Épisodes

  • Dawn Lundy Martin: Our Present, Long Moment
    Sep 24 2025

    Dawn Lundy Martin selects poems of urgency, tension, and devotion. She shares Daniel Borzutzky responding to massacres with a poem that must be written (“Written after a Massacre in the Year 2018”), francine j. harris negotiating what can be contained and what cannot (“in case”), and Ada Limón choosing astounding devotion ("State Bird"). Martin closes with an excerpt from “A Fable of the Regime,” which engages with the present, long moment of American history.

    Watch the full recordings of Borzutzky, harris, and Limón on Voca:
    Daniel Borzutzky (January 10, 2019)
    francine j. harris (September 3, 2015)
    Ada Limón (April 5, 2018)

    You can also enjoy Lundy’s performance as part of Black Took Collective and her participation in a panel discussion at the Poetry Center, part of the Poetry Off the Page Symposium from 2012.

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    32 min
  • Leila Chatti: How Lucky to Have Lived
    Sep 10 2025

    Leila Chatti chooses poems illuminated by a heart left often to life here on Earth. She introduces us to Linda Gregg’s fierce and incandescent honesty (“There She Is”), Lucille Clifton’s embrace of lightness amidst struggle (“sorrows”), and Jane Hirshfield’s distillation of silence and attention (“The World Loved by Moonlight”). To close, Chatti reads her poem “I went out to hear”—an affirmation for choosing a life that includes both beauty and pain.

    Find the full recordings of Gregg, Clifton, and Hirshfield on Voca:
    Linda Gregg (April 22, 1981)
    Lucille Clifton (November 1, 2007)
    Jane Hirshfield (November 29, 1995)

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    22 min
  • Samuel Ace: Rage, Complicity, and the True Nature of Amends
    Aug 27 2025

    Samuel Ace introduces poems that speak to today with raw honesty, truthfulness, and bravery. He shares Angel Dominguez wrestling with atrocity and empathy (“Dear Diego, Tell me what you know of stars”), Ilya Kaminsky braiding complicity with grief for the future (“In a Time of Peace”), and Layli Long Soldier drawing us into the meaning of apology (“WHEREAS I heard a noise I thought was a sneeze”). Ace closes with a sound rendering of his poem “These Nights,” which considers acts of beauty amidst institutional violence.

    Watch the full recordings by Dominguez, Kaminsky, and Long Soldier on Voca:

    Angel Dominguez (August 23, 2023)
    Ilya Kaminsky (January 23, 2025)
    Layli Long Soldier (November 2, 2017)

    You can also enjoy a recording of Ace reading for the Poetry Center in 2013.

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    35 min
  • Harmony Holiday: Against Sentimentality
    Aug 13 2025

    Harmony Holiday selects poems that shed the skin of nostalgia, testing the boundaries of cruelty as they push toward clarity. She introduces Robert Hass accepting moments of error (“A Story About the Body”), Ai recognizing the humanity of the evil-doer (“Salome”), and Allen Ginsberg acknowledging his mother’s scars as he grieves (“Kaddish”). Holiday closes with her poem “Tale of the Sudden Sweetness of the Dictator,” which refuses sentimentality by telling a story in sharp detail.

    Listen to the full recordings of Hass, Ai, and Ginsberg reading for the Poetry Center on Voca:

    Robert Hass (September 12, 1984)
    Ai (March 6, 1985)
    Allen Ginsberg (April 30, 1969)

    Check out Holiday’s Substack Black Music and Black Muses.

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    42 min
  • Nicole Sealey: Love’s Big Ideas
    Jul 30 2025

    In our fiftieth episode, Nicole Sealey chooses poems that speak to the lasting power of big ideas offered generously to one’s community. She shares Toi Derricotte forecasting the spirit of Cave Canem (“I say hello, oracle, kind mother...”), Cornelius Eady responding to racism with defiant love (“Gratitude”), and Patricia Smith reminding us that poetry is a life-affirming art (“Building Nicole’s Mama”). Sealey closes with her piece “The First Person Who Will Live to Be One Hundred and Fifty Years Old Has Already Been Born,” a poem that measures time in the span of open arms.

    Find the full recordings of Derricotte, Eady, and Smith reading for the Poetry Center on Voca:

    Toi Derricotte (February 19, 1992)
    Cornelius Eady (November 6, 1991)
    Patricia Smith (November 10, 2004)

    You can also enjoy a recording of Sealey reading at the Poetry Center in 2023 and participating in a virtual reading in 2021.

    Participate in the 2025 #SealeyChallenge, a community challenge to read one book of poetry a day for the month of August. There's no official sign-up to participate and everyone is welcome to join in! Find reading ideas and other information here and use/find the hashtag #SealeyChallenge on your social channels to follow along and learn more.

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    32 min
  • Kwame Dawes: Cleansing as Fire
    Jan 29 2025

    Kwame Dawes introduces poems that interrogate loss and violence, transforming them in the flame of irony, elegy, and empathy. He discusses Lucille Clifton distilling “pure moments of tremendous poetry” (“lu 1958”), Michael S. Harper offering a haunting conclusion that serves as both memorial and gift (“We Assume: On the Death of our Son, Reuben Masai Harper”), and Terrance Hayes treading the line where outrage meets compassion (“Carolina Lullaby,” “A Poem That Does Nothing,” “The Poet Ai as Dylann Roof”). Dawes closes with an unpublished poem, “The House of Two Women,” which engages with the turbulent present of American life.

    Find the full recordings of Clifton, Harper, and Hayes reading from the Poetry Center on Voca:

    Lucille Clifton (November 1, 2007)
    Michael S. Harper (April 4, 1973)
    Terrance Hayes (February 4, 2016)

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    42 min
  • Mackenzie Polonyi: Mycorrhizal Love
    Jan 15 2025

    Mackenzie Polonyi selects poems that engender bell hooks’ idea of love as a verb—a mycorrhizal, persistent, and complicated act linking us to past and present, near and far. She discusses Lucille Clifton on the boundlessness of light (“i was born with twelve fingers”), Fady Joudah’s adaptation of Hussein Barghouthi on the music of what it means to be human (“I Dreamed You”), and Victoria Chang on questions for the generations we cannot meet (“Once you had to stand behind...”). Polonyi closes with her own “Grand Daughter’s Grief Logic,” where grieving ruptures time.

    Find the full recordings of Clifton, Joudah, and Chang reading for the Poetry Center on Voca:

    Lucille Clifton (October 12, 1983)
    Fady Joudah (February 19, 2015)
    Victoria Chang (October 6, 2022)

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    38 min
  • Abigail Chabitnoy: The Field
    Jan 1 2025

    Abigail Chabitnoy curates poems that dwell in fields of searching, connecting, and being. She introduces Michael Wasson communing with those who are no longer breathing (“Aposiopesis [or, The Field between the Living & the Dead]”), Jean Valentine considering the moment and its boundaries (“To my soul”), and Saretta Morgan writing into love over many years (“Dearth-light”). To close, Chabitnoy reads her poem “Signs You Are Standing at the End,” which enters its own field of imagining across time.

    Find the full recordings of Wasson, Valentine, and Morgan reading for the Poetry Center on Voca:

    Michael Wasson (April 27, 2023)
    Jean Valentine (September 25, 2008)
    Saretta Morgan (March 28, 2024)

    Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout. Look for the transcript tab under each episode.

    Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here, or try out this new feature by visiting Voca.

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    25 min