Afleveringen
-
Welcome to In Three Poems, where we read three poems with a different guest poet each week, and the third poem is always a work by another poet, chosen by our featured poet.
Text the show!
Support the show
This episode David talks with poet, editor and podcaster Dr. Han VanderHart about the influences of rural life on childhood as well as poetry, and how a poet can bridge the gulf of experience from one reader to another.
POEM 1
âInvocationâ by Han VanderHart, read by David.
POEM 2
âOde to Knowing,â written and read by Han.
POEM 3
âBoston Seaport, July 2024â Catherine Rockwood," published in Moist Poetry Journal.
More Links:
HanVanderHart.com
Han's Books
Dogwitch by Catherine Rockwood
Han VanderHart is a queer writer living in Durham, NC. They are the author of Larks (Ohio University Press, 2025), winner of the 2024 Hollis Summers Poetry Prize, the chapbook Hawk & Moon (Bottlecap Press, 2025), and What Pecan Light (Bull City Press, 2021), and have poetry and essays published in Poetry Daily, Kenyon Review, The American Poetry Review, Poetry Magazine, Poetry Northwest, Prairie Schooner, Poet Lore, AGNI, and elsewhere. Han hosts Of Poetry Podcast and co-edits River River Books.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
Welcome to In Three Poems, where we read three poems with a different guest poet each episode, and the third poem is always a work by another poet, chosen by our guest.
David talks poetry, faith, and folklore, method and mythology, with Nigerian poet and professor of English, Saddiq Dzukogi.
Text the show!
Support the show
POEM 1. âRingâ First published in Poetry Magazine (September, 2021), read by David
POEM 2. Excerpt from Bakandamiya: An Elegy (University of Nebraska Press, 2025), read by Saddiq.
POEM 3. "Vowsâ by Gbenga Adesina from Death Does Not End at the Sea (University of Nebraska Press, 2025), read by Saddiq.
Links:
Ring by Saddiq Dzukogi, Poetry Magazine
Saddiq Dzukogi
Saddiqâs Books
Gbenga Adesinaâ Death Does Not End at the Sea
Saddiq's Bio:
Saddiq Dzukogi is the author of Your Crib, My Qibla (Nebraska, 2021), winner of the Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry and the Julie Suk Award-- and shortlisted for the Nigeria Prize for Literature, and most recently, Bakandamiya: An Elegy (Nebraska, 2025).His poems have appeared in Poetry Magazine, Kenyon Review, Prairie Schooner, Narrative Magazine, Ploughshares, Guernica Magazine, Poetry London, Best American Experimental Writing Anthology, and Cincinnati Review. He has received fellowships from the Nebraska Arts Council, Mississippi Arts Commission, and Cave Canem.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
-
David and poet Marjorie Maddox talk poetry, inspiration, loss, and transformation as they read poems together and discuss her latest collections, Hover Here, Small Earthly Space, and Seeing Things.
Welcome to In Three Poems, where we read three poems with a different guest poet each episode, and the third poem is always a work by another poet, chosen by our guest.
Support the show
POEM 1
âHow We Are Foundâ by Marjorie Maddox, from one of her recent collections, Hover Here. Read by David.
POEM 2
âOde to Everythingâ from Seeing Things by Marjorie Maddox. Read by Marjorie
POEM 3
âLitany of Flightsâ by Laura Reece Hogan, read by Marjorie Maddox. Thank you to Laura Reece Hogan for permission to read her poem on the podcast.
Links:
Marjorie Maddox
Hover Here
Small Earthly Space
Seeing Things
Keystone Poetry: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania
Marjorie Maddox:
Professor Emerita of English and Creative Writing at the Lock Haven campus of Commonwealth University, 2023 Monson Arts Fellow, a poetry editor of Presence, and radio host of WPSU-FM'âs Poetry Moment, Marjorie Maddox has published seventeen collections of poetry, including Begin with a Question from Paraclete Press (Illumination Book Award and International Book Award); How Can I Look It Up When I Donât Know How Itâs Spelled? Spelling Mnemonics and Grammar Tricks (Kelsay Books 2024); Seeing Things (Wildhouse Publishing February 2024), Hover Here (Broadstone Books, January 2026); Keystone Poetry: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania (Penn State University Press, 2025).
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David and Monica Prince have a fun but also heavy discussion about women and trauma, and about the writing of poetry and the production of choreopoems. The discussion ranges from word choice in poem to forms like lipograms and the distinctions between womanhood and motherhood.
Support the show
POEM 1
âPolitical Poem as Prayerâ, written by Monica Prince, published in Movable Type ( 2023), read by David.
POEM 2
From âHysteria,â a Choreopoem in Progress, written and read by Monica.
POEM 3
âI am unfit to raise daughters,â written by Jessica Nirvana Ram, from Earthly Gods (2024, Variant Lit), read by Monica Prince.
Links:
monicaprince.com
What Is a Choreopoem?
Monica Prince, Associate Professor of Activist & Performance Writing, serves as Director of Africana Studies at Susquehanna University in Pennsylvania. She is the author of Roadmap: A Choreopoem, How to Exterminate the Black Woman: A Choreopoem, Instructions for Temporary Survival, and Letters from the Other Woman, with another choreopoem, FORCE, forthcoming in Janaury 2026. Her work appears in Twisted Tongue, In Short, Wildness, The Missouri Review, The Texas Review, The Rumpus, MadCap Review, American Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. As one of the foremost choreopoem scholars, Prince writes, teaches, and performs choreopoems across the nation.Text the show!
Support the show
-
David reads poetry with his good friend and fellow poet Philip F. Clark. The first two poems are by Philip and from his book The Carnival of Affection (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2017). The third poem was chosen by Philip and written by Cavafy.
Support the show
POEM 1
âLacrimosaâ from The Carnival of Affection (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2017), read by David.
POEM 2
âThe Beggar's Welcome'â from The Carnival of Affection, read by Philip.
POEM 3
âThe Afternoon Sunâ by C.P. Cavafy, read by Philip F. Clark. Originally published in "The City" from C.P. Cavafy: Collected Poems. Translated by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard. Translation Copyright © 1975, 1992 by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard.
Links:
Order The Carnival of Affection
"The Afternoon Sun"
Please consider leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts or giving a rating on Spotify! Thanks for being an amazing listening audience.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David chats with Donna Vorreyer about her collection Unrivered. As is our custom, we read two poems by our guest poet, one by David and the other by our guest. The third poem is also read by our guest poet, and it can be a poem by anyone from the present or past.
The discussion is lively and includes the structure of Unriverred, which is anchored in a heroic crown of sonnets.
Poem 1. âIf You Go Into the Woods Today,â from Unrivered by Donna Vorreyer. Read by David
Poem 2. âI Fail in Many Tensesâ by Donna Vorreyer. Read by Donna.
Poem 3. âWhat Is There to Say,â by Jack Gilbert and read by Donna.
âWhat Is There to Sayâ was published in The Great Fires (1994, Knopf/Random House) and later in Collected Poems (2012), and originally in Poetry Magazine, January 1965. Used with permission by Knopf Doubleday Rights
Donnaâs Bio:
Donna Vorreyer is the author of four full-length collections of poetry and seven chapbooks! In this episode she and I are reading from her latest collection, Unrivered from Sundress Publications, published in 2025. Her recent work has appeared in Ploughshares, Pleiades, Poet Lore, Colorado Review, Baltimore Review, Salamander, and many other journals. She is the co-founder/co-editor of Asterales: A Journal of Arts & Letters.
Donna hosts the online poetry reading/interview series A Hundred PItchers of Honey, which maintains a YouTube archive.
More Links:
Purchase Unrivered from Sundress Publications.
DonnaVorreyer.com
Asterales: A Journal of Arts and Letters
For info about upcoming episodes, You can Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or BlueSky.And if you like what you hear, please share it. Tell your poetry friends that htey can tune in on their favorite podcast app (pick one!) at InThreePoems.com, or on the In Three Poems channel on YouTube.
Iâm David J Bauman, and this has been a conversation In Three Poems.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
I am so lucky to get the chance to do this. Some of the poets I've been talking with are artists I'm honored to be meeting for the first time. But today, I get to read poems with a BFF who I've known for almost thirty years. Please enjoy this poetry chat with my dear friend Joel Showalter.
Support the show
Poem 1
âIn the Nursing Home,â by Joel Showalter, read by David, as published in December magazine, Volume 31, spring/summer, 2020.
Poem 2
âSteam,â by Joel Showalter, read by Joel, as published in Mud Season Review, Volume 3, 2017
Poem 3
âMonet Refuses the Operation,â by poet Lisel Mueller. From the collection, Second Language: Poems, published Louisiana State University Press, 1986 and used with permission of the publisher.
Joel's Bio:
Joel Showalter received his bachelorâs degree in English and writing from Indiana Wesleyan University. His work has been published in The Carolina Quarterly, December, Delmarva Review, Mud Season Review, and The Christian Century. He works as editorial director at a marketing agency in Columbus, Ohio.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David has a delightful conversation with Jehanne Dubrow about her latest books, a poetry collection entitled Civilians and a craft resource called The Wounded Line: A Guide to Writing Poems of Trauma.
Support the show
Poem One: âMy Husbandâs Fatherâ From Civilians Louisiana State University Press, 2025, read by David
Poem Two: âCivilians,â a villanelle, one of the title poems of the book, read by Jehanne
Poem Three: âSelf Portrait as a Psychopomp,â read here by Jehanne. Written by Lindsay Lusby as it appears in The Wounded Line: A guide to Writing Poems of Trauma (University of Mexico Press, 2025), used by permission of the author and the poet.
Links:
The poem âCivillian.â
Lindsay Lusby's website.
To order Jehanneâs books click here.
Jehanne's Bio:
Jehanne Dubrow is the author of ten books of poems, including most recently, Civilians (Louisiana State University Press, 2025), and three books of creative nonfiction, throughsmoke: an essay in notes (New Rivers Press, 2019), Taste: A Book of Small Bites (Columbia University Press, 2022), and Exhibitions: Essays on Art & Atrocity (University of New Mexico Press, 2023). Her previous poetry collections are Wild Kingdom, Simple Machines, American Samizdat, Dots & Dashes, The Arranged Marriage, Red Army Red, Stateside, From the Fever-World, and The Hardship Post. She has co-edited two anthologies, The Book of Scented Things: 100 Contemporary Poems about Perfume and Still Life with Poem: Contemporary Natures Mortes in Verse. Her craft book, The Wounded Line: A Guide to Writing Poems of Trauma, was published by the University of New Mexico Press in 2025. Jehanneâs fourth book of creative nonfiction, Frivolity: A Defense, is forthcoming from Columbia University Press.
Jehanneâs poems have appeared in POETRY, Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, Southern Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, American Life in Poetry, The New York Times Magazine, The Slowdown, The Academy of American Poets, as well as on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and in numerous other venues. Recent essays have appeared in The New England Review, Colorado Review, Lilith, The Writerâs Chronicle, Poets & Writers, and Literary Hub. She is the founding editor of the national literary journal, Cherry Tree.
For more about Jehanne and her work, click here.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
Poet, educator and editor Jerry Wemple is David's featured guest on this episode of In Three Poems.
Support the show
Poem 1: "A Flower Rests," read by David.
Poem 2: "Colored," read by Jerry.
Poem 3: "The Day Lady Died," by Frank OâHara, also read by Jerry.
"The Day Lady Died" by Frank O'Hara was published in Lunch Poems (City Lights, 1964). Red by permission, thanks to Frederick T. Courtright
Jerry's Bio:
Jerry Wemple is an award-winning poet and prose writer who has published four poetry collections, most recently We Always Wondered What Became of You from Broadstone Books. His collection Artemas and Ark: the Ridge and Valley Poems chronicles the lives of two generations living in a small town in the central Susquehanna Valley. He is co-editor, with Marjorie Maddox, of the recently published anthology Keystone Poetry: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania, and its predecessor, Common Wealth. Both published by Penn State Press. He also co-edited the anthology Rivers, Ridges, and Valleys: Essays on Rural Pennsylvania., released earlier this year by Catamount Press.
Links:
https://www.jerrywemple.com/
We Always Wondered What Became of You, from Broadstone Books
Artemas & Ark: The Ridge and Valley Poems, Finishing Line Press
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David's youngest son, Micah James Bauman joins us to talk about his own poems as well as collaborations with his father. Some of Micah's favorite tools are metaphor and wordplay.
Support the show
The Poems:
"My House," originally published in Word Fountain, read by David"Tools," from the chapbook, Mapping the Valley: Hospital Poems (2021, Seven Kitchens Press). Read by Micah"Fire and Ice" by Robert Frost from New Hampshire: A Poem with Notes and Grace Notes (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1923): Public domain.Links:
"My House:" https://wordfountain.net/2016/07/14/micah-bauman-2016/
"Tools:" https://sevenkitchenspress.com/editors-series-1/volume-four/david-micah-bauman-mapping-the-valley/
"Fire and Ice:" https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44263/fire-and-ice
Micah's Blog: https://micahbauman.wordpress.com/
Micah's Bio:
Micah James Baumanâs poems have been published in South 85 Journal, Whale Road Review, Anti-heroin Chic, and Sage Cigarettes and has poems forthcoming in the Keystone Anthology. His chapbook Mapping the Valley: Hospital Poems (Seven Kitchens Press, 2021) is a collaboration with his father, David J. Bauman.
Text the show!
Support the show
-
In this special episode of anti-fascist poetry, David talks with Hannah Levy about her poem and the current democracy crisis in the United States. They discuss the value of art as a mode to process, as well as art as a vehicle for protest and exploration of truth.
Support the show
Poems:
"Apolitical Intellectuals" by Otto Rene Castillo, translated by Margaret Randall. Used with the translator's permission, read by David"The Day a Poet Is Murdered by ICE," written and recited by Hannah Levy"On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs," by Renee Nicole Good. Read by DavidLinks:
Otto Rene Castillo, Apolitical Intellectuals/ Intelectuales apolĂticos
Writer and Translator Margaret Randall's Poetry Foundation Page
https://margaretrandall.org/
Hannah Levy's poem, "The Day a Poet Is Murdered by ICE"
https://hannaheve.substack.com/
"Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs," by Renee Nicole Good
Andre Henry's Instagram Post
"Beaumont to Detroit: 1943" by Langston Hughes
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David talks with poet Grant Clauser about his recent book, Temporary Shelters (Cornerstone Press, 2025). We talk about poetry grounded in place, and particularly in nature, but also the taking of shelter, however temporary those things that fascinate you, whatever they may be.
Support the show
Poems:
"Fireline Trail" from (2025, Cornerstone Press), read by David"Talking with Birds" from (2025, Cornerstone Press), read by Grant"From a Country Overlookedâ by Tom Hennen, read by Grant, as published in Hennenâs book Darkness Sticks to Everything, published by Copper Canyon, 2013. Used on the podcast with permission.Grant's Bio:
Grant Clauser is the author of several books, including Muddy Dragon on the Road to Heaven (2020) and Reckless Constellations (2018). His poems have appeared in the American Poetry Review, Kenyon Review, Greensboro Review, and Tar River Poetry. He teaches in Rosemont Collegeâs MFA program and works for the New York Times.
Links:
GrantClauser.com
Temporary Shelters
Text the show!
Support the show
-
David talks with Mitchell Nobis about his first book of poetry, The Size of the Horizon, or I Explained Everything to the Trees. The poetry discussion spans the topics nature and politics to gun violence and publishing, all wrapped in a discussion centered on three poems.
Support the show
Poems:
"A Jackass Offers and Apology" from The Size of the Horizon, or I Explained Everything to the Trees (2025, Matchbox Editions)"Monumental" from The Size of the Horizon, or I Explained Everything to the Trees (2025, Matchbox Editions) "For Allâ by Gary Snyder was presented as published in The Gary Snyder Reader: Prose, Poetry, and Translations, 1952-1998 (Volume I, 1999 Counterpoint). Used with Permission.Mitchell's Bio:
Mitchell Nobis is a writer and K-12 public school teacher in Metro Detroit where he lives with his family and dog. He facilitates the Teachers as Poets group for the National Writing Project, hosts the Wednesday Night Sessions reading series for KickstART Farmington, and co-founded the Not at AWP (NAWP) reading series. He is a past president of the Michigan Council of Teachers of English and former co-director of Red Cedar Writing Project, and he co-authored Real Writing: Modernizing the Old School Essay, a pedagogical text for writing teachers. For more, see mitchnobis.com or find him falling apart on a basketball court.
Links:
mitchnobis.com
The Size of the Horizon, or I Explained Everything to the Trees
Text the show!
Support the show
-
Meet poet and Memoirist Judith Sornberger as we read three poems and chat about her writing inspirations and projects, as well as examine how these poems work on the page and how they communicate with each other and with other art, particularly how "Weaving," an ekphrastic poem by Judith draws on and expands from the mural by Diego Rivera.
Support the show
Poems:
"Prayer Flags" by Judith Sornberger, read by David J. Bauman as it appears in the new anthology, Keystone Poetry: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania, edited by Marjorie Maddox & Jerry Wemple, published by Penn State University Press, 2025. "Weaving" by Judith Sornberger, read by Judith, published in her collection Sorority of Stillness: A Gallery of Women in Art, published by Shanti Arts, 2025."Throwing Like a Girl," by Marjorie Maddox, read by Judith Sornberger from Keystone Poetry: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania, edited by Marjorie Maddox & Jerry Wemple, published by Penn State University Press, 2025.Judith's Bio:
Poet, memoirist, and essayist Judith Sornberger earned her B.A. in University Studies at the age of 30 from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln while a single mother raising twin sons. Sornberger is the author of five full-length books of poetry (most recently Sorority of Stillness: A Gallery of Women in Art from Shanti Arts, 2025K), six chapbooks, and a prose memoir. She first taught creative writing and literature in Nebraska prisons and since then has taught in many venues, including the University of Colorado-Boulder where she taught in the Women's Studies Program. She is professor emerita of Mansfield University of Pennsylvania where she created and taught in the Women's Studies Program, as well as teaching creative writing. She lives on the side of a mountain outside Wellsboro, Pennsylvania.
Links:
InThreePoems.com
https://www.judithsornberger.net/
Sorority of Stillness
Keystone Poetry
Text the show!
Support the show