With a minimum of words so much can be said as Damian Balassone’s poem ‘Bathsheba’ highlights.
Almanac Poetry: Every Odyssey
Every odyssey has a beginning and an end…but like the filling of a sandwich, arguably most important is what lies between. Kevin Densley taps into Homeric tales for today’s poem, but of course the experiences of major journeys and the doubts involved do not start and end with Homer; they are universal and timeless.
Beauty and the Billionaire
A poem from Damian Balassone about a billionaire, beauty, and marriage, with all their ups and downs.
Almanac Poetry: ‘Changing Gears’ – Geoff Goodfellow
Geoff Goodfellow is popularly known as the people’s poet who writes from personal experiences often reflecting his humble upbringing. ‘Changing Gears’ is one of his much loved poems.
Almanac Poetry: After Baudelaire
A substantial pour of Baudelaire, accompanied by a dash of Poe, stirred thoroughly…scan the mixture through a glass darkly, then savour the result – a heady, hallucinatory poetic cocktail by Kevin Densley.
The New Sportswriter
A poem from Damian Balassone about sporting words called ‘The New Sportswriter’.
Almanac Poetry: ‘Digging’ – Seamus Heaney
‘Digging’ by Seamus Heaney is one of his most loved poems and is from his first poetry collection ‘Death of a Naturalist’.
Almanac Poetry: Spleen
Feel like getting something off your chest? Out of your system? Reading today’s poem by Kevin Densley may help!
Almanac Music: Song of the Seasons (Song Lyric)
Partly inspired by Almanackers’ responses to his group of posts concerning Oz songs connected to particular seasons, KD puts forward a song lyric he wrote as an eighteen-year-old that encompasses all four of them.
The Gambler
The plight of the gambler is portrayed tellingly in Damian Balassone’s poem.
Almanac Poetry: Another for Mr Malley
Australia’s greatest literary hoax was the creation of the non-existent poet, Ern Malley, in the 1940s. This week, Kevin Densley presents a Malley-esque poem dedicated to the fictitious Ern.
Almanac Music: The Doctor Will See You Now – Five Oz Rock Classics by The Angels
KD salutes iconic Australian band The Angels, originally headed by dynamic frontman, Bernard ‘Doc’ Neeson.
Round 15 – Haiku Bob: the ruckman’s reach
Collingwood’s run of success and the creature comforts of home are enough to keep both Haiku Bob and his dog happy.
Almanac Poetry: ‘The Wild Iris’ – Louise Glück
Louise Glück is an American poet who won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature. ‘The Wild Iris’ is one of her best known poems.
Almanac Poetry: Measures Taken
This week’s poem from Kevin Densley is about hard times, and actions one takes when experiencing them, like ‘kicking a newspaper football, tied into shape with string.’ [Who has played kick-to-kick with a football made of folded-up newspapers? – KD]
Almanac Literary: Proximity
Very short story? Prose poem? This Friday’s piece from KD involves his maternal grandmother’s unusual connection to Africa.
Almanac Poetry: Archetypal Dream
This Monday’s poem by Kevin Densley is about dream analysis, and also makes reference to a big hit by Chubby Checker!
Almanac Music: Australian Songs of Autumn
Now that it’s autumn, KD offers his piece concerning Australian songs of autumn, to complete a ‘Footy Almanac Four Seasons’, as he has previously posted pieces concerning Australian songs of summer, winter and spring on the Almanac website. Again, he invites Almanackers to contribute their own song choices.
Almanac Prose Poetry: People and Places
This Friday, KD presents two prose poems concerning people and places – the first piece was inspired by his paternal grandmother, Iris, as well as his love of old pubs, while the second is a more introspective affair evoking loneliness and the passing of time.
Almanac Poetry: Three (More) Little Worlds
As with last week, every poem worthy of the name – no matter the length – should evoke a world; clearly Kevin Densley has a veritable galaxy of word worlds brimming within.










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