Poetry Friday

Poetry Friday: One Step Forward Updates

Carol at Beyond Literacy Link is hosting this week. Hop on over there for the roundup.
 

One Step Forward News

Pre-Orders for One Step Forward

If you’d like a signed copy of One Step Forward, please order through my local indie, One More Page Books. I’ll sign books and they’ll ship them to you!
 
 
If you are a Barnes and Noble premium or rewards member you can get 25% on pre-orders of One Step Forward through Friday, February 7. It’s a very short window.
 
 

Signed Bookplates

If you are buying through B&N or other online retailer, you can sign up to receive a free signed bookplate. Sign up here and I will mail them out in March.
 

Booklist Review

I’m thrilled that Booklist had such a lovely review in their February issue.
 
 
“Atkins’ excellent novel in verse brings the 15 days Matilda spends in jail to vivid life, dramatizing the inhumane treatment the suffragists received. [She] has done a superb job of research, bringing her material to life in an important book.”
 

Save the Date

If you are a local Poetry Friday reader, you are invited to my book launch at the Lucy Burns Museum. It’s scheduled for March 29. More information to come!
 

Haiku of the Week

 
ceiling ruffles
an undulation
of jellyfish
 
Photo Taken: February 1, 2025 at the Folger Shakespeare Library
Haiku Written: February 3, 2025
 

25 New-to-Me Poets in 2025

 
In her essay “Ten Things About Poetry,” Patricia Smith challenges the reader to “discover one new poet every week.” (in The Practicing Poet: Writing Beyond the Basics edited by Diane Lockward). I’m setting out to discover 25 New-to-Me poets in 2025. Join me as I read at least 5 poems by a new-to-me poet.
 
  1. Francis Ponge
  2. Cynthia Manick
  3. Mattie Quesenberry Smith
 

Janine Joseph

In January there was a poetry event in DC that I couldn’t attend. One of the poets involved caught my attention—Janine Joseph. She’s a professor at Virginia Tech and her most recent collection, Decade of the Brain, won the Virginia Literary Award for Poetry. In it, she writes about post-concussive memory loss after a major auto accident.
 
None of the my local libraries had this new book, so I read some excerpts online.
 
One of the things that struck me about her writing is the way that she staggers her lines. I’m always interested in the way poets use white space in their poetry.
 
After reading a bunch of her poems here, I’m going to request my local library purchase her new book.
 
 
 

RECREATE 

 
  • Zoom with a Maryland garden where Camille Dungy spoke. She talked about her book Soil. If you haven’t read this book, I highly recommend!
  • I visited some museums in DC (more on that in my February roundup).
  • I’ve been replotting a novel with sticky notes and now I’ve moved to Scrivener with a plan in place.

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