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Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion

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2021 Read Harder Challenge > Task 20: Read a book of nature poems

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message 1: by Book Riot (new)

Book Riot Community (book_riot) | 457 comments Mod
Use this space to discuss books you're reading or that might fit the 20th Read Harder task.


message 2: by Katie (new)

Katie (goktrose) | 101 comments Currently I have planned to read New and Selected Poems, Volume One. When I was searching her work sounded fantastic.
New and Selected Poems, Volume One by Mary Oliver


message 3: by Gina (new)

Gina (ginanicoll) | 15 comments Does anyone have recommendations for books by BIPOC authors? So far I'm thinking of Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry, edited by Camille T. Dungy.


message 4: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (elizabethohara) | 68 comments I'm thinking of Nature Poem by Tommy Pico. After reading IRL last year I'm interested in reading more.


Virginia Reads the World Reads (virginiareadstheworld) | 5 comments I'm going to read A Thousand Mornings for this one. Not POC, but lovely poems nonetheless.


message 6: by Tanu (last edited Dec 09, 2020 09:50PM) (new)

Tanu (tanu_reads) | 57 comments Gina wrote: "Does anyone have recommendations for books by BIPOC authors? So far I'm thinking of Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry, edited by Camille T. Dungy..."</i>

[author:Shiki Masaoka
, Issa Kobayashi, Bashô Matsuo, possibly?



message 7: by Bobby (last edited Dec 09, 2020 10:46PM) (new)

Bobby | 197 comments Gina wrote: "Does anyone have recommendations for books by BIPOC authors? So far I'm thinking of Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry, edited by Camille T. Dungy..."

Richard Wright (author of Native Son and Black Boy) wrote thousands of haiku, many of which are collected in Haiku: This Other World.


message 9: by Rachel (last edited Dec 11, 2020 04:24AM) (new)

Rachel | 25 comments Gina wrote: "Does anyone have recommendations for books by BIPOC authors?

I found a poetry collection called Bestiary: Poems by Donika Kelly, a woman of colour. The description says:
Across this remarkable first book are encounters with animals, legendary beasts, and mythological monsters–half human and half something else. Donika Kelly’s Bestiary is a catalogue of creatures–from the whale and ostrich to the pegasus and chimera to the centaur and griffin. Among them too are poems of love, self-discovery, and travel, from “Out West� to “Back East.� Lurking in the middle of this powerful and multifaceted collection is a wrenching sequence that wonders just who or what is the real monster inside this life of survival and reflection. Selected and with an introduction by the National Book Award winner Nikky Finney, Bestiary questions what makes us human, what makes us whole.


message 10: by Kass (new)

Kass (kassonoccasion) | 28 comments Does anyone know if World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments by Aimee Nezhukumatathil counts?


The Bookish Austin (thebookishaustin) | 5 comments Kassidy wrote: "Does anyone know if World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments by Aimee Nezhukumatathil counts?"

I've read this one - it's more a collection of essays than poetry. I know she's known primarily as a poet but this one would be branching out for her stylistically (in my opinion). It's a great book though and I definitely recommend it - just don't think it would fit this prompt as "poetry".


message 12: by Kass (new)

Kass (kassonoccasion) | 28 comments The Bookish Austin wrote: "Kassidy wrote: "Does anyone know if World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments by Aimee Nezhukumatathil counts?"

I've read this one - it's more..."


Thanks! The search continues then lol


message 13: by Sara (last edited Dec 11, 2020 03:09PM) (new)

Sara Hollingsworth | 5 comments I'd highly recommend Ada Limón. Her work is heavily influenced by nature so I think it would count. I read Bright Dead Things by Ada Limon this year, and I'll probably do The Carrying Poems by Ada Limon or Sharks in the Rivers by Ada Limon for this challenge.


message 14: by Emerging (new)

Emerging Writer | 106 comments Katie wrote: "Currently I have planned to read New and Selected Poems, Volume One. When I was searching her work sounded fantastic.
New and Selected Poems, Volume One by Mary Oliver"

Highly recommend Mary Oliver... yes!


message 15: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 5 comments Excited to check out The Lost Words for this one.


message 16: by James (new)

James | 19 comments The new Nobel laureate Louise Gluck's The Wild Iris is about garden plants. It is also included in the volume Poems 1962-2012


message 19: by Rachel (last edited Dec 19, 2020 05:00AM) (new)

Rachel | 25 comments I've chosen Death of a Naturalist by Seamus Heaney. Most of the collection is about rural life, which for me is close enough to fit the prompt.

I'm not a big poetry reader, and while I was looking at possibilities for this category, I found some anthologies which could be useful here. They also seem good for younger readers, if anyone's doing the challenge with other family members.

A Nature Poem for Every Day of the Year
A Nature Poem for Every Night of the Year
I Am the Seed That Grew the Tree A Poem for Every Day of the Year


message 20: by Christina (last edited Dec 21, 2020 05:44PM) (new)

Christina (cdhotwing) | 4 comments Joy Harjo is the Poet Laureate of The United States and N. Scott Momaday is a Pulitzer Prize winner. American Treasures

An American Sunrise
She Had Some Horses

Earth Keeper: Reflections on the American
Land

The Death of Sitting Bear: New and Selected Poems


message 21: by Mandie (last edited Dec 24, 2020 04:29AM) (new)

Mandie (mystickah) | 218 comments Christina wrote: "Joy Harjo is the Poet Laureate of The United States and N. Scott Momaday is a Pulitzer Prize winner. American Treasures

An American Sunrise
She Had Some Horses

[book:..."


Just reading over the descriptions of these in realm of the prompt, I wouldn't think either of Joy Harjo's would fit. They are more on the social justice of Native life than nature. Just need to be careful of not stereotyping all Native works of being nature-related.

However, N. Scott Momaday's Earth Keeper looks fantastic.


message 22: by [deleted user] (new)

unless someone is going to tell me i can't because there's also prose, i think i will read Sisters of the Earth: Women's Prose and Poetry About Nature


message 23: by Teresa (new)

Teresa (writerwoman) | 4 comments Considering a Wendell Berry or Mary Oliver for this one. Poetry is out of my comfort zone for reading but the poems of theirs I’ve read so far I’ve loved. Berry is a Christian and I appreciate his insights into my faith too.


message 24: by [deleted user] (new)

Elizabeth wrote: "I'm thinking of Nature Poem by Tommy Pico. After reading IRL last year I'm interested in reading more."
Thank you for this suggestion! I don't think of myself as someone who enjoys poetry but this sounds like something I would enjoy!


message 25: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. (narshkite) | 1413 comments Shoshana wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "I'm thinking of Nature Poem by Tommy Pico. After reading IRL last year I'm interested in reading more."
Thank you for this suggestion! I don't thin..."


Nature Poem is great, and I recommend it, but it doesn't fit. It is an anti-nature poem. Actually it's a condemnation of white people who assume that Native people are always interested in or connected to nature.


message 26: by Laura (new)

Laura | 25 comments I’m not much of a poetry reader and even less so when I’m the subject is nature. Anyone have a short volume of nature
poems to recommend?


message 27: by Keegan (new)

Keegan | 1 comments Would anyone consider either of Rupi Kaur's books a collection of nature poems?


message 28: by Kayleigh (last edited Dec 31, 2020 03:18PM) (new)

Kayleigh (kayebird) | 19 comments Would an anthology of poems work? I am interested in Bright Wings: An Illustrated Anthology of Poems About Birds but it is a collection of poems by various authors. I really love birds, haha.


message 29: by Kathryn (new)

Kathryn McGowan Kayleigh wrote: "Would an anthology of poems work? I am interested in Bright Wings: An Illustrated Anthology of Poems About Birds but it is a collection of poems by various authors. I really love bir..."

I'm reading that one too! I think it fits just fine.


message 30: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (elizabethohara) | 68 comments Bonnie G. wrote: "Shoshana wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "I'm thinking of Nature Poem by Tommy Pico. After reading IRL last year I'm interested in reading more."
Thank you for this suggest..."


Ah, I guess my definition of nature poem was a little off/different? I was thinking the fact that it was confronting the colonial preconceptions people have as it falling under the umbrella of the "nature" prompt. I'm not a big poetry reader unfortunately.

I'll probably read it anyway, but based on a friend's rec I'll read New and Selected Poems, Volume Two by Mary Oliver.


message 31: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (elizabethlk) | 359 comments If you're looking for nature poetry that's more about the damage we as humans are doing to the natural world, I recently read Forage by Rita Wong, and she deals with a lot of environmentalist themes in it.

I won't be counting it for myself because I started it in the last couple days of 2020 and finished it at the very beginning of 2021, but I figured I'd mention it here for interested parties.


message 32: by Book Riot (new)

Book Riot Community (book_riot) | 457 comments Mod
Morning, readers! Don't know about you, but some soothing nature poems sound pretty great right now. Here are our picks!


message 33: by Donya (new)

Donya Keegan wrote: "Would anyone consider either of Rupi Kaur's books a collection of nature poems?"

I have Milk and Honey by her and would not consider that one for this. It is about abuse and trauma and eventual healing from it. The sun and her flowers is also not "about" nature but uses metaphors of nature so do with that what you will.


message 34: by Storm (new)

Storm | 7 comments I read In the Dark, Soft Earth for this prompt


message 35: by doreneemi (new)

doreneemi | 9 comments I'm planning to read Tiger Girl by Pascale Petit for this and even though I'm not usually a poetry reader, I think it sounds really good.


message 36: by Lindsay (new)

Lindsay Critelli | 1 comments I'm excited to be reading The Poetry of Eyvind Earle. You might recognize his famous art work, notorious for paintings of trees seen in the lush hills of Northern California. For tree lovers like myself, his poetry brings voice to the flutter and warmth in my heart as I admire the the stoic beauty of trees of all kind.


message 37: by Gw (new)

Gw | 40 comments This one really threw me off as well. I do not like poetry. The thought of reading a whole book of it🤢. I started to choose the one with the least pages like I did with the food memoirs. Then THE LOST WORDS caught my eye. It actually looks interesting. I chose that one.


message 38: by Diane (new)

Diane Baima | 17 comments Laura wrote: "I’m not much of a poetry reader and even less so when I’m the subject is nature. Anyone have a short volume of nature
poems to recommend?"


I have enjoyed lots of children's poetry books about nature. You might check out some books by Joyce Sidman, Valerie Worth, and David Elliott. Your local library will probably have copies, so you can enjoy the illustrations too.


message 39: by Octavia (last edited Feb 12, 2021 02:42AM) (new)

Octavia Cade | 139 comments I read Urban Nature: Poems About Wildlife in the City, edited by Laure-Anne Bosselaar for this. I enjoyed it, poems about pigeons and road kill and all. "Dead Armadillos" by Gail White was my favourite, I think. (It's less grim than it sounds.)


message 40: by Cat (new)

Cat (perkyrusalka) | 37 comments I read Terrapin: Poems by Wendell Berry and I think several of his books would also fit this challenge.


message 41: by Jason (new)

Jason Lilly (wolfdreamer) | 44 comments I read and loved The Lost Words by Robert McFarlane and Jackie Morris. Such a beautiful book that seeks to poetically invoke words from nature that have been "lost" from the vocabulary of children by being removed from dictionaries or by just becoming rare to our modern language. Visual both literally and figuratively; I loved it and my daughters loved it.


message 42: by Rachel (new)

Rachel F (rachelbookdragon) | 18 comments Jason wrote: "I read and loved The Lost Words by Robert McFarlane and Jackie Morris. Such a beautiful book that seeks to poetically invoke words from nature that have been "lost" from the vocabul..."

I read this one, the physical copy of the book is huge though!, but very beautiful.


message 43: by Rachel (new)

Rachel F (rachelbookdragon) | 18 comments Gw wrote: "This one really threw me off as well. I do not like poetry. The thought of reading a whole book of it🤢. I started to choose the one with the least pages like I did with the food memoirs. Then THE L..."

Yeah I completely agree, I am not a poetry fan but I read The Lost Words, physical copy is huge!


message 44: by A (new)

A Lockwood | 13 comments The Spell of the Yukon and Other Verses is definitely a little dated. It was neat to read from a 1907 printing of this work (first year printed in the US).


message 45: by Ashley (new)

Ashley Marie (ashleym92) | 3 comments I am new to reading poetry so I looked at the Book Riot's suggestions. I just picked up "Wild Embers" by Nikita Gill today. The topic is surrounding human nature rather than actual nature but I still think it counts! I just started it but it's beautiful.


message 46: by Nicole (new)

Nicole | 6 comments I love reading poetry to my kids at bedtime. While my go-to is usually Shel Silverstein, I read and loved Hawks Kettle Puffins Wheel by Susan Vande Griek.


message 47: by Karen (new)

Karen Witzler (kewitzler) | 173 comments I am reading The Essential Haiku: Versions of Basho, Buson, and Issa collected and with commentary by Robert Hass. Thanks to previous posters telling me about Haiku: This Other World by Richard Wright, as well.

I have The Wild Iris by Louise Glück on the shelf, too.


message 48: by Sherri (new)

Sherri Harris | 232 comments I used An American Sunrise by Joy Harjo.


message 49: by Heather (new)

Heather Bottoms (heatherbottoms) | 16 comments I just finished Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude and just loved it! This brief collection is by a black poet and was a joy to read.


message 50: by Kass (new)

Kass (kassonoccasion) | 28 comments I read Oceanic by Aimee Nezkumatathil for this prompt. It's mostly poems about her life but with heavy use of nature metaphors. It mostly wasn't for me but I know others would enjoy it. The poems are quick and the whole thing is only 80 pages


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