Lauren Christensen’s memoir, “ Firstborn ,” begins with an epigraph from Louise Glück’s poem “The Wild Iris”: “Hear me out: ...
Her poetry centered experiences of loss and continued the focus on language, including lines like, “How dare I love a word without ... and I just lost my whole self back there,” they said.
I’ve come to realize that when we lose the ability to communicate fully in words, the other ways we connect—through actions, ...
From child prodigy to multi-hyphenate artist, Chhavi Sodhani’s career is a masterclass in reinvention. In this exclusive ...
When Julianna Glasse saw the call from her pastor, she hesitated. It was the fourth time he'd been in contact in a month, so ...
“Kanye West is not Picasso / I am Picasso / Kanye West is not Edison / I am Edison / I am Tesla / Jay-Z is not the Dylan of anything / I am the Dylan of anything / I am the Kanye West of Kanye West,” ...
Diana Burns’ heartfelt essay, honouring the memory of her late daughter Tahlia, earns a prestigious literary nomination for ...
“We have lost one of music’s most revered and prolific ... Cohen began to publish poetry and then novels, and was noticed by the national Canadian press. Moving to New York in the late 1960s ...
Euronews Culture sits down with Thierry Frémaux to discuss the 130-year anniversary of the invention of cinema, his new film ...
Don't just say "I like you" or "I love you"—make your love confession to that special someone in a more romantic way, with an unforgettable poem.
Charles Baudelaire is our most religious 19th-century poet. It’s just that his poetry does religion in the mode of anti-religion.
When her husband died at 38, Rosie was bereft and lost. But when she swapped New York for Northern Ireland she managed to ...