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  2. Jan Howard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Howard

    Jan Howard (born Lula Grace Johnson; March 13, 1929 – March 28, 2020) [1] was an American author, as well as a country music singer and songwriter. As a singer, she placed 30 singles on the Billboard country songs chart, was a Grand Ole Opry member and was nominated for several major awards. As a writer, she wrote poems and published an ...

  3. Lydia Sigourney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Sigourney

    The Faded Hope (1852) in memory of her only son, who died when he was nineteen years old; Past Meridian (1854) The Daily Counsellor (1858), poems; Gleanings (1860), selections from her verse; The Man of Uz, and Other Poems (1862) Letters of Life (1866), giving an account of her career

  4. Jane Richardson (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Richardson_(author)

    Jane Patch Richardson (December 4, 1919 – November 25, 2018) was an American author. She was born Jane Patch on December 4, 1919, in Cleveland, Ohio , to Gustave and Martha Patch. Taking up traveling at an early age, Richardson traveled numerous times through the Indian subcontinent .

  5. "Hope" is the thing with feathers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/"Hope"_is_the_thing_with...

    The poem was published posthumously as "Hope" in 1891 "'Hope' is the thing with feathers" is a lyric poem in ballad meter by American poet Emily Dickinson. The poem's manuscript appears in Fascicle 13, which Dickinson compiled around 1861. [1] It is one of 19 poems in the collection, in addition to the poem "There's a certain Slant of light". [1]

  6. Jan Beatty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Beatty

    Her most recent poetry collection is The Switching/Yard (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2013), and her poems have appeared in literary journals and magazines including Quarterly West, Gulf Coast, Indiana Review, and Court Green, and in anthologies published by Oxford University Press, University of Illinois Press, and University of Iowa Press. [2]

  7. AOL Mail

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    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

  8. Harmonium (poetry collection) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonium_(poetry_collection)

    Although Joan Richardson's reading makes the case that the poem's "true subject" is an extended holiday that Stevens and his wife, Elsie, took in the fall of 1923, and specifically that the true subject is the poet's sexuality, [14] rather it is the powerful "poetry of the subject" that displays Stevens' genius and draws readers to the poem, as ...

  9. Portal:Poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Poetry

    Mário Raul de Morais Andrade (October 9, 1893 – February 25, 1945) was a Brazilian poet, novelist, musicologist, art historian and critic, and photographer.One of the founders of Brazilian modernism, he virtually created modern Brazilian poetry with the publication of his Paulicéia Desvairada (Hallucinated City) in 1922.