Please leave the URL of your Poetry Friday post in the comments. I'll be rounding up the links throughout the day.
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Poetry Friday: Morning Edition
Award-winning poet
Julie Larios has an original poem for us today at
The Drift Record. She says it’s in the spirit of summer’s blowziness and her grandson’s current love affair with the sprinkler. It’s titled
Undone by the Sun.
Right here at
Wild Rose Reader, I have an original candy poem titled
Fireball. It just might will sear your poetry taste buds.
Mary Lee has a post titled
Seei
ng Instead of Just Looking about the “beauty in the ordinariness of life” at
A Year of Reading.
Laura Salas says she’s got “some fantastic
15 Words or Less poems inspired by a barbed wire photo at her blog.
Diane Mayr has a passel of poetry posts for us this week. At
Random Noodling, she looks at Archy & Mehitabel.
Kids of the Homefront Army continues with "I Don't Even Know Him."
Kurious Kitty celebrates Gene Kelly.
Kurious K's Kwotes' P.F. quote is by Marilyn Hacker. At
The Write Sisters you'll find a poem called "Things."
Robyn Hood Black is “remembering a beloved cat with Thomas Gray's humorous 18th-century ode to an over-reaching one...”
Heidi Mordhorst says she’s reflecting on poetry criticism this week and how what she likes helps you figure out what you like.
Katie is revisiting a favorite poem, W.H. Auden's "A Summer Night" in a quick little post on her blog
Secrets & Sharing Soda today.
Jeannine Atkins wrote about a great book called
Maid as Muse, which is about Emily Dickinson's relationship with servants in the house and yard.
Carol is sharing a poem from Sara Holbrook's book,
WEIRD? ME TOO! LET'S BE FRIENDS! She thinks intermediate grade readers are going to love this book of "all things friendship!"
Tara has a post about
C.K. Williams, a poet that she discovered through a gorgeous picture book.
Steve Withrow has a poem for us in blank verse that was inspired by a July 4th outing with his wife and daughter.
Over at
Gathering Books, you’ll find a poem titled
Singapore River.
Charles Ghigna—aka
Father Goose—has a post titled
What I Learned from Picture Books at his blog.
Karen Edmisten contributes to Poetry Friday with a poem by
Beverly Rollwagen titled
Essential.
Sara Lewis Holmes gives us a report from her week at Shakespeare Camp, and an original sestina,
Play On, in her post
What gives us Shape?
Poetry Friday: Afternoon Delights
The talented
Amy Ludwig VanDerwater joins in celebrating Poetry Friday with her post
First Assignment—Explosions.
The Stenhouse Blog brings us the poem
Greguerías by Ramón Gómez de la Serna.
David Elzey, who says he is on the eve of taking off for nearly two weeks, shares an original poem about his current state of mind called
Checklist.
Popular children’s poet
Douglas Florian shares an Ocean-Of-Consciousness poem/song by DONOVAN over at the Florian Café.
Rasco from RIF writes about
Father and Son this Poetry Friday.
Gregory Pincus shares an original poem titled
No Poem Today. It’s a “writer’s block” poem.
Janet Squires writes about
Amber Was Brave, Essie Was Smart at her blog.
Ruth gives us a poem by Naomi Shihab Nye titled
Trying to Name What Doesn’t Change.
Poetry Friday: Evening Edition
Marjorie is in at
Paper Tigers this week with a post about a surprising little book of haiku and its accompanying Activity Book from Katha Books.
Hannah serves up a silly riff on William Carlos Williams—in honor of the peaches that she’s says she’s currently devouring like they're going out of style.
Karissa Knox Sorrell joins the Poetry Friday crowd with a poem titled
Oldest Map of the World by poet/memoirist
Kelle Groom.
Libby Frankel shares a poem/prayer that she says was inspired by her 13-hour road trip to Pennsylvania with her toddler.
Melissa Wiley shares a few lines from Randall Jarrell's lovely book, Th
e Bat-Poet, which she says she and her five-year-old have been enjoying all week.
At
Learning to Go,
Judy has a poem by
Peter Kane Dufault titled
Dear George Eliot.