Touchstone Talk Podcast Por Touchstone arte de portada

Touchstone Talk

Touchstone Talk

De: Touchstone
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Interviews, readings, and poetry talk connected with Touchstone, the Poetry and Art Journal of the Poetry Society of New Hampshire.

Poetry Society of New Hampshire
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Episodios
  • Four Poems from Issue 67.1 Discussion
    Aug 9 2025

    We enjoyed the poems from issue 67.1 so much that we couldn't resist talking in more detail about 4 of them. Editor David Banach and Associate Editor Melissa Sprague take a deep dive into four poems from Issue 67.1:

    1. Cassandra Was A Far Cry From Waco by Courtney Seymour.

    2. EXHIBITION by Elizabeth Acevedo.

    3. Talking to Jorge Again by Marjorie Moorhead.

    4. How Be Dispersed by Mary Castelli.

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    48 m
  • Touchstone Issue 67.1 Spring 2025 Audio Edition
    May 21 2025

    Poem read from the Spring 2025 Issue of Touchstone, the journal of poetry and art from the Poetry Society of New Hampshire

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    1 h y 14 m
  • 3. Patrice Pinette Interview
    Apr 14 2025

    Touchstone Readers Norah Smith and Sam Marcotte got to talk to NH poet Patrice Pinette about her new book Happiness is a Strange Bird and her poetic practice. They also got to talk about three poems from the new book.

    Patrice Pinette received her MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. In the Connections Program of New Hampshire Humanities, she facilitates book discussions with adult learners of English from all over the world. She also leads poetry workshops in the Transdisciplinary Studies in Healing Education program at Antioch University New England, and Center for Anthroposophy’s Renewal Courses. Patrice’s poems have appeared in literary journals and anthologies including Pensive: A Global Journal of Spirituality & the Arts, Touchstone Journal, Poet Showcase: An Anthology of New Hampshire Poets, Allegro Poetry Journal, Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review, and elsewhere.

    About Happiness is a Strange Bird, 2025 from Bee Monk Press:

    Purchase Happiness, A Strange Bird on Amazon As primal and fearless as myth, or a great blue heron touching down in a snowstorm in Manhattan, the “strange bird” of this book perches at the edge of Eden, winging to us as if out of memory or the voice in the wilderness we dream has awakened us. Patrice Pinette’s poems, glowing and unholdable as a child’s chased bubbles, limn the mystical both in the ineffable and the domestic. As laden with questions as a “deluge of grief” with tears or peonies with petals, they bow down while we are uplifted, filling with hope and hunger—not so much for answers as for more of the dangerous, playful, momentary encounters with wonder we’re reminded of. Elemental as rain, as magnolias, as love, the color blue, or happiness, these poems transport us as we watch them soar, line by line “dazzling the ordinary.” Alice B Fogel, New Hampshire Poet Laureate Emerita Author of Falsework

    An excerpt from the conversation: “. . . in these times we’re in, as you know, language is in a troubled state. The idea of having reverence and a clarity around truth, to have spoken word come from the heart to the heart, that can’t be taken for granted. And I know that what you two are doing… with many other writers and artists and good folks serving others, are keeping words alive as expressions of soul and of your deepest truth.”

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    36 m
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