I’ve discovered that I increasingly enjoy being able to see more than one collection by a poet, and sometimes all of their poetry at once. I find myself looking for the words “collected” or “complete” in poetry titles. I may have developed a small addiction to Library of America collections of both fiction and poetry.
If I don’t have the “collected” works of a poet, you can do something like it – and read all what a poet has published. It can be relatively easy with a more recently published poet.
Pasquale Trozzolo, a self-described “retired madman from Kansas,” is chairman of his own advertising and public relations firm in Kansas City. In 2020, as the pandemic lockdown descended, he turned to poetry.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.
Some Thursday Readings
“Velvet Shoes,” poem by Elinor Wylie – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.
Threads – poem by Seth Lewis.
A Tribute to Jane Greer – New Verse Review.
“A Riddle on the Letter H,” poem by Catherine Maria Fnshawe – Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.



No comments:
Post a Comment