Poetry Medicine for the Soul Podcast By John Gillespie cover art

Poetry Medicine for the Soul

Poetry Medicine for the Soul

By: John Gillespie
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Poetry readings and conversation Art
Episodes
  • Holly Iglesias: National Poetry Month 2026
    Apr 10 2026

    María Esqunica's poem, "This Hispanic Invasion of Texas," can be found on the Michigan Quarterly Review website.

    Holly Iglesias has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the North Carolina Arts Council, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and the Edward Albee Foundation. Her poetry collections are Souvenirs of Shrunken World, Angles of Approach, and Sleeping Things. She is working on an intergenerational memoir in prose fragments that is tentatively entitled Theories of Flight.

    María Esquinca is a Xicana educator, poet and journalist. A fronteriza, she was born in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico and grew up in El Paso, Texas. She currently teaches newcomers who are recent immigrants at San Francisco International High School. Her debut collection, Where Heaven Sinks was the 2024 Andres Montoya Poetry Prize winner, and was selected by Juan Felipe Herrera. Learn more at: mariaesquinca.org

    This podcast is hosted and produced by John Gillespie. Check out our website for more episodes: https://poetry-medicine-for-the-soul.simplecast.com/

    Listen and subscribe to Poetry Medicine for the Soul in Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

    Get in touch with us at: info@poetrymedicineforthesoul.com

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    5 mins
  • Marie Antoinette and a poetry spiced latte: a reading with Elizabeth Sylvia
    Apr 8 2026

    Elizabeth Sylvia's second collection, Scythe (2026), is out now from River River Books. Her first book, None But Witches: Poems on Shakespeare’s Women (2022), won the 2021 3 Mile Harbor Press Book Award. Her chapbook My Little Book of Domestic Anxieties (2025), available from Ballerini Books, was a runner-up for the Kari Ann Flickinger Memorial Prize. Elizabeth has been a semi- or finalist in competitions sponsored by the Burnside Review, C&R Press, DIAGRAM, Thirty West, Rare Swan and Wolfson Press, and is a reader for SWWIM Every Day. She has received fellowships from the New York Public Library, the West Chester University Poetry Center and the Longleaf Writers Conference. Elizabeth has led workshops at MassPoetry, Lit Youngstown, and Tell it Slant. She is the winner of the 2023 riverSedge Poetry Prize.

    Elizabeth grew up on Martha’s Vineyard and currently teaches in Southeastern Massachusetts, where she lives with her husband, two daughters, and extravagantly demanding garden. Learn more at: elizabethsylviapoet.net

    This podcast is hosted and produced by John Gillespie. Check out our website for more episodes: https://poetry-medicine-for-the-soul.simplecast.com/

    Listen and subscribe to Poetry Medicine for the Soul in Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

    Get in touch with us at: info@poetrymedicineforthesoul.com

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    35 mins
  • Kathryn Petruccelli: National Poetry Month 2026
    Apr 3 2026

    You can read "Persimmons" by Li-Young Lee on the Poetry Foundation's website.

    Kathryn Petruccelli is a Pushcart-, Best of the Net-, and Best Small Fictions-nominated poet with roots in spoken word and a degree in teaching English language learners. She is also the host of Melody or Witchcraft, a podcast where a poet reads a work of their own and an Emily Dickinson poem of their choosing that contributed to their work. The podcast is based on the idea that poetry can be a launchpoint to discuss the pressing issues of today.

    Kathryn's poetry has appeared in places like the Massachusetts Review, Whale Road Review, RHINO, About Place Journal, and Anacapa Review. You can find her prose at places like SweetLit, Switch, Fictive Dream, The Los Angeles Review, and Wrong Turn Lit. Kathryn recently relocated with her family to the west of Ireland which she enjoys greatly besides missing her former job as tour guide at the Emily Dickinson Museum. She teaches online, pay-what-you-can workshops that aim to build community. Come say hello via her website: poetroar.com, or at her Substack newsletter, Ask the Poet.

    This podcast is hosted and produced by John Gillespie. Check out our website for more episodes: https://poetry-medicine-for-the-soul.simplecast.com/

    Listen and subscribe to Poetry Medicine for the Soul in Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

    Get in touch with us at: info@poetrymedicineforthesoul.com

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    7 mins
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