The Roots of Cowboy Music
Searching for home at a cowboy poetry convention in Elko, Nevada.
Searching for home at a cowboy poetry convention in Elko, Nevada.
Carvell Wallace MTV News Mar 2017 25min Permalink
Seth Abramson’s viral meta-journalism unreality.
Lyz Lenz Columbia Journalism Review Feb 2021 15min Permalink
The two poets correspond about basketball, life, and living.
Ross Gay, Noah Davis The Sun Magazine Jun 2020 30min Permalink
On the bohemian poet’s hidden career as a prolific copywriter.
Dale Hrabi The Walrus Nov 2019 25min Permalink
A young lesbian poet's confused love.
Li Zhuang The Collapsar Jun 2018 20min Permalink
On creativity in the age of Trump.
Patricia Lockwood Tin House Apr 2018 10min Permalink
Teaching Emily Dickinson at Santa Fe Community College in Gainesville, Florida.
William Bowers Oxford American Jan 2003 40min Permalink
“We take it that all young writers overestimate their work. It’s impossible not to—I mean if you recognized what shit you were writing, you wouldn’t write it. You have to believe in your stuff—every day has to be the new day on which the new poem may be it.”
John Berryman, Peter A. Stitt The Paris Review Dec 1972 40min Permalink
"His friends remembered when Richard became famous. It was the year the hippies came to San Francisco. Richard had published one novel, A Confederate General from Big Sur, but it had sold miserably 743 copies and his publisher, Grove Press, had dropped its option on Trout Fishing in America."
Lawrence Wright Rolling Stone Apr 1985 30min Permalink
“He was untouchable, or he thought he was. But that era is over, for all those guys.”
Jia Tolentino Jezebel Mar 2016 30min Permalink
An essay on depression, art, and growing up.
Poetry Jenny Zhang Jul 2015 15min Permalink
On the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, women express themselves through fierce short poems.
Eliza Griswold Outside Apr 2014 15min Permalink
The adventures and controversies of the avant-garde poet Kenneth Goldsmith, who believes plagiarism is an art form.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Sep 2015 25min Permalink
An accidental evening with Yeats, in the spring of 1937.
Avies Platt London Review of Books Aug 2015 30min Permalink
A trip to the Famous Poets Society convention/contest in Reno.
Jake Silverstein Harper's Aug 2002 40min Permalink
The “insane playfulness, deliberate infantilism, nutty haikus, naked stripteases, free-form chants and literary war dances of the beats” and their leader.
Seymour Krim Shake It For the World, Smartass Jun 1970 35min Permalink
On the parallel sadness of Thom Gunn and Elizabeth Bishop.
Colm Tóibín The Guardian Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Drug trips in space; from Motherboard's new science fiction series.
"During the Earth trials, someone told her that being in orbit was just falling around the planet forever. Back in the safe house somewhere in the Midwest, with 2,000 milligrams of MDMA ricocheting across her brain stem, it wasn't practical information. But she had retained it. Ground Control didn’t know the first thing about throwing a party. The drugs were free, but those nights on Earth always ended with psychonauts sobbing in the corners of the room, touching each others’ faces in the darkness. Of course, the Earth was falling too—around the sun."
Claire L. Evans Motherboard, VICE Nov 2014 Permalink
An academic marriage dissolves into a grotesque, demeaning power trip.
"I had always loved Olivia’s fearless and outspoken brilliance. It was one of the things that first attracted me to her—along with her perfect bubble butt and sailor’s laugh. But I suspected she didn’t honestly believe what she said about Dickinson’s poetry. Sometimes, especially after multiple martinis, one or the other of us would find the slightest reason to engage in some sort of verbal jousting. It was the manifestation of a lot of other problems we had buried over the past five years of marriage. We had both been divorced, both had children, both were in our forties, both should have understood the tensions of remarrying in mid-life. And we both should have known how alcohol—which we loved and self-medicated with—was the match that lit the fuse to these confrontations every time."
Neil Carpathios Lime Hawk Jul 2014 15min Permalink
“But to grow up costs the earth, the earth. It means you take responsibility for the time you take up, for the space you occupy. It’s serious business. And you find out what it costs us to love and to lose, to dare and to fail. And maybe even more, to succeed. What it costs, in truth. Not superficial costs—anybody can have that—I mean in truth. That’s what I write. What it really is like. I’m just telling a very simple story.”
George Plimpton, Maya Angelou The Paris Review Sep 1990 25min Permalink
A profile of the internet’s poet, Patricia Lockwood.
W.H. Auden’s quiet, personal pursuit of kindness and honor.
Edward Mendelson New York Review of Books Mar 2014 15min Permalink
A poet's first day of teaching in an inner-city school.
"She looks at me through squinting eyes and waits. I drag out one poem about someone’s bad day, to let the students know that poets have bad days too, and that poets’ lives can be mundane and that poets’ lives can be like their lives, and that, therefore, they too can be poets. She takes a large black felt pen and crosses out words. I’m so shocked I just stand there speechless. I’d assumed we were all together in this old school in the depths of Brooklyn, hoping to reach and educate the kids."
Lynda Schor The Brooklyn Rail Jun 2013 10min Permalink
On the writers, poets and beats in a reclusive California town, where residents repeatedly tear down highway signs indicating its location.
Kevin Opstedal Jack Magazine Nov 2001 25min Permalink
A history of erasure as literature.