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  2. Birthday Letters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_Letters

    Birthday Letters is a 1998 poetry collection by English poet and children's writer Ted Hughes. Released only months before Hughes' death, the collection won multiple prestigious literary awards, including the Whitbread Book of the Year, the Forward Poetry Prize for Best Collection, and the T.S. Eliot Prize for Poetry in 1999. [ 1 ]

  3. William Stafford (poet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Stafford_(poet)

    The morning of his death he had written a poem containing the lines, "'You don't have to / prove anything,' my mother said. 'Just be ready / for what God sends.'" [ 12 ] [ 13 ] In 2008, the Stafford family gave William Stafford's papers, including the 20,000 pages of his daily writing, to the Special Collections Department at Lewis & Clark College.

  4. Amiri Baraka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiri_Baraka

    But as Baraka himself later admitted [in his piece I was an AntiSemite published by The Village Voice on December 20, 1980, vol. 1], he held a specific animosity for Jews, as was apparent in the different intensity and viciousness of his call in the same poem for 'dagger poems' to stab the 'slimy bellies of the ownerjews' and for poems that ...

  5. In His Own Write - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_His_Own_Write

    In His Own Write is a 1964 nonsense book by the English musician John Lennon.Lennon's first book, it consists of poems and short stories ranging from eight lines to three pages, as well as illustrations.

  6. Anne Sexton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Sexton

    His poem "Heart's Needle" proved inspirational for her in its theme of separation from his three-year-old daughter. [8] Sexton first read the poem at a time when her own young daughter was living with her mother-in-law. She, in turn, wrote "The Double Image", a poem which explores the multi-generational relationship between mother and daughter.

  7. Anna Akhmatova - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Akhmatova

    Akhmatova was a common-law wife to Nikolai Punin, an art scholar and lifelong friend, whom she stayed with until 1935. He also was repeatedly taken into custody, dying in the Gulag in 1953. [ 38 ] [ 39 ] [ 40 ] [ Notes 9 ] Her tragic cycle Requiem documents her personal experience of this time; as she writes, "one hundred million voices shout ...

  8. AOL Mail

    mail.aol.com

    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!

  9. Joseph Brodsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Brodsky

    His son, Andrei, was born on 8 October 1967, and Basmanova broke off the relationship. Andrei was registered under Basmanova's surname because Brodsky did not want his son to suffer from the political attacks that he endured. [ 21 ]