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Essays, guides, and close readings from Ink & Ribbon Press — a library for poets, readers, and anyone who cares about the made poem.

What brings you here?
I Am New to Poetry
Books to start with, how to read, and what makes poetry worth your time.
Browse All Articles 64
I Write Poetry
Craft guidance, submission help, prize deadlines, and MFA advice.
Browse Poet Articles 13
Understand a Poem
A specific poem, closely read — Frost, Poe, Dickinson, Angelou, Thomas, Shelley.
Browse Close Readings 11
Join the Press
Donate, join as a patron, or understand how a nonprofit poetry press works.
Browse Press Articles 10
Recent Reviews See all reviews →
Reviews
Scattered Snows to the North
Carl Phillips
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Reviews
Modern Poetry
Diane Seuss
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Reviews
Into the Hush
Arthur Sze
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Reviews
With My Back to the World
Victoria Chang
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Reviews
Regaining Unconsciousness
Harryette Mullen
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Original Form
The Triptych Sonnet — A New Poetry Form
G. K. Allum introduces an original fourteen-line form developed through the Domestic Sonnets sequence.
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Recently Added Browse all 64 →
New · Poets & Traditions
Mary Oliver: An Introduction
New · Craft
What Is Iambic Pentameter?
New · Practical Guide
How to Submit Your Poems: A Realistic Guide
New · Essay
Keats and Shelley: Two Kinds of Romantic
New · Essay
Why Everyone Fell in Love with H.D.
New · Poets & Traditions
Ocean Vuong: An Introduction
New · Poets & Traditions
Louise Glück: An Introduction
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64 articles · search, filter by category, or scroll
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24 articles
Poets & Traditions
What Is Free Verse?

From Whitman’s long breathing lines to Williams’s sharp fragments — what “freedom” in poetry actually means.

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Poets & Traditions
Frank O’Hara and the New York School

How a group of poets in 1950s New York changed American poetry — and why O’Hara’s voice still feels necessary.

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Poets & Traditions
The History of the Sonnet

From Petrarch to Shakespeare to Terrance Hayes — how fourteen lines became one of poetry’s most enduring forms.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Confessional Poetry?

The movement that brought private life into public verse — Plath, Sexton, Lowell, and the poem as act of witness.

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Poets & Traditions
Elizabeth Bishop: An Introduction

Precision, restraint, and the art of close looking — why Bishop remains one of the most studied and loved poets.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Imagism?

Pound, H.D., Williams — the early twentieth-century movement that stripped poetry down to the image itself.

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Poets & Traditions
Sylvia Plath: An Introduction

The life, the Ariel poems, and the complicated legacy of one of the twentieth century’s most magnetic poets.

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Poets & Traditions
Warren Wilson: The Low-Residency MFA

The programme that invented the low-residency MFA model — its history, ethos, and what it still offers serious poets.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Slow Publishing?

Against velocity — the philosophy of making fewer books with greater care, and why it matters for poetry.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is a Poetry Press?

How independent poetry publishers work, what they look for, and why they exist at all.

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Poets & Traditions
Diane Seuss and the Confessional Tradition

The Pulitzer Prize-winner has taken the confessional poem somewhere its founders never imagined.

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Poets & Traditions
The Pacific Northwest Literary Scene

The poets, presses, bookshops, and institutions that make the PNW one of America’s most vital literary communities.

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Poets & Traditions
The Triptych Sonnet: A New Poetry Form

G. K. Allum introduces an original fourteen-line form — three haiku followed by five lines of iambic pentameter — developed through the Domestic Sonnets sequence.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Enjambment? How the Line Break Makes Meaning

The most important decision a poet makes — and the least explained. What enjambment does, how double meaning works at the line break, and how to read it.

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Poets & Traditions
Walt Whitman and the Democratic Poem

Whitman decided the poem should sound like America sounds — democratic, inclusive, refusing to rank what deserves attention. An introduction to his work and why it still matters.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is a Volta? The Turn That Makes a Poem

The volta is the moment a poem changes direction — the structural hinge of lyric poetry. What it is, how it works in sonnets and free verse, and how to write one.

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Poets & Traditions
Anne Sexton: Confession, Craft, and the Poem as Survival

Sexton is the most misread poet of the confessional generation. Her poems are constructed performances of formal intelligence — not case files. An essential introduction.

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Poets & Traditions
Keats and Shelley: Two Kinds of Romantic

Two poets who shared a moment in history and almost nothing else. On sensation versus idea, on politics and beauty, and the permanent question of what poetry owes the world.

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Poets & Traditions
Why Everyone Fell in Love with H.D.

On Hilda Doolittle — her decades of overlooking, the Imagist revolution she helped spark, the erotic intensity of her work, and the visionary scale hiding in plain sight.

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Poets & Traditions
Mary Oliver: An Introduction

The most beloved poet in America spent her life paying attention to the world. Why the critics underrated her, what her poems do, and why so many keep her close.

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Poets & Traditions
Ocean Vuong: An Introduction

One of the most celebrated poets of his generation writes from the meeting point of violence and tenderness. On inheritance, language, and why his work moves so many.

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Poets & Traditions
Louise Glück: An Introduction

The Nobel laureate wrote some of the most austere and unflinching poems in American literature. On myth, the family, and why so little on the page holds so much.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Iambic Pentameter?

The most important rhythm in English poetry, explained without jargon. What it is, why English settled on it, how to hear it, and how to scan a line yourself.

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Poets & Traditions
What Is Meter in Poetry?

The organized rhythm beneath formal verse, explained from the ground up. The handful of patterns worth knowing, and why a regular beat can carry so much feeling.

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5 articles
Reviews
Scattered Snows to the North — Carl Phillips

A review of Carl Phillips’s latest collection — restraint, desire, and the long practice of looking clearly.

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Reviews
Modern Poetry — Diane Seuss

A review of Seuss’s fifth collection — self-conscious, expansive, and entirely her own.

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Reviews
Into the Hush — Arthur Sze

A review of Arthur Sze’s latest — ecological attention, lyric sequence, and the ethics of observation.

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Reviews
With My Back to the World — Victoria Chang

A review of Victoria Chang’s ekphrastic collection — Agnes Martin, silence, and the grief that doesn’t end.

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Reviews
Regaining Unconsciousness — Harryette Mullen

A review of Mullen’s selected poems — language play, Black vernacular tradition, and the politics of form.

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13 articles
Practical Guides
The Best MFA Programs for Poetry

Low-residency and full-residency programmes that train serious poets — Pacific University, Warren Wilson, and beyond.

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Practical Guides
Where to Submit Your Poems

From Poetry Magazine and the Paris Review to Rattle and Copper Nickel — a tiered guide to finding the right home.

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Practical Guides
How to Format a Poetry Manuscript

The practical guide to preparing a manuscript file for submission — fonts, spacing, ordering, cover pages.

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Practical Guides
How to Write a Cover Letter

What to include, what to leave out, and how to write a cover letter that reads like a peer rather than a supplicant.

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Practical Guides
What Are Poetry Contests and Prizes?

How poetry contests work, what to look for in a legitimate prize, and what winning means for a poet’s career.

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Practical Guides
How Poetry Books Are Made

From manuscript to bound copy — the full production process of a limited edition poetry book.

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Practical Guides
How to Get a Poetry Book Published by a Small Press

What independent press editors look for, how to research the right press, and how to submit with confidence.

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Practical Guides
How to Write a Poetry Manuscript

Finding the arc, sequencing, cutting, and knowing when a collection is genuinely ready to submit.

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Practical Guides
The Best Poetry Prizes for a Poet

Rattle, the LemonLight Prize, and the major awards worth your time — how to identify legitimate prizes and enter well.

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Practical Guides
How to Read a Poem

A practical guide to reading poetry — how to slow down, what to do with difficulty, and how to let a poem work on you.

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Practical Guides
How to Get a Poetry Book into Bookshops

Distribution, consignment, and the realities of getting a small press title onto shelves.

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Practical Guides
How Poetry Publishing Works

The most common paths poets take — presses, prizes, and independent publishing compared.

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Practical Guides
How to Submit Your Poems: A Realistic Guide

The honest version — what the odds really are, how to handle rejection, simultaneous submissions, reading fees, and how to build a habit instead of waiting to feel ready.

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10 articles
Foundations
What Is a Poetry Reading?

What to expect, how to listen, what makes a great reading, and how to find poetry events near you.

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Foundations
What Makes a Limited Edition Book Worth Collecting?

What distinguishes a book made to last — paper, binding, typography, print run, and why it matters.

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Foundations
What Is a Fine Art Book?

From the Kelmscott Press to McCall Bindery in Poulsbo — the tradition of craft bookmaking and why it matters.

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Foundations
Why Donate to a Poetry Press?

How nonprofit poetry publishing works, where donor money goes, and why it’s one of the most direct forms of literary patronage.

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Foundations
What Is a Poetry Journal?

The role of literary magazines in the ecosystem of poetry publishing — and which ones matter most.

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Foundations
What Is an Author’s Note?

How to write a brief reflection on how a book came to exist — without explaining the poems.

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Foundations
What Is a Colophon?

The small page at the back of a fine press book — what it contains, why it matters, and what ours says.

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Foundations
What Is a Literary Agent?

Do poetry collections need agents? When they help, when they don’t, and how the small press route differs.

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Foundations
What Is a Copyright Page?

What the copyright page in a poetry book contains and what each element actually means.

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Foundations
What Is an ISBN?

International Standard Book Numbers — what they are, who assigns them, and why they matter for distribution.

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12 articles
Close Reading
The Road Not Taken — Robert Frost

Frost wrote it as a joke. His friend went to war. A hundred years later, almost everyone is still missing the point.

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Close Reading
Do Not Go Gentle — Dylan Thomas

Written for his dying father, built on the villanelle. How the form’s structure enacts grief itself.

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Close Reading
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock — Eliot

The poem that announced modernism’s arrival. What Prufrock cannot do, and why.

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Close Reading
Still I Rise — Maya Angelou

How Angelou’s formal escalation turns defiance into something elemental.

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Close Reading
Ozymandias — Percy Bysshe Shelley

Three thousand years of empire reduced to a sneer in the sand. Fourteen lines, perfectly constructed.

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Close Reading
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening — Frost

The most memorised American poem — its interlocking formal machinery and quiet flirtation with death.

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Close Reading
The Raven — Edgar Allan Poe

The hypnotic sound machine, what Nevermore actually means, and why the speaker is his own tormentor.

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Close Reading
If— — Rudyard Kipling

The UK’s favourite poem — a single sentence held in suspension for thirty-two lines.

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Close Reading
Hope Is the Thing with Feathers — Dickinson

What it means to make hope a bird, what the storm reveals, and why the final stanza is stranger than it seems.

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Close Reading
Annabel Lee — Edgar Allan Poe

Written weeks before his death — childlike music concealing something far darker. The love that refuses to end.

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Close Reading
Shall I Compare Thee — Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18

The most read poem in the English language is not what everyone thinks. A close reading of what Sonnet 18 actually argues — and why the final couplet changes everything.

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Close Reading
The Waste Land — T.S. Eliot

The most famous difficult poem in English doesn’t have to defeat you. What it’s about, why it’s in fragments, and how to read it without a footnote for every line.

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