Poetry news via Google, MSN, and Yahoo!
- St Andrew’s celebrations put nation in a festival mood (The Herald)
Dozens of Scotland's top visitor attractions opened their doors for free yesterday while thousands braved icy temperatures to take part in an unprecedented series of free activities to commemorate the country's patron saint.
- Songwriting great knows how to cut to the heart (Knoxville News Sentinel)
Guy Clark is a songwriting master. His creations are as evocative as any in modern music - stirring up images and emotions in the fashion of great novelists and poets
- Vikings preferred to groom themselves rather than loot - Thaindian.com
London, Oct 27 (ANI): A new study by researchers at Cambridge University in the UK is trying to change the traditional view of Vikings as illiterate warring thugs, and recast them as new men with an interest in grooming, fashion and poetry. According ...
- Joan Dautel’s books on sale locally - Xenia Gazette
Joan Dautel’s books on sale locallyXenia Gazette, OH - 1 hour agoMy heart is troubled, for I fear that on our streets this Christmas time we’ll witness hate and death and crime….” Later in the same poem it says “… ...
- The Man who would be English! - Indian Express
The Man who would be English!Indian Express, India - 7 minutes agoLook We Have Coming To Dover! became the first ever collection of poems to be picked up by Britain’s most renowned poetry publishers, Faber and Faber after ...
- JOHN HALEY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PICKS/WEEK 7 - New Brunswick Home News Tribune
JOHN HALEY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PICKS/WEEK 7New Brunswick Home News Tribune, NJ - 2 hours agoBy JOHN HALEY • Staff Writer • October 23, 2008 The game of football is so vicious and filled with commotion, but at the same time, it can be poetry in ...
- On the Bright Side: Hartwick professor publishes poets’ letters (The Daily Star)
Thomas Travisano, a Hartwick College professor, said he spent 10 years working on correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell. The result has been a collection gaining mainstream media recognition.
- Iran's Mr Nice -- satire on a tightrope - Macau Daily Times
Iran's Mr Nice -- satire on a tightropeMacau Daily Times, Macau - 2 hours agoThe publication also uses ancient Persian literature, poetry in particular, which Iranians feel more at ease with when it comes to satire, although much of ...
- 'Road' to Nowhere - Wall Street Journal
Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman got their wish: " Road Show " finally made it to New York. This much-revised musical about two brothers who can't decide whether to love or hate one another has been under construction for a decade, but only now has ...
- Good launches inspirational album - Summerland Review
Good launches inspirational albumSummerland Review, Canada - Sep 24, 2008By Roxanna Maron - Summerland Review After five years of touring, singing and recording, Summerland’s Linnea Good is back with a brand new album — Momentary ...
- Herring 'n' butterflies: Rick Jones remembers his tutor, WG Sebald - The Independent
The inaugural WG Sebald conference took place under heavy skies at the University of East Anglia in Norwich. The 100 international delegates slept in student residences designed to resemble ziggurat pyramids by the architect Denys Lasdun in the 1960s ...
- Living room library elevates Iranian women - San Francisco Chronicle
Living room library elevates Iranian womenSan Francisco Chronicle, USA - 3 hours agoFirst she stocked them with trashy novels, poetry and how-to and self-help titles. But the demand for cookbooks and sewing patterns eventually gave way to ...
- Events on tap - Staten Island Advance
Here's a schedule of African American Cultural and Kwanzaa-related events scheduled on Staten Island for the month. Dec. 5 Annual Kwanzaa Celebration, College of Staten Island, 2800 Victory Blvd., Willowbrook, 7 p.m. Singers, dancers, poets, artists ...
- Beatnik vibe (The Columbus Dispatch)
What's an English major to do after graduation? Open a coffee shop, of course. But not just any coffee shop. When he conceived Kafe Kerouac -- named for a famous Jack of the writing trade -- Ohio State University student Mike Heslop had more novel plans in mind.
- 'The Other' chills without vampires - Baton Rouge Advocate
If you’re looking for a good scary book to enjoy this Halloween, here is a suggestion: The Other by Thomas Tryon. The 1971 horror classic is a tale of a seemingly bucolic farmhouse in a small Connecticut town in the 1930s. There are no vampires in ...
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