Innisfree Poetry Journal Takes an In-Depth Look at the Career and Works of Grace Cavalieri
In their newest edition, Innisfree Poetry Journal, takes a deep dive into the work and career of Grace Cavalieri. The article features thirteen poems by the Maryland Poetry Laureate including many featured in her Legacy Book, Other Voices, Other Lives. The poems are drawn from her historical-literary explorations of the lives of three famous women of vastly different backgrounds: Mary Wollstonecraft, Anna Nicole Smith, and Madame de Stael.
Of her work on Mary Wollstonecraft, the oft-overlooked feminist pioneer and mother of Mary Shelley, Grace writes, "Historians may know what she did, but I knew what she felt."
You can read the entire article and all thirteen poems here. And check them out in Grace's groundbreaking legacy book, Other Voices, Other Lives which includes a selection of poems, plays, and interviews drawn from over forty years of work.
Featured Audio: “Achilles on Shore,” a reading by Rose Solari
Rose Solari reads “Achilles on Shore” “No one reads poetry like Rose Solari. She enters the essence of each word with a voice, making meaning become spirit. I think her […]
Featured Audio: “Jesse Lancaster Remembers,” a reading by James J. Patterson
James J. Patterson reads “Jesse Lancaster Remembers” from Roughnecks “[Reading James J Patterson] is like sitting down with a very intelligent friend and having the kind of conversation you’d always wanted […]
[Richard Peabody] His Great Feature in The Washington Post
Richard Peabody has spent most of his adult life nurturing and promoting Washington’s literary output. Gargoyle, a thick doorstop of a literary magazine that he has published since 1976, has amassed a list of distinguished contributors, including eight National Poetry Series winners, five National Book Award winners, three PEN/Faulkner winners, three Pulitzer Prize winners, and winners of more than a dozen other honors. And he can count at least 30 former university, Writer’s Center and private creative writing students who have gone on to sell screenplays or publish books, including many with the most prestigious New York publishing houses.