Friday, March 20, 2026

Poetry + Art = Some Starry Night by Irene Latham

 Hello and Happy Poetry Friday! Be sure to visit Tanita S. Davis for Roundup.

First: this week's Tuesday 2-Minute Writing Tip 31 is all about Writers & AI. Find out how I'm using AI, and how I'm not.


Second: I'm thrilled to be teaching another poetry webinar over at Inked Voices! Last year I tackled punctuation in poetry. This year I'm talking about one of my most favorite elements of poetry: surprise! Join me to learn "8 Ways to Wake Up Your Poetry: How to Create Surprise, Tension & the Unexpected Inevitable." Monday, April 27, 2026, 3 pm CST. Click to register. 

I'll also be offering a limited number of poetry consultations in conjunction with this offering. So, if you need encouragement and/or feedback, I'm excited to help.

Third: My first novel for adults is coming next month from Historium Press! It's a blend of history and imagination that explores the lives of Vincent van Gogh and Emily Dickinson and answers the question: What—or who—inspired The Starry Night?

Y'all, I have long wanted to write a big, bittersweet love story...and now I have! I loved communing with Emily and Vincent.

 That question you've heard about your ideal dinner party? Emily and Vincent are certainly at the top of my guest list! And this book is all about me exploring how a chance meeting between these two brilliant souls might change their art, their lives, and...US. It includes poems, letters, history, magic, mystery...and did I mention I loved writing it? I also got to write some poems for the book in the style of Emily Dickinson.. a whole series called "The Paris Poems by Emily Dickinson." More on this soon!

For a limited time, the publisher is running a pre-order special on the e-book: 99 cents! I really, really hope you like it. 

Finally, my ArtSpeak: WOMEN piece this week features a Warhol-esque piece by Elaine Sturtevant. (I'm still working my way through the Harper's Bazaar list of women artists!) Sturtevant was known for her repetitions, particularly of Warhol's work. That got me thinking about repetition in nature, repetition in gardening, van Gogh's repetition in his art, and repetition in poetry...and then I had to stop! Because there are worlds within those worlds, and my get-to-do list is long. So I stopped myself at two (love!) poems, which I offer to you today. Thanks so much for reading.


May garden

the way my heart flares each time

I remember you


- Irene Latham



Repetitions


Ten thousand—

That’s how many times

a child mounts a bike

when learning to ride


A gardener in Hawaii

may plant ten thousand

hibiscus

to unify a garden


Your favorite artist paints

the same sky

ten thousand times

without moving on


No wonder

I whisper I love you

ten thousand times each day,

knowing ten thousand

will never be

enough.


- Irene Latham


4 comments:

  1. Great Writing Tip this week, Irene! I never thought of using AI to find comps. The last stanza in "Repetitions" brought tears to my eyes. Beautiful! And I'm so looking forward to reading Some Starry Night, already preordered.

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  2. I am in an AI working group of librarians in my division mainly because I know I have a responsibility as a librarian to know about it and be able to help students navigate it. The environmental aspect of it worries me a great deal (we live surrounded by data centers). I'm glad it offered you REAL comps. I have found that some tools hallucinate way too much for me to use them yet (making up many books that simply don't exist). I found that the tools we pay for at school are more accurate at this point, but I know AI will get better with more data. I have found some interesting AI tools for finding research papers that have surprised me.

    I have pre-ordered your book! Can't wait to read it!

    And oh yes to a May garden! Can't wait for that.

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  3. I am coming to love the 2 minute tips. I listen to them as I get ready for work in the morning. LOL. By then, I've written my morning poem and my brain is transitioning. AI is big in school library right now as Marcie mentioned. I'm also loving how copilot is a tool that helps me refine lessons and organize large amounts of information. However, I really think that human touch cannot be replaced entirely. It's a fascinating topic for sure.
    I've signed up for Inked Voices. Thanks for the invite. See you soon...I hope to have read your new book by then! I'm asking my public library to purchase so that many can enjoy it with me.

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  4. You amaze me, Irene! I plan to read your new book to see how you put these two lives together. I hope to see you in April!

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