By force of her imagination and skill, Emily Dickinson could take the measure of solitude, opprobrium and even damnation.
Robert Lee Brewer shares a prompt and an example poem to get things started for poets. This week, write a valentine poem.
Nothing New,” which the American poet wrote in 1918, is published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
“For a long time,” writes Kathleen Jamie in her afterword to The Keelie Hawk (Picador £12.99), “I’ve wanted to write a suite of poems entirely in Scots.” If your first thought is “But ...
In his follow-up to the award-winning The Final Year, poet Matt Goodfellow continues his mission to reach and give a voice to ...
By treating DNA as a language, Brian Hie’s “ChatGPT for genomes” could pick up patterns that humans can’t see, accelerating ...
New research has found that people are unable to determine whether a poem was written by a human or generated by AI. Despite ...
The University of Wisconsin’s Creative Writing Department is one of the nation’s few fully funded programs in creative ...