"
poetry Emily Dickinson, "Experience is the Angled Road" (910) Many have used poetry to generate lingering, meditative essays, but Dickinson is in rare form with "Experience is the Angled Road."
poetry Jane Kenyon, "Not Writing" Kyla Houbolt's "On Not Writing" brought back memories of this poem, "Not Writing," by the inimitable Jane Kenyon.
writing Where do you like to write? (Or, where did you write where every word counted?) The Substack #AmWriting had a great prompt: Where is your favorite writing spot? And why?
american politics Lift Every Voice I've got a few new subscribers, so I want to make sure I welcome everyone properly.
philosophy Joan Didion, "On Self-Respect" I want self-respect to claim its rightful place as an eminently useful concept.
poetry Rita Dove, "Little Town" This little, haiku-like poem by Rita Dove got me thinking about a lot of places I've been.
philosophy Emerson on Surfaces; Hamilton Nolan on Joe Biden Emerson: "We live amid surfaces, and the true art of life is to skate well on them."
poetry Suzanne Buffam, "On Antigone" Suzanne Buffam's little lyric "On Antigone" strikes me as if the perfect words have been spoken.
american politics Boring and Frightening, Both At Once There's so much news and all of it is relevant.
poetry Yosa Buson, "Early summer rain" Lots of light rain in South Jersey makes everything a bit too overgrown.
philosophy Camus on Art, Wealth, and Valuation In Create Dangerously, Camus asks if art must either be "merely entertaining," trying to connect to the majority, or if it will get stuck expressing "nothing but negativity," trying to "blindly reject society."
poetry Emily Dickinson, "I can wade Grief" (252) Dickinson's darkly comic opening should rankle us. Really? You can wade grief?
education Literacy and Leadership "To thine own self be true," says Polonius, and viewers of Hamlet might think it terrible advice.