Friday, July 11, 2025

"poetry from daily life": a treasure trove of goodness

Greetings, Poetry People! I have been remiss. I have never taken the opportunity to highlight the fact that David L. Harrison, one of the greats of children's poetry, has been beavering tirelessly away on a project worthy of a Children's Poet Laureate (although he has never held that title). He is, however, the Missouri Poet Laureate, and has been organizing POETRY FROM DAILY LIFE, a series of columns published in the Springfield (MO) News-Leader and several other newspapers.

The opportunity to write short essays on what poetry is, what it means for us, and how others can access the little daily glories of poetry, has been taken up by a wide range of people writing and performing for a wide range of audiences.  There are columns by Ted Kooser, Jane Yolen and Joseph Bruchac, Marilyn Singer, Janet Wong and Greg Pincus, plus some by Poetry Friday regulars including Laura Purdie Salas, Irene Latham, Matt Forrest Esenwine, and me!  In fact, my second column will be published this Sunday, followed by a column by Kate Coombs on July 19.

My first piece, "You Are the Boss of Your Poem," appeared in September 2024, and my second is titled "Surprise for the writer, surprise for the reader."  In both I talk about writing poetry with elementary-aged kids and feature some of their work. [It's hard to get poetry formatting right in an online newspaper column, but I've tried to be less fussy than usual about that!]


To go along with these columns, David has pursued funding for "a free online library featuring recordings of the columns published. The first fifty-two recordings were completed and introduced as Poetry from Daily Life Free Video Library three months ago." Here’s the link to that channel.
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5wGqp5vbw2K0N7cFcGwN5

And here's the video of my first column!


Explore the video channel, follow the column (if that's even possible), and sign up for updates from David's blog--I think we might say that he is the James Brown of children's poetry, the hardest-working man in the business!

Thanks to Tabatha at The Opposite of Indifference for hosting us today--where she is, as usual, the walking, talking, poeting opposite of indifference, spurring us towards Peace, Poetry and Justice for All.


11 comments:

  1. This sounds incredible! Thank you for sharing it with us - I'm a bit ashamed to say I went and had a look to see if my province had a poet laureate, and not only do we have one, my own city has one, and I had no idea! So, I'm off to do some reading. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Okay, I love everything about this, Cousin, including your performance. How COOL!!!
    We have Youth Laureates in our county through the library, but nothing like this. This is brilliant, thanks for the heads up about Poetry From Daily Life.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hats off to David Harrison! He is out there making it happen. Love your topics, Heidi. Yes to the excitement of being the boss and having surprises!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I follow David, who has so many great ideas, manages to post on his blog every day, created this wonderful group as the Missouri Poet Laureats "and" still write more books! Thanks for being part of it, Heidi!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well, this is positively delightful all around. :D I subbed to the YouTube channel too!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh, wow! A video library is such a good idea. Congrats on a second column and the video. I'm so glad David L. Harrison is beavering along for the sake of poetry! What a great activity for him and for us.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Heidi, I LOVED your Boss column so am really looking forward to reading your newest. Yay!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you for sharing about this it sounds wonderful. I just subscribed and am looking forward to delving into these videos. What a contribution David Harrison has made in his time as MI Poet Laureat!

    ReplyDelete
  9. I absolutely LOVE this! Telling kids they are the boss of their poem is BRILLIANT!! Thank you for sharing this awesome video.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thanks for sharing all of this, Heidi! I just subscribed to the video channel and look forward to digging in.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Heidi, thank you for returning to Poetry from Daily Life. Your column this weekend marks the 90th in a series of 101 short essays contributed by sixty writers from twenty-five states and three other countries. I'm delighted to have you in the lineup twice!

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for joining in the wild rumpus!