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Carruth, Hayden. Collected Shorter Poems: 1946-1991. Port Townsend: Copper Canyon, 1992.
Kinnell, Galway. Imperfect Thirst. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1994.
Guerrero, Laurie Ann. I Have Eaten the Rattlesnake. Fort Worth: TCU Press, 2020.
Marcum, Carl. Cue Lazarus. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2001.
Silently Loud. Minneapolis: Unrestricted Editions, 2023.
Dominguez, Angel. Desgraciado (the collected letters). New York: Nightboat Books, 2022, pp. 101-102.
Dominguez, Angel. Desgraciado (the collected letters). New York: Nightboat Books, 2022, p. 125.
Yanyi. The Year of Blue Water. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019.
Myles, Eileen. a "Working Life." New York: Grove Press, 2023.
Hillman, Brenda. In a Few Minutes Before Later. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2022.
Hillman, Brenda. In a Few Minutes Before Later. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2022.
Zapruder, Matthew. "My Grandmother's Dictionary." The New Yorker, vol. 99, no. 25, 21 August 2023.
Murillo, John. Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry. New York: Four Way Books, 2020.
Morgan, Saretta. Alt-Nature. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2024.
Morgan, Saretta. Alt-Nature. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2024.
Morgan, Saretta. Alt-Nature. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2024.
Toledo, Natalia. "Dxiibi." Plume, Issue 116, April 2021. Web. Accessed 7 May 2024.
Toledo, Natalia. "Pánico." Plume, Issue 116, April 2021. Web. Accessed 7 May 2024.
Toledo, Natalia. "Panic." Translated by Irma Pineda and Clare Sullivan. Plume, Issue 116, April 2021. Web. Accessed 7 May 2024.
CAConrad. Listen to the Golden Boomerang Return. Seattle: Wave Books, 2024.
CAConrad. Listen to the Golden Boomerang Return. Seattle: Wave Books, 2024.
CAConrad. Listen to the Golden Boomerang Return. Seattle: Wave Books, 2024.
Otta, Tilsa. The Hormone of Darkness. Translated by Farid Matuk. Minneapolis: Graywolf Press, 2024.
Laurie Ann Guerrero reads from across her body of work as collected in I Have Eaten the Rattlesnake: New and Selected Poems (2020). This includes portions of her heroic sonnet crown, A Crown for Gumecindo, written for her grandfather, alongside other poems rooted in family experience. Guerrero also reads from Redwork, her manuscript in progress. This reading was originally given alongside Carl Marcum.
John Murillo, the Poetry Center's spring poet in residence, reads from Up Jump the Boogie (2010) and Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry (2020). His poems—many of them long poems—consider masculinity, the divide between boyhood and manhood, violence, and the ways we construct our sense of self.