On your way to or from the mountains or the lakes,
stop by for a sip of cider or sherry
and meet and hear New Hampshire and Boston poets
stop by for a sip of cider or sherry
and meet and hear New Hampshire and Boston poets
Forthcoming:
Poetry Weekends will resume in the spring of 2019
Archive:
Liz Ahl is the author of Beating the Bounds (Hobblebush Books, 2017),
Home Economics (Seven Kitchens Press, 2016),
Talking About the Weather (Seven Kitchens Press, 2012),
Luck (Pecan Grove Press, 2010),
A Thirst That’s Partly Mine (winner of the 2008 Slapering Hol Press chapbook contest).
"Luck" received the “Reader’s Choice in Poetry” award at the 2011 New Hampshire Literary Awards.
Her poems, some of which have received Pushcart Prize nominations, have appeared recently
or are forthcoming in Lavender Review, Slipstream, Sinister Wisdom, and Nimrod, among others.
Her work has also been included in several anthologies, including This Assignment is So Gay: LGBTIQ
Poets on the Art of Teaching (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2013), A Face to Meet the Faces:
An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry (University of Akron Press, 2012) and
Like Thunder: Poets Respond to Violence (University of Iowa Press, 2002).
Ahl teaches at Plymouth State University in Plymouth, New Hampshire.
Home Economics (Seven Kitchens Press, 2016),
Talking About the Weather (Seven Kitchens Press, 2012),
Luck (Pecan Grove Press, 2010),
A Thirst That’s Partly Mine (winner of the 2008 Slapering Hol Press chapbook contest).
"Luck" received the “Reader’s Choice in Poetry” award at the 2011 New Hampshire Literary Awards.
Her poems, some of which have received Pushcart Prize nominations, have appeared recently
or are forthcoming in Lavender Review, Slipstream, Sinister Wisdom, and Nimrod, among others.
Her work has also been included in several anthologies, including This Assignment is So Gay: LGBTIQ
Poets on the Art of Teaching (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2013), A Face to Meet the Faces:
An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry (University of Akron Press, 2012) and
Like Thunder: Poets Respond to Violence (University of Iowa Press, 2002).
Ahl teaches at Plymouth State University in Plymouth, New Hampshire.
Jean Flanagan is the author of two books of poetry,
“Ibbetson Street” (Garden Street Press)
and Black Lightning (Cedar Hill Books).
She recently completed a memoir in poetry and prose called “A Hard Winter for Living”.
She teaches at Middlesex Community College in Bedford, MA & lives in Arlington.
“Ibbetson Street” (Garden Street Press)
and Black Lightning (Cedar Hill Books).
She recently completed a memoir in poetry and prose called “A Hard Winter for Living”.
She teaches at Middlesex Community College in Bedford, MA & lives in Arlington.
Keith Tornheim,a biochemistry professor at Boston University School of Medicine, has five recent books,
I Am Lilith, Dancer on the Wind
Spirit Boat: Poems of Crossing Over
Can You Say Kaddish for the Living
Fireflies: Poems of Love and Family
Spoiled Fruit: Adam and Eve in Eden and Beyond.
His poems have appeared in Ibbetson Street, The Somerville Times, Boston Literary Magazine,
Muddy River Poetry Reviewand Poetica.
He lives in Newton Highlands, Massachusetts, with his wife, Susan, a fiber artist
and his primary critic and copy editor.
I Am Lilith, Dancer on the Wind
Spirit Boat: Poems of Crossing Over
Can You Say Kaddish for the Living
Fireflies: Poems of Love and Family
Spoiled Fruit: Adam and Eve in Eden and Beyond.
His poems have appeared in Ibbetson Street, The Somerville Times, Boston Literary Magazine,
Muddy River Poetry Reviewand Poetica.
He lives in Newton Highlands, Massachusetts, with his wife, Susan, a fiber artist
and his primary critic and copy editor.
Timothy Muskat, a former professor of English and Creative Writing,
has resided for the last seventeen years in nearby Sandwich, New Hampshire.
Tim is the author of four collections of poems, numerous critical essays,
and the recipient of several prizes and awards for both his teaching and his poetry.
In the past decade has focused his poetic and photographic lenses
on his beloved boyhood—haunt, the White Mountains.
has resided for the last seventeen years in nearby Sandwich, New Hampshire.
Tim is the author of four collections of poems, numerous critical essays,
and the recipient of several prizes and awards for both his teaching and his poetry.
In the past decade has focused his poetic and photographic lenses
on his beloved boyhood—haunt, the White Mountains.