1539 Episodes

  1. [encore] 531: anti-immigration by Evie Shockley

    Published: 6/12/2025
  2. [encore] 676: Last Sundays at Bootleggers by Carlos Andrés Gómez

    Published: 6/11/2025
  3. [encore] 516: In Response to Feeling Alone by t. liem

    Published: 6/10/2025
  4. [encore] 603: Sligo Abbey by Rebecca Lindenberg

    Published: 6/9/2025
  5. [encore] 373: Tracing the Horse by Diana Marie Delgado

    Published: 6/6/2025
  6. [encore] 459: The Feeling by Ari Banias

    Published: 6/5/2025
  7. [encore] 303: Telling My Father by James Crews

    Published: 6/4/2025
  8. [encore] 9: Portrait of the Alcoholic with Withdrawal by Kaveh Akbar

    Published: 6/3/2025
  9. [encore] 311: Listen, by Barbara Crooker

    Published: 6/2/2025
  10. [encore] 821: I Have No Idea What's Going to Happen by Justin Marks

    Published: 5/30/2025
  11. [encore] 1113: Egrets, While War by Tishani Doshi

    Published: 5/29/2025
  12. [encore] 1168: Refusing Rilke's "You must change your life" by Remica Bingham-Risher

    Published: 5/28/2025
  13. [encore] 1201: Try to Praise the Mutilated World by Adam Zagajewski, translated by Clare Cavanagh

    Published: 5/27/2025
  14. [encore] 1029: If I Told Him, A Completed Portrait of Picasso by Gertrude Stein

    Published: 5/26/2025
  15. [encore] 600: I Imagine the Butches' Stripper Bar by Jill McDonough

    Published: 5/23/2025
  16. [encore] 760: Song by Charif Shanahan

    Published: 5/22/2025
  17. [encore] 647: Walking Across Fire Island by Shelley Wong

    Published: 5/21/2025
  18. [encore] 571: Golden Age by Chris Santiago

    Published: 5/20/2025
  19. [encore] 708: Bruised Peaches by Bronwen Tate

    Published: 5/19/2025
  20. [encore] 236: Polaroid Ode by Cori Winrock

    Published: 5/16/2025

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Host Maggie Smith is your daily poetry companion. Poetry is one of the greatest tools we have to wield our own attention — to consider our own lives and the lives of others, to help us live creatively and compassionately, to use that attention to lean into wonder, and joy, and truth, and to find hope — to keep hoping. The Slowdown community knows that reflecting on a poem, every weekday, can connect us to our inner world and the world around us. Listen as you make your morning coffee, as you go on a walk in your neighborhood, as you pull away from the to-do list, as you resist the dismal, endless scroll to share five minutes of perspective through the lens of poetry, from poets old and new, well-loved and emerging onto the scene. Brought to you by American Public Media, in partnership with the Poetry Foundation.