Poetry is either loved or a headscratcher. It’s a headscratcher because we aren’t convinced we understand it and don’t know how to approach it. I like to think of a poem as a very brief short story. Every image in a poem pieces that story together. Each word used in the telling can caress, sting, or bury us. A good poem speaks to our emotions, struggles, injustice, love, life, and death in ways prose cannot. It pulls us into the story through imagery and memory, whether or not it rhymes. We will connect with some poets and not others, just as we prefer mysteries over romance. The fun is in finding those poets that speak to our souls.

April is National Poetry Month, so take this opportunity to peruse the poetry collection at Salina Public Library. Not sure where to start? You can’t go wrong with the classics such as Robert Frost, Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, or, dare I say, William Shakespeare. I went through a big Sylvia Plath phase in college, gobbling up every poem of hers I could lay my hands on. Poetry is binge-worthy.

You could also try out some more current works written by local poets, such as:

  • This Is Not a Love Note by Emery Diercks
  • Fugitive Histories by Harley Elliott
  • Into the Stillness by Jackie Magnuson Ash
  • At the Mercy of Ourselves by Joe McKenzie
  • Naming the Fires by Patricia Traxler

And take a look at the poets featured throughout the last 30+ years at the Salina Poetry Series readings. These are some of my favorites:

  • The Rookery by Traci Brimhall
  • The Witch of Eye by Kathryn Nuernberger
  • Un Mango Grows in Kansas by Huascar E. Medina
  • A Tongue in the Mouth of the Dying by Laurie Ann Guerrero
  • Peluda by Melissa Lozada-Oliva
  • Churches by Kevin Prufer
  • Flatlands by Ruth Williams

Or browse the library’s collection in the 811 call number range. You might stumble upon a poet who strums your heartstrings, stirs you to revolution, or expresses the inexpressible.

Even better, attend a poetry reading this month! Nothing is better than hearing poetry read by its author. The annual Poetry Series, hosted by Salina Arts & Humanities, is held on Tuesday evenings in April at 7 p.m. at Red Fern Booksellers, 106 S. Santa Fe. The cost is $5 at the door; free entry with valid student ID. Contact sah@salina.org or call 785-309-5770 for more information.

I’ll see you there.