Sometimes I Think That This Is What It Is to Write a Poem (and at Such Times I Am, Without a Doubt, a Monster of Grandiosity)

The author of peep considers the ecstatic freedom of writing poetry.
Jump to navigation Skip to content
In our weekly series of craft essays, some of the best and brightest minds in contemporary literature explore their craft in compact form, articulating their thoughts about creative obsessions and curiosities in a working notebook of lessons about the art of writing.
The author of peep considers the ecstatic freedom of writing poetry.
The author of peep offers an exercise in negative capability.
The authors of The Invisible Art of Literary Editing engage in a dialogue about textual doneness.
The author of The Art of Brevity: Crafting the Very Short Story offers a lesson in becoming a verbal junk collector.
The author of The Art of Brevity: Crafting the Very Short Story investigates the power of a single sentence, long or short.
The author of The Art of Brevity: Crafting the Very Short Story explores what is gained by cutting elements of a narrative.
The author of The Art of Brevity: Crafting the Very Short Story ponders the seductive power of laconic prose.
The author of What Can I Tell You?: Selected Poems examines poetic approaches to narrative.
The author of What Can I Tell You?: Selected Poems explores the poetic potential of vernacular language.
The author of What Can I Tell You?: Selected Poems considers how lyric poetry may communicate beyond the realm of private experience.
The author of The Boundaries of Their Dwelling considers how best to get into characters’ heads.
The author of The Boundaries of Their Dwelling explores fiction’s holy commandments—and when a writer has license to defy them.
The author of The Boundaries of Their Dwelling argues that writers should be as open to influence during revision as they are at the beginning of a project.
The author of The Boundaries of Their Dwelling counts the many ways a novelist may get lost, but ultimately find a way through, a book project.
The author of The White Mosque troubles the boundary between realist and genre fiction.
The author of The White Mosque considers how writing holds space for the accidental, the random, and the stray.
The author of The White Mosque charts the ambience of literary worlds.
The author of The White Mosque offers an ode to intertextuality.
The author of Selected Books of the Beloved investigates the uses of specificity in narrative poetry.
The author of Selected Books of the Beloved illuminates the power of narrative to move a poem forward.
The author of Selected Books of the Beloved explores enumeration as a source of poetic possibility.
The author of Selected Books of the Beloved reflects on the sonic pleasures of verse and offers an exercise in attending to poetry’s music.
The author of Animal Joy: A Book of Laughter and Resuscitation reflects on the importance of letting the mind wander to release blocked creativity.
The author of Animal Joy: A Book of Laughter and Resuscitation considers the link between the author’s emotional state while writing and the reader’s engagement.
The author of Animal Joy: A Book of Laughter and Resuscitation offers a psychoanalytic approach to imagining the reader.