From my poetry collection Do You Like Butter?
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Discoholic đȘ©
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
I'd rather be in outer space đž
trying on a metaphor
Keni
Three Goblin Art
No title available
Monterey Bay Aquarium
taylor price
One Nice Bug Per Day
sheepfilms
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Product Placement

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Today's Document
No title available
đȘŒ
we're not kids anymore.
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@brittneymelvin
From my poetry collection Do You Like Butter?
Hey guys, my poetry book Do You Like Butter? is still free on Amazon through December 5th.
I wrote all the poems in my 20s.
The book tells a story about unrequited love & heartbreak, healing, chasing big dreams, self-love, AND finding your one true love.
Download your free copy today đ
Amazon.com: Do You Like Butter?: A Poetry Collection eBook : Melvin, Brittney: Kindle Store
The ebook version of my poetry book Do You Like Butter? is free on Amazon now through December 5th, 2023.
I wrote all the poems in my 20s while I was figuring out who I am, what I wanted, and how to love myself.
While it's a poetry book, the poems tie together a cohesive narrative about heartbreak, healing, and the manifestation of dreams.
These poems helped me heal, and it's my hope that you'll find some of that same peace in the pages. â€ïž
Affirm and chill.
Mary Oliver, excerpt from the poem "Evidence" in Evidence: Poems
You are just as much ocean as the Pacific, just as much sand as the Sahara, as much mountain as Everest, as much eruption as Vesuvius, So let yourself erupt, you vibrant life force. Burst forth with all the energy inside you.
Mary Pinkoski, What Makes You Come Alive?
"According to quantum mechanics, I can send messages to my past self." by Brittney Melvin
âText me when youâre drunk tomorrow. Text me when youâve had three whiskey sours, two beers, and ten cigarettes. Text me when youâre drunk and you donât know your left arm from your right but you wonder what it would be like to have my crimson lipstick all over your mouth again. Text me because youâre bored, because youâre curious, because you want the scent of my perfume stuck on your t-shirt one last time. Text me for the hell of it, because you want my sun soft fingers bending beneath your bones, because you still remember how pretty i look in parking lot light. Text me because one day we wonât be able to blame our youth or the alcohol. Because one day Iâll have a husband, a new number or an apartment in New York City, and we both know that once that day comes there will be more than a nine character message keeping me from crawling back into your bed to say my goodbye.â
â Just Drunk Text Me. by brittney melvin
This poem is included in my poetry book Do You Like Butter? available on Amazon
Move Along is playing in the credits of the movie I just watched, and wow, I forgot about this song and how much it slaps.
what are your suggestions for starter poetry for people who dont have strong reading/analysis backgrounds
I've answered this a few times so I'm going to compile and expand them all into one post here.
I think if you haven't read much poetry before or aren't sure of your own tastes yet, then poetry anthologies are a great place to start: many of them will have a unifying theme so you can hone in based on a subject that interests you, or pick your way through something more general. I haven't read all of the ones below, but I have read most of them; the rest I came across in my own readings and added to my list either because I like the concept or am familiar with the editor(s) / their work:
Staying Alive: Real Poems for Unreal Times (ed. Nick Astley) & Being Alive: The Sequel to Staying Alive (there's two more books in this series, but I'm recommending these two just because it's where I started)
The Rattlebag (ed. Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes)
The Ecco Anthology of International Poetry (ed. Ilya Kaminsky & Susan Harris)
The Essential Haiku, Versions of Basho, Buson and Issa (ed. Robert Hass)
A Book of Luminous Things (ed. CzesĆaw MiĆosz )
Now and Then: The Poet's Choice Columns by Robert Hass (this may be a good place to start if you're also looking for commentary on the poems themselves)
Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your World(ed. PĂĄdraig Ă'Tuama)
African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song (ed. Kevin Young)
The Art of Losing: Poems of Grief and Healing (ed. Kevin Young)
Lifelines: Letters from Famous People about their Favourite Poems
The following lists are authors I love in one regard or another and is a small mix of different styles / time periods which I think are still fairly accessible regardless of what your reading background is! It's be no means exhaustice but hopefully it gives you even just a small glimpse of the range that's available so you can branch off and explore for yourself if any particular work speaks to you.
But in any case, for individual collections, I would try:
anything by Sara Teasdale
Devotions / Wild Geese / Felicity by Mary Oliver
Selected Poems and Prose by Christina Rossetti
Collected Poems by Langston Hughes
Where the Sidewalk Endsby Shel Silverstein
Morning Haiku by Sonia Sanchez
Revolutionary Letters, Diane di Prima
Concerning the Book That Is the Body of the Beloved by Gregory Orr
Rose: Poems by Li-Young Lee
A Red Cherry on a White-Tiled Floor / Barefoot Souls by Maram al-Masri
Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky
Tell Me: Poems / What is This Thing Called Love? by Kim Addonizio
The Trouble with Poetry by Billy Collins (Billy Collins is THE go-to for accessible / beginner poetry in my view so I think any of his collections would probably do)
Crush by Richard Siken
Rapture / The World's Wife by Carol Ann Duffy
The War Works Hard by Dunya Mikhail
Selected Poems by Walt Whitman
View with a Grain of Sand by Wislawa Szymborska
Collected Poems by Vasko Popa
Under Milkwood by Dylan Thomas (this is a play, but Thomas is a poet and the language & structure is definitely poetic to me)
Bright Dead Things: Poems by Ada LimĂłn
Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire,
Nostalgia, My Enemy: Selected Poems by Saadi Youssef
As for individual poems:
âWild Geeseâ by Mary Oliver
[Dear The Vatican] erasure poem by PĂĄdraig Ă'Tuama // "The Pedagogy of Conflict"
"Good Bones" by Maggie Smith
"The Author Writes the First Draft of His Weddings Vows (An erasure of Virginia Woolf's suicide letter to her husband, Leonard)" by Hanif Abdurraqib
"I Can Tell You a Story" by Chuck Carlise
"The Sciences Sing a Lullabye" by Albert Goldbarth
"One Last Poem for Richard" by Sandra Cisneros
"We Lived Happily During the War" by Ilya Kaminsky
âIâm Explaining a Few Thingsâby Pablo Neruda
"Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" //"Nothing Gold Can Stay"//"Out, Out--" by Robert Frost
"Tablets: I // II // III"by Dunya Mikhail
"What Were They Like?" by Denise Levertov
"Those Winter Sundays" by Robert Hayden,
"The Patience of Ordinary Things" by Pat Schneider
âI, tooâ // "The Negro Speaks of Riversâ // "Harlemâ // âTheme for English Bâ by Langston Hughes
âThe Mowerâ // "The Trees" // "High Windows" by Philip Larkin
âThe Leashâ // âLove Poem with Apologies for My Appearanceâ // "Downhearted" by Ada LimĂłn
âThe Fleaâ by John Donne
"The Last Rose of Summer" by Thomas Moore
"Beauty" // "Please don't" // "How it Adds Up" by Tony Hoagland
âMy Friend Yeshiâ by Alice Walker
"De Humanis Corporis Fabrica"byJohn Burnside
âWhat Do Women Want?â // âFor Desireâ // "Stolen Moments" // "The Numbers" by Kim Addonizio
âHummingbirdâ // "For Tess" by Raymond Carver
"The Two-Headed Calf" by Laura Gilpin
âBleecker Street, Summerâ by Derek Walcott
âDirge Without Musicâ // "What Lips My Lips Have Kissed" by Edna St. Vincent Millay
âDiggingâ // âMid-Term Breakâ // âThe Rain Stickâ // "Blackberry Picking" // "Twice Shy" by Seamus Heaney
âDulce Et Decorum Estâby Wilfred Owen
âNotes from a Nonexistent Himalayan Expeditionâby Wislawa Szymborska
"Hour" //"Medusa" byCarol Ann Duffy
âThe More Loving Oneâ // âMusĂ©e des Beaux Artsâ by W.H. Auden
âSmall Kindnessesâ // "Feeding the Worms" by Danusha LamĂ©ris
"Down by the Salley Gardensâ // âThe Stolen Childâ by W.B. Yeats
"The Thing Is" by Ellen Bass
"The Last Love Letter from an Entymologist" by Jared Singer
"[i like my body when it is with your]" by e.e. cummings
"Try to Praise the Mutilated World" by Adam Zagajewski
"The Cinnamon Peeler" by Michael Ondaatje
"Last Night I Dreamed I Made Myself" by Paige Lewis
"A Dream Within a Dream" // "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe (highly recommend reading the last one out loud or listening to it recited)
"Ars Poetica?" // "Encounter" // "A Song on the End of the World"by Czeslaw Milosz
"Wandering Around an Albequerque Airport Terminalâ // "Two Countriesâ // "Kindnessâ by Naoimi Shihab Nye
"Slow Danceâ by Matthew Dickman
"The Archipelago of Kisses" // "The Quiet World" by Jeffrey McDaniel
"Mimesis" by Fady Joudah
"The Great Fires" // "The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart" // "Failing and Flying" by Jack Gilbert
"The Mermaid" // "Virtuosi" by Lisel Mueller
"Macrophobia (Fear of Waiting)" by Jamaal May
"Someday I'll Love Ocean Vuong" by Ocean Vuong
"Still I Rise" by Maya Angelou
I would also recommend spending some times with essays, interviews, or other non-fiction, creative or otherwise (especially by other poets) if you want to broaden and improve how you read poetry; they can help give you a wider idea of the landscape behind and beyond the actual poems themselves, or even just let you acquaint yourself with how particular writers see and describe things in the world around them. The following are some of my favourites:
Upstream: Essays by Mary Oliver
"Theory and Play of the Duende" by Federico GarcĂa Lorca
"The White Bird" and "Some Notes on Song" by John Berger
In That Great River: A Notebook by Anna Kamienska
A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance by Hanif Abdurraqib
The Book of Delights by Ross Gay
"Of Strangeness That Wakes Us" and "Still Dancing: An Interview with Ilya Kaminsky" by Ilya Kaminsky
"The Sentence is a Lonely Place" by Garielle Lutz
Still Life with Oysters and Lemon by Mark Doty
Paris, When It's Naked by Etel Adnan
Headless John The Baptist Hitchhiking, C.T. Salazar
Les femmes (1969)
sometimes I think to myself, didn't I used to have friends who loved poetry and understood literature references and my niche inner world and then I remember, no, I just used to spend a lot more time on tumblr
just found some random ass fanfic poem I wrote 2 years ago đ€Ł
for the love of god, write all the self-indulgent scenes you want. be utterly shameless about including every last fantasy. i know everyone likes to share quotes and quips about how miserably hard writing is, but please please try thinking of it as a joyful act where you get to be a messy human who makes art rather than some pain filled quest for icy perfection.
âauthenticity looks an awful lot like self-indulgence but it is the only way to find your true audienceâ