Daily Prompt Love <3 The Cost
29 May 2017
Make art inspired by this quote:

Poets Against the War: The Movement, The Anthology
Led by poet Sam Hamill, February 12, 2003 became a day of Poetry Against the War conducted as a reading at the White House gates in addition to over 160 public readings in many different countries and almost all of the 50 states. Since then, over 9,000 poets have joined this grassroots peace movement by submitting poems and statements to http://www.poetsagainstthewar.org, registering their opposition to the Bush administration’s headlong plunge toward war in Iraq. Poets Against the War features a selection of the best poems that were submitted to the website. Contributors include: Adrienne Rich, W.S. Merwin, Galway Kinnell, Robert Bly, Marilyn Hacker, Grace Schulman, Shirley Kaufman, Wanda Coleman, Yusef Komunyakaa, Hayden Carruth, Jane Hirshfield, Tess Gallagher, Sandra Cisneros, former Poet Laureate Rita Dove, and many others.
Buy This Beautiful Necessary Book
More Online About Poets Against the War
The Nation: https://www.thenation.com/article/poets-against-war/
In These Times: http://inthesetimes.com/article/49/poets_against_the_war
Voices in Education: http://voiceseducation.org/content/poets-against-war
Voices in Wartime Documentary (12 Minute Preview; Full documentary available): http://voiceseducation.org/voices-wartime-12-minute-preview
Excerpts From Voice in Wartime
Wonderful Reading by Sam Hamill
Write on, y’all!
xo
Mary
I LOVE this book 🙂
The fabulous and loving Nancy Peacock is the author of the novels Life Without Water and Home Across the Road, as well as the memoir, A Broom of One’s Own: Words on Writing, Housecleaning, and Life. She currently teaches writing classes and workshops in and around Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where she lives with her husband Ben. Her most recent novel, The Life and Times of Persimmon Wilson is a definite must read!
Buy The Life and Times of Persimmon Wilson
Praise for The Life and Times of Persimmon Wilson
“ ‘I have been to hangings before, but never my own…’ From this riveting beginning to the last perfect word, Nancy Peacock grabs her reader by the throat and makes him hang on for dear life as the action moves from a Louisiana sugar plantation to life among the western Comanches, bringing to blazing life her themes of race and true love caught in the throes of history. The Life and Times of Persimmon Wilson is as deeply moving and exciting an American saga as has ever been penned.” -Lee Smith, Author of Guests on Earth and Dime Store
“Such a powerful story, so beautifully written. Peacock captures the era perfectly, with just the right amount of historical detail woven seamlessly into the fabric of the story. Unlike some historical novels loaded with digressions that are merely undigested chunks of raw research, this book is just the opposite—a fully realized world with rich, vivid characters. The novel hard to put down—and impossible to forget.” Donna Lucey – author of Sargent’s Women: Four Lives Behind the Canvas
“A magnificent, immersive, breathtaking work of historical fiction. Nancy Peacock has written a beautifully crafted, richly detailed novel inhabited by morally complex and fully realized characters, enthralling and heartbreaking in equal measure.” -Jennifer Chiaverini – author of Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker
Buy Nancy’s Other Wonderful Books!
More from Nancy Online
https://pamlicowritersgroup.wordpress.com/2014/01/03/interview-with-nancy-peacock/
http://wunc.org/post/maid-novelist-writer-s-journey#stream/0
Reading
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ho5sSIHC7Mg
Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTmcvRmpNkI
Happy Reading!
xo
Mary
Praise for Persimmon Wilson
11 March 2017
Spent the day lost in a book.
Make art about being lost in a good way.

12 March 2017
Dreamt a future conversation with my grandson, where we talked about what it meant to create home wherever you are, that our true home is what we carry inside us, from our experiences, from the ancestors. He nodded solemnly, as if he already knew this.
Make art about where home is, or how we create home.

Clare L. Martin is a graduate of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and lifelong Louisiana resident. Her poetry has appeared in numerous literary journals and anthologies both online and in print, including Avatar Review, Blue Fifth Review, Literary Mama, Louisiana Literature, and Poets and Artists, among others. Her poems have been included in the anthologies The Red Room: Writings from Press 1, Best of Farmhouse Magazine Vol. 1, and Beyond Katrina. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize (2012), Dzanc Books’ Best of the Web (2011), Best New Poets (2009), and Sundress Publication’s Best of the Net (2008 and 2011).
Visit Clare’s website here: https://clarelmartin.com/
Buy Clare’s beautiful books!
Eating the Heart First
http://www.press53.com/BioClareLMartin.html
Preorder Clare’s new book Seek the Holy Dark!
http://www.yellowflagpress.com/_p/prd15/4592458541/product/clare-l.-martin—seek-the-holy-dark
Seek the Holy Dark available for pre-order. Trade paperback, 66 pages, only $10. Pre-orders will ship in early February.
Praise for Eating the Heart First
“Clare L. Martin pulls off an impressive balancing act in her debut book of poems Eating the Heart First. In this collection, divided into three sections, she manages trust of her intuitive powers while she tats her findings onto poems built with technical expertise. She is a believer of dreams, and the whole of the work can be read as an oneiric treatise guided by the powers she believes in: the power of memory, the power of water, the power of moons, the powers of longing, and the power of love. In one of the late poems a crow in a dream asks, ‘Let me be a whorl of darkness— / Let me be a fist in the sun.’ All of the poems in this collection have the impact of that crow’s call and of the trope it creates. Gradually the poems reveal richly textured revelations of a heart tied to human experience in that ‘dream we cannot know completely.’ And, while we may not ever know the dream completely, Ms. Martin hands us a guidebook to dreams and to the art that uses dream and dreaming as the scaffolding from which to make something beautiful, and useful, and mysterious all at the same time.”
— Darrell Bourque, former Poet Laureate of Louisiana and author of In Ordinary Light, New and Selected Poems
“Clare L. Martin is a fine young poet whose work is dark and lovely and full of a deep organic pulse. Like the landscape of her beloved Louisiana, her work is alive with mystery. You could swim in this hot water, but there are things down inside its darkness that might pull you away forever. It is an exquisite drowning.” — Luis Alberto Urrea, author of Queen of America
Praise for Seek the Holy Dark
From the holy dark of horror storms and freedom in the hand, to starving wolves and old women who live in woods, Clare Martin’s poetic imagery seeks in myth to locate depth of soul. She incants salvation “bone by bone” up from the shadows. Her writing has a beautiful fury, a hard questing and secret exultation that keep the reader poised and intoxicated. “Do you seek the heart too” the opening poem asks, and of course, we answer Yes and read breathlessly on. These poems “drop through this world/into dark awakening.” The strong-hearted will understand.
~Rachel Dacus, author of Gods of Water and Air
Seek the Holy Dark is a book of revelations in poems. Clare L. Martin sees the richness and the poverty that are bedmates, proffers them as gifts, lays them at our feet. Her poems suggest we join in the quest to be both humbled and exalted. Martin, who never looks away, fully understands the duality of nature, its light and darkness, exploring both in this lush and lyrical new collection.
~Susan Tepper, author of dear Petrov and The Merrill Diaries
Visit Clare’s beautiful litmag: MockingHeart Review!
https://mockingheartreview.com/
Read More from Clare Online
http://wewantedtobewriters.com/2014/01/excerpt-from-clare-martins-poetry-collection/
https://referentialmagazine.com/contributors/m-o/clare-l-martin/
http://www.eclectica.org/v12n1/martin.html
http://www.unlikelystories.org/12/martin1212.shtml
http://www.madhattersreview.com/issue15/poetry_martincl.
Hear Clare Read!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Yx32YG96f8
Happy Reading!
xo
Mary
The beautiful Naomi Ayala was born in Puerto Rico and moved to the United States in her teens, eventually earning an MFA from the Bennington College Writing Seminars. Writing in both Spanish and English, she is author of the poetry collections Wild Animals on the Moon, chosen by the New York City Public Library as a 1999 Book for the Teen Age, This Side of Early, and this week’s recommended read, Calling Home:Praise Songs and Incantations. Her poems have appeared in the anthologies Boriquén to Diasporican: Puerto Rican Poetry from Aboriginal Times to the New Millennium (2007), Latino Boom: An Anthology of U.S. Latino Literature (2006), and First Flight: 24 Latino Poets (2006).
An educator and arts administrator interested in environmental causes, Ayala has received numerous awards, including the Connecticut Latinas in Leadership Award, the 2000 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Legacy of Environmental Justice Award, and the 2001 Larry Neal Writers Award for Poetry from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
Ayala has been a visiting humanities scholar for Hermana a Hermana/Sister to Sister and was co-chair of the board of directors for the organization Change: Building Social Justice, Starting in the Classroom; she co-founded the New Haven Alliance for Arts and Cultures. A former resident of Washington, DC, she currently lives in New Haven, Connecticut, and works as a freelance writer, educational consultant, and teaching artist.
Buy Naomi’s beautiful books!
Calling Home: Praise Songs and Incantations
http://bilingualpress.clas.asu.edu/book/calling-home
This Side of Early
http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/content/side-early
Wild Animals on the Moon
http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/content/wild-animals-moon-and-other-poems
Read More from Naomi Online
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/53007
http://washingtonart.com/beltway/ayala.html
http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/nayala.html
http://washingtonart.com/beltway/ayala4.html
http://www.nathanielturner.com/naomiayalabio.htm
http://www.anomalouspress.org/current/25.ayala.winter.php
http://blogthisrock.blogspot.com/2010/11/poem-of-week-naomi-ayala.html
Interviews
http://www.eethelbertmiller.com/muse/ayala.html
http://letraslatinasblog.blogspot.com/2014/05/pablo-miguel-martinez-interviews-naomi.html
Interview for the Oral History Program at the Institute for Latino Studies
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPdLwaN2ez8
Hear Naomi Read!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isocCGT-hFQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJZKJpqAIAw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUPkGvwHjFo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Py5zfe-f9kc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84jhZutUlWo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABMXD7mY3uc
Happy Reading!
xo
Mary
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