
Breaking Form: a Poetry and Culture Podcast
Arts & Culture Podcasts
James Allen Hall and Aaron Smith talk about their favorite poems and poets, interview amazing writers, laugh a lot, gossip, and get real about life and art.
Location:
United States
Description:
James Allen Hall and Aaron Smith talk about their favorite poems and poets, interview amazing writers, laugh a lot, gossip, and get real about life and art.
Language:
English
Episodes
Kiss Kiss
11/27/2023
The queens' Kissing Booth is now open! We talk poetic kisses and then read some recent poetry crushes.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Read more about Rimbaud here, and watch Patti Smith's video about preparing for "Rimbaud Month" here (5min).
To really understand the life & times Akhmatova lived through, watch Semeon Aranovitch's film The Anna Akhmatova File (in Russian with subtitles ~70 min) here.
The actor and singer Jonathan Groff is a spitter and you can read the receipts here.
Watch this video comprising a short bio about Jane Hirshfield and then a videorecording of Hirshfield reading "For What Binds Us."
Watch Tomas Transtromer read his poem "Allegro" (2 min). Read an English translation of "Allegro" here.
Watch Cher perform her song "DJ Play a Christmas Song" on Berlin's Wetten Dass here and at the 2023 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade here.
If you don't know much about Dorothy Parker, here's a great video to get you started.
Here's Mariah Carey saying about J Lo, "I don't know her" here. The unfolding is here.
For more about Louise Glück's essay "The Forbidden" and the shade she casts on Linda McCarriston and Sharon Olds, read on here.
And W i lli am L0g an receipts about shoeshine kits can be had here.
Read William Ward Butler's "I Got that Dog in Me" here & order his chapbook Life History from Ghost City Press here.
Read Gustavo Hernandez's "Summer, You're a Boneyard," picked by Diane Seuss for Poem-A-Day. Buy Flower Grand First from Tide Moon Press here.
Visit Ruth Madievsky's website. Read her poem "In High School" here. Buy Emergency Brake here.
Read Amy Thatcher's poem "Road Kill" here and her poem "Our Lady of Sorrows" here.
Duration:00:30:44
Cranberry Shade: A Thanksgiving Mess
11/23/2023
The queens get stuffed as they rehash Thanksgivings past. No poetry, but this episode does make hilarity rhyme with vulgarity. After all, a Breaking Form Thanksgiving special wouldn't be complete without talk of clitoris, lesbian octogenarians, and Listerine cocktails. Unbuckle your seatbelts and your pants, cuz this is a messy wild ride -- definitely not for the feint of heart!
Duration:00:14:14
Cher Revises Poetry
11/20/2023
Snap out of it! The queens use Cher to revise some poems and the result is ICONIC!
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
You can hear Louise Glück read "The Mirror" here and read it for yourself here. (The show was taped before LG's untimely death.)
Read "Old Ironsides" by Oliver Wendell Holmes
Read "Homage to my hips" by Lucille Clifton
You can read Alexandra Teague's excellent poem "Language Lessons" here.
Tess Gallagher's "I Stop Writing the Poem" can be found here.
Go here to read Dorothea Lasky's poem "If you can't trust the monitors"
Here's Robert Lowell's poem "The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket"
Finally, we mention Hart Crane's poem "Chaplinesque"
Here are two clips from Moonstruck"
Meeting outside the opera
"I want you to come upstairs with me and get in my bed!"
Duration:00:25:53
The Janes
11/13/2023
The queens play "Just Jane!" featuring a jackpot of J. Kenyon and J. Mead poems. James just can't jank a jackdaw but refuses to be jaded.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Kenyon published four volumes of poetry during her life: From Room to Room (1978), The Boat of Quiet Hours (1986), Let Evening Come (1990), and Constance (1993), and, as translator, Twenty Poems of Anna Akmatova (1985). A fifth book, Otherwise: New and Selected Poems, appeared in 1996.
Jane Mead was the author of five collections of poetry: The Lord and the General Din of the World (1996), The House of Poured-Out Waters (2001), The Usable Field (2008), Money Money Money Water Water Water (2014), World of Made and Unmade (2016), and To the Wren: Collected and New Poems (2019).
Here are the Kenyon poems we discuss:
Having It Out with Melancholy
Private Beach
Climb
The Shirt
Otherwise
You can listen to Jane Kenyon read "Otherwise" here.
Here are the Kenyon poems we discuss:
The Argument Against Us
The Memory
In the Parking Lot at the Junior College on the Eve of a Presidential Election
Passing a Truck Full of Chickens at Night on Highway Eighty
If you need a refresher on Brenda Hillman's "Male Nipples"
Read Amy Thatcher's poem "Road Kill" in SWWIM.
Duration:00:28:55
Doing Lines
11/6/2023
The gorls chop up some gorgeous lines before playing Mean, Queen, or Blue Jean.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
"It was a time when they were afraid of him" is from Jimmy Santiago Baca's poem "Ancestor"
"An opening to a story should be / unremarkable" is from Catherine Chen's " My Poem Asks to Be Read Right to Left"
"Things happen when you drink too much mescal" is from Moira Egan's "Bar Sonnet # 11"
Rabindranath Tagore's poem "Gitanjali 11" begins: "Leave this chanting and singing and telling of beads! Whom dost thou worship."
"Crickets are stitching the afternoon" is how Rosanna Warren begins her poem "Boletus"
"Arlene learned to dance backwards in heels that were too high" is the start of Patricia Smith's poem "Siblings"
"I will die in Paris, on a rainy day," writes Cesar Vallejo at the beginning of his "Black Stone Lying on a White Stone"
"Monterosa, your body is dead on Avenue A." is from Jack Agueros's "Sonnet for Angelo Monterosa"
"We kept war in the kitchen" is the beginning of Reetika Vazirani's "Dream of the Evil Servant"
"This did not happen" begins Thylias Moss's poem "Did Not Happen"
Watch "10 Things Joseph Sikora Cannot Live Without" from GQ here.
Check out Forbes's list of The Most Comfortable Heels That Consistently Earn Top Reviews
Pattiann Rogers is the author of at least 17 books, including most recently Flickering, just published in April of 2023. Read this interview with her in Lit Hub
The Frank O'Hara line I reference in the game "Queen, Mean, or Blue Jean" is "Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed" which you can read here.
For more tea about Virginia Woolf and her paid domestic workers, read this review.
Duration:00:28:55
Astonishment
10/30/2023
The queens put the ass in astonishment & tease out favorite moments in poems.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Read Alicia Ostriker's "Locker-Room Conversation"
Check out Rita Dove's poem "Afer Reading Mickey in the Night Kitchen for the Third Time Before Bed."
Anne Carson's "X. Sex Question" from Autobiography of Red can be read here. Read "The Glass Essay" from Glass, Irony and God here.
Read Mark Doty's poem "With Animals" from My Alexandria. Check out "Days of 1981" here. And go (re)read "Atlantis" here.
You can read Olena Kalytiak Davis's poem “Resolutions In A Parked Car” here. The line "Explain Jesus" is actually a whole stanza unto itself, and it appears in the poem, "I Am Only Now Beginning to Answer Your Letter" from And Her Soul Out of Nothing.
Read "Facing it" by Yusef Komunyakaa, the final poem in his book Dien CanDau (Wesleyan, 1988).
Duration:00:29:25
Portals: a Tribute to Maureen Seaton
10/23/2023
Aaron and James are joined by special guests to pay tribute to Maureen Seaton.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Read Maureen Seaton's obituary to learn more about her life.
You can read poems & conversations with Maureen in the South Florida Poetry Journal here.
Watch Maureen read poetry for the Alaska Quarterly Live Reading Series (~12 min).
Duration:00:27:46
Enjambment
10/16/2023
The queens leave you breathless in antici....pation with this crafty episode focused on enjambed lines.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Read Susan Mitchell's poem "The Dead" which is indeed in her first book, The Water Inside the Water (Wesleyan, 1983 and reprinted by Harper Perennial, 1994).
Here's the text of "Wake" by Tess Gallagher. You can watch her read the poem and a few others here (she reads "Wake" around the 11:10 mark)
Carl Phillips's poem "The Gods Leaving" is in his book Pastoral (Graywolf, 2002)
For the receipts regarding Miley Cyrus and Vickie Lawrence, or to read more from that interview, go here.
Read the start of Jorie Graham's essay "Some Notes on Silence" which James quotes in the episode.
You can read Andrea Cohen's poem "Ghosting" in the Atlantic if the spirit moves you.
Here's a link to read Jane Mead's "In Need of a World" (from The Lord and the General Din of the World)
Jean Valentine's poem "This Side" appears in her book Little Boat.
Duration:00:30:08
Hoedown
10/9/2023
Get on your spurs & chaps and join our country queens down at the poetry gay bar!
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Watch Miranda Lambert calling out some selfie-takers and the ladies of The View talking about it. And watch her sing "Tin Man" here.
Watch Jennifer L. Knox read "Crushing It" here.
Maybe the most memorable Tammy Wynette reference is this one from Sordid Lives. "He looked just like Tammy....in the early years," one character says about her brother.
"Billy Collins is to good poetry what Kenny G is to Charlie Parker" reads this scathing pan of the poet.
You can watch Richard Howard read from his poems here (~60 min).
Anne Carson is in conversation with Lannan Foundation's Michael Silverblatt here (30 min).
Terrance Hayes
Read B.H. Fairchild's "A Starlit Night" from 32 Poems here.
Read "Chopin in Palma," the Susan Mitchell poem in Best American Poetry 2023 (first published in Harvard Review) here.
Listen to Mark Doty talk all things Whitman (~50 min)
You can watch Frank Bidart read his serial-killer poem "Herbert White" here (~8 min)
Here's an amazing tribute to Lucille Clifton organized by SAG-AFTRA, with readings by Geena Davis, Tantoo Cardinal, Isabella Gomez, Mark St. Cyr, Candace Nicholas Lippman, Max Gail, Nicco Annan; Lynne Thompson; Sidney Clifton; Madeline di Nonno; and Rochelle Rose. (~70 min)
Read Matthew Dickman's poem "Grief."
Here's Susan Mitchell's CV.
Duration:00:29:07
F*CKSTICK
10/2/2023
The queens hypothesize that erotic/love poems must always have one "f*ckstick."
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
We talk about the difficulty of language and words that “shouldn’t” be in poems in Crimes Against Diction, episode 95.
Read “Dick Pics” by Sarah Tsiang.
Read Jack Gilbert’s “Michiko Dead."
Linda Gregg, “Kept Burning and Distant” from The Sacraments of Desire.
Read H.D.'s “Sea Poppies."
Read Sharon Olds's, “The Pope’s Penis”
Read Adrienne Rich's "The Floating Poem" in Twenty-One Love Poems.
Kim Addonizio's poem “Penis Blues” can be read here.
Louise Glück's “The Encounter” can be found here and is from The Triumph of Achilles
Read Emma Lazarus's “Assurance”
We reference Russell Edson's poem “Conjugal” and Mark Strand's “Courtship”
Read Jill Alexander Esbaum's awesomely funny “On Reading Poorly Transcribed Erotica”
Wallace Stevens’s first book of poems is Harmonium, published by Knopf in 1923. A Palm at the End of the Mind is a Selected Poems and a play.
Lynn Melnick's third book of poetry is Refusenik. You can watch Lynn read from it and talk about it with David Ulin of the New York Public Library.
Watch James Hoch talk about Miscreants and the backstory behind "Bobby" here (~17 min mark). You can read the Publisher's Weekly review of Miscreants here.
Donika Kelly’s first book is called Bestiary. Her second book is called The Renunciations pub’d by Graywolf.
Watch Lucas Mann read "Conversion" from Matthew Olzmann's book Constellations.
Read Charles Olsen's essay “Projective Verse."
Duration:00:30:57
Poppers
9/25/2023
Get vasodilated with the queens in this episode filled with heady poetry games.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate."
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Watch fabulously messy Willam Belli, from RuPaul's Drag Race and host of the popular game "Poppers Slap," review poppers here.
Read this appreciation of Gwendolyn Brooks by Christian Wiman.
Watch Sharon Olds at the National Book Awards 2022 finalist reading (~5 min).
Louise Glück’s most recent book is Marigold and Rose: A Fiction, a 64-page fablesque novella publishedin 2022 by FSG. Read a review of it here.
Carl Phillips reads Linda Gregg’s poem “It Is the Rising I Love” from The Paris Review (~2 min).
Listen to Jorie Graham read “Why” from To 2040.
If you want to read Jack Kerouac’s haiku, check them out here.
Angelo Nikolopoulos’s website is https://www.angelonikolopoulos.com. Catch a reading with Angelo, Jameson Fitzpatrick, and Monica McClure here.
Duration:00:31:21
True and Actual (with Lynn Emanuel / part. 2)
9/18/2023
The queens talk bad words and get Sharon Stoned with Lynn Emanuel in part 2 of the interview.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate."
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books, including Lynn Emanuel's new one, from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Lynn Emanuel is the author of six books of poetry: Hotel Fiesta, The Dig, Then, Suddenly—, Noose and Hook, The Nerve of It: New and Selected Poems, and most recently Transcript of the Disappearance, Exact and Diminishing. She is Profosser Emerita of English at the University of Pittsburgh.
Her work has been featured many times in the Pushcart Prize Anthology and Best American Poetry and is included in The Oxford Book of American Poetry. She has been a poetry editor for the Pushcart Prize Anthology, a member of the Literature Panel for the National Endowment for the Arts, and a judge for the National Book Awards.
She has been the recipient of numerous awards including the Eric Matthieu King Award from The Academy of American Poets, two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, a fellowship from the Ranieri Foundation and the National Poetry Series.
Read Lynn's poem “Homage to Sharon Stone." Sharon Stone is a Pisces (March 10), which is also Lynn’s sign (Mar. 14).
Deborah Bogen’s essay “Emanuel’s Elegies” can be found in Plume here. Check out Bogen’s website here: https://www.deborahbogen.net
Sharon Olds's baseball poem is collected in This Sporting Life: Contemporary American Poems About Sports and Games, published by Milkweed in 1987.
The Writer’s Almanac asked Sharon Olds to give some advice to young poets, and she said: "Take your vitamins. Exercise. Just work to love yourself as much as you can — not more than the people around you but not so much less." More of the interview can be found here.
Watch Lynn talk about some of her favorite/influential poets here.
Duration:00:29:04
Pills, Portraits, Pessoa (with Lynn Emanuel / pt. 1)
9/11/2023
The ladies pop a poetry pill with guest Lynn Emanuel in part one of the interview.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Lynn Emanuel is the author of six books of poetry: Hotel Fiesta, The Dig, Then, Suddenly—, Noose and Hook, The Nerve of It: New and Selected Poems, and most recently Transcript of the Disappearance, Exact and Diminishing. She is Profosser Emerita of English at the University of Pittsburgh. Her work has been featured many times in the Pushcart Prize Anthology and Best American Poetry and is included in The Oxford Book of American Poetry. She has been a poetry editor for the Pushcart Prize Anthology, a member of the Literature Panel for the National Endowment for the Arts, and a judge for the National Book Awards. She has been, as well, the recipient of numerous awards including the Eric Matthieu King Award from The Academy of American Poets, two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, a fellowship from the Ranieri Foundation and the National Poetry Series.
When Fernando Pessoa died in 1935, he left a huge body of work under his own name and under the name of other poets--men he not only invented but provided with separate and distinct personalities, personal histories and biographies, religious beliefs, political points of view, and aesthetic styles. There were three major heteronyms: Alberto Cairo, Alvaro de Campos, and Ricardo Reis. Pessoa explained: “Pseudonymous works are by the author in his own person, except in the name he signs; heteronymous works are by the author outside his own person. They proceed from a full-fledged individual created by him, like the lines spoken by a character in a drama he might write.” For more about Pessoa and his heteronyms, read this fabulous essay in Lit Hub or watch this 30-min BBC Radio 3 profile of the author here.
Read this interview with Lynn conducted by Mathias Svalina in Blackbird.
Watch Lynn Emanuel read with Lucia LoTempio and Lauren Russell for the Hudson Valley Writers' Center (90 min).
Duration:00:28:40
Horrible Men
9/4/2023
The divas are telling the truth and shaming some devils in this tea-spilling episode about horrible men with wide readerships.
Support Breaking Form!
hereBuy our books:
STOP LYING Publisher's Weekly ROMANTIC COMEDY Lit Hub, Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Here's the article that gave us so many receipts.
Claire Dederer's book is Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma. You can read a part of the book that was published earlier in The Paris Review.
Adele Morales was Norman Mailer's second wife. She divorced him two years after he stabbed her. Mailer was married six times and had nine children. According to his obituary in The Independent, his "relentless machismo seemed out of place in a man who was actually quite small – though perhaps that was where the aggression originated."
Sally Hayes and Holden Caulfield do go on a date in Catcher in the Rye—they end up seeing a play and then going ice-skating, where Holden tells her she's phony, then says she's a "royal pain in the ass," then asks her to run away. His near-shouting and impulsiveness scares her. Holden leaves her at the skating rink, and Sally says she'll find her own way home.
For more about Gyllenhall and "All Too Well (Taylor's Version)" which contains the keychain reference, go here.
We reference Frank O'Hara's famous poem "Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed]" and you can read the poem here.
Read the original article about Ta-Nehisi Coates attending the school board meeting at which the banning of his book Between the World and Me.
Duration:00:28:05
Digging for Poems
8/28/2023
Our intrepid pansies talk prompts--but first up it's a scandal of grave proportions.
Support Breaking Form!
hereBuy our books:
STOP LYING Publisher's Weekly ROMANTIC COMEDY Lit Hub,
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Read this fascinating consideration of Elizabeth Siddal in Lucinda Hawksley's "The Tragedy of Art's Greatest Supermodel" for the BBC. And you can view some of Lizzie Siddal's paintings/drawings here: https://lizziesiddal.com/portal/lizzies-art/
A bit more about Sidda: Shel became an artist in her own right and was the only woman to exhibit at an 1857 Pre-Raphaelite exhibition—the first exhibition of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood—which took place in London and was an alternative to the restrictive Royal Academy summer exhibition. A London newspaper review of the exhibition mentioned Siddal by name: “Her drawings display an admiring adoption of all the most startling peculiarities of Mr. Rossetti’s style, but they have nevertheless qualities which entitle them to high praise.” The reviewer also expressed admiration for the “high, pure, and independent feeling” of Siddal’s rendering of human faces in her drawings. Her painting, Clerk Saunders, was purchased by an American collector in attendance. Significant collections of her artworks can be found at Wightwick Manor and the Ashmolean.
Read Christina Rossetti's "Goblin Market" (the title poem of her first published book) here. If you're interested in learning a bit more about Christina Rossetti's drawings and verse, watch this short and fabulous video exhibition.
Here's the article Aaron references which ranks flavored lube. You're welcome.
Learn more about Dante Gabriel Rossetti's paintings here (Tate). Read his poem "Jenny" (one of the poems he buried with Siddal).
Duration:00:30:36
The In-Between (with Diannely Antigua)
8/21/2023
The queens talk music, monsters, and masturbation with Diannely Antigua.
Support Breaking Form!
hereBuy our books:
STOP LYING Publisher's Weekly ROMANTIC COMEDY Lit Hub,
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative. You can buy Ugly Music by Diannely Antigua by clicking here.
Diannely Antigu is a Dominican American poet and educator, born and raised in Massachusetts. Her debut collection Ugly Music (YesYes Books, 2019) was the winner of the Pamet River Prize and a 2020 Whiting Award. Her second poetry collection Good Monster is forthcoming with Copper Canyon Press in 2024. She hosts the podcast Bread & Poetry and is currently the Poet Laureate of Portsmouth, NH, the youngest and first person of color to receive that title.
Diannely reads "Diary Entry # 16 About Using My Body" from Good Monster. The poem was originally published in Muzzle Magazine and you can read it here.
Two poems Diannely mentions but doesn't read:
"Praise to the Boys" in the Paris Review
&
"Chronically" in Pangyrus.
You can read the entire Raque Dalton poem "Like You" ("Como Tú") translated by Jack Hirschman here.
Go here to listen to Diannely read poems and be interviewed on Was I in a Cult
Read a rave review of Ugly Music in Muzzle Magazine.
Watch Diannely tell stories and read in the Creative Mornings series (~25 min).
Here's another terrific recording of Diannely Antigua reading at City of Asylum for "Latinx and Proud" series (~15 min).
Duration:00:31:45
National Book Award Predictions
8/14/2023
The gays gaze into their crystal balls and predict the National Book Awards.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate."
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling cooperative.
Poets mentioned in this episode include:
Watch Gabrielle Bates read for Alaska Quarterly Review here
Watch Kyle Dargan read at the Cork Poetry Festival from Panzer Hertz: A Live Dissection (3:30-24:00)
Watch Timothy Donnelly read his poem "Diet Mountain Dew" with music
Watch Michael Dumanis read his poem "The Empire of Light" here
Watch Meg Fernandes read 4 poems from I Do Everything I'm Told here (with Adrienne Raphel; ~1 hr)
Watch Katie Ferris read from Standing in the Forest of Being Alive (with Ilya Kaminsky) here
Rigoberto Gonzalez reads as part of Poets House's Hard Hat Reading Series from To the Boy Who Was Night here
Watch Jorie Graham's book launch for To 2040 (~1 hour)
Terrance Hayes took part in this reading and conversation with Ocean Vuong & Claudia Rankine here (~1.5 hrs). Terrance guested on eps 98 & 99
Eugenia Leigh reads from Bianca (with Jennifer S. Cheng) at Green Apple Books in San Francisco here. You can also watch Leigh lead a free writing workshop about zuihitsu here
Watch Randall Mann read his poem "Straight Razor" (included in Deal: New and Selected Poems). Randy was our guest on ep 96
Paisley Rekdal talks about West: A Translation here (~50 min)
Watch sam sax read "Everyone's an Expert at Something" here
Read Charif Shanahan's "On the Overnight from Agadir" in Trace Evidence
Brenda Shaughnessy reads from Tanya here
Watch Monica Youn read from From From here (~30 min). Read "Against Imagism" in The New Yorker her
Duration:00:27:37
Deep Image Poets
8/7/2023
Our intrepid hosts talk Deep Image poetics and nearly break into rosebud....er blossom.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate."
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling coop.
The word (and journal name) Trobar comes from the Old Catalan verb trobar, from Vulgar Latin tropāre, a verb presumably derived from Latin tropus, of Greek origin—for "to find." It transforms in French to also take on "to invent, to compose" and thus forms the root of "troubador."
Watch Ellen Bass read her poem "Any Common Desolation" (~2 min) or read it for yourself here.
Check out Cola Franzen's translation of Lorca's poem "La Guitarra." Cola Franzen (February 4, 1923 – April 5, 2018) was an American writer and translator. Among her awards are the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award and the Gregory Kolovakos Award from PEN American Center for expansion of Hispanic Literature to an English-language audience.
Read James Wright's poem "A Blessing" or watch him read it here (at the 33:15 mark).
According to Dr. Kristin Mark, a sex and relationships researcher and a professor at the University of Kentucky, ejaculated sperm can travel up to 28 mph. It is, as you can imagine, difficult to measure.
Duration:00:29:28
A Little Bit Alexis
7/31/2023
The ladies get a little bit Alexis in this episode that mixes poetry quotes with Alexis Rose quotes from Schitt's Creek.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. Publisher's Weekly calls the book "visceral, tender, and compassionate."
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books. Writing in Lit Hub, Rebecca Morgan Frank says the poems have "a gift for telling stories . . . in acts of queer survival."
Please consider buying your books from Bluestockings Cooperative, a feminist and queer indie bookselling coop.
Read reviews of The Wendys on Allison Benis White's website here.
Preorder Modern Poetry by Diane Seuss (out in March 2024) here.
Watch this 2011 reading by Mark Bibbins here (~8 min).
Too Bright to See is Linda Gregg's first book. Aaron references her fourth book, Chosen by the Lion.
If you'd like to read the back story about "Leather and Lace," the song Aaron and I reference in the episode, it's worth your time here.
For more about the Devil Wears Prada prank meme, click here.
A public celebration of Minnie Bruce’s life will take place in the near future. Details will be posted on her social media and on her website: https://minniebrucepratt.net
Donations in memory of Minnie-Bruce may be made to the Friends of Dorothy House in Syracuse, NY. If you would like to donate, go here.
Read James Wright's poem "A Note Left in Jimmy Leonard’s Shack."
Duration:00:28:02
Keeping It 100
7/24/2023
The queens swear to tell the hole truth, and nothing butt the truth to commemorate the 100th episode of Breaking Form.
Support Breaking Form!
Review the show on Apple Podcasts here.
Buy our books:
Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series.
James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.
Read Carl Phillips's "As from a Quiver of Arrows." Or see Summit Chakraborty read it here (~3 min).
If you want to know more about Bruce Weigl, check out the Breaking Form Episode "The Impossible." You can also read "Song of Napalm" here or watch Weigl read it here (~3 min).
Ellen Bryant Voigt's newest book is Collected Poems (WW Norton).
The poet Ed Smith took his own life in 2005 at age 48; before that, he published two books, “Fantasyland” and “Tim’s Bunnies” (1988). David Trinidad edited the book “Punk Rock Is Cool for the End of the World: Poems and Notebooks of Ed Smith." Trinidad wrote a remembrance of Smith here. And David Ulin wrote a retrospective of Ed Smith's work for the LA Times.
Watch this World AIDS Day commemoration that celebrates the works of Walta Borawski and Robert Ferro (recorded December 1, 2022)
You can learn more about the incredible poet Christopher Gilbert here. We particularly recommend you stop your day and read his poem "How the Stars Understand Us"
Read Thomas James's bio and peruse some of his poems here. I've always really loved this essay on James's work by Lucie Brock-Broido and can't recommend it enough to you.
You can read Aaron's poem "After All These Years You Know They Were Wrong about the Sadness of Men Who Love Men" as well as a little essay about the poem here on the Poetry Society of America's website. Also, go read Aaron's poem "Sissy" that James mentions loving.
You can read James's poem "A Fact Which Occurred in America" here (though imagine it in tercets) and view the George Dawe painting referenced in the poem here.
Explore Jill Alexander Essbaum's fabulous work here.
Watch the fight scene in Mommie Dearest here if you don't get the "I am not one of your fans" reference. It's 3.5 minutes of high (but violent) camp.
Duration:00:29:46