Amy Miller (@amymillerpoet) 's Twitter Profile
Amy Miller

@amymillerpoet

Poet & nonfiction writer. Work in Barrow Street, Copper Nickel, Rhino, Tupelo Quarterly, ZYZZYVA. Author of Astronauts & The Trouble with New England Girls.

ID: 22663084

linkhttp://writers-island.blogspot.com/ calendar_today03-03-2009 19:21:58

794 Tweet

449 Followers

596 Following

Amy Miller (@amymillerpoet) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The deadline for the Chad Walsh Chapbook Prize is November 30. I highly recommend giving it a try — working with the BeloitPoetryJournal editors was an amazing experience!

The Daily Show (@thedailyshow) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"That's the nice thing about being South African, our hearts have been pre-broken. We don't have hope." Trevor picks his favorites to win the World Cup #BetweenTheScenes

Lakota Man (@lakotaman1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If she was strong enough to survive this — then white kids should be strong enough to learn about it in school. Agree? #BlackHistoryMonth

If she was strong enough to survive this — then white kids should be strong enough to learn about it in school. Agree? #BlackHistoryMonth
BeloitPoetryJournal (@bpjtweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We're thrilled that Amy Miller's Chad Walsh Prize-winning chapbook "Astronauts” is a finalist for the Oregon Book Awards! Congratulations Amy Miller!

that one nurse epi 🐀🏳️‍🌈 (@sobsinepi) 's Twitter Profile Photo

3+ years into a pandemic, the general public is still generally confused about what to do when they test positive for COVID19. So let me walk you through what I, an infectious disease epidemiologist public health nurse, am doing since I tested positive on a rapid antigen today.

3+ years into a pandemic, the general public is still generally confused about what to do when they test positive for COVID19.

So let me walk you through what I, an infectious disease epidemiologist public health nurse, am doing since I tested positive on a rapid antigen today.
Writer's Digest (@writersdigest) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Award-winning author Amy Miller shares what writers can learn from Shakespeare after more than a decade working as the publications manager at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. hubs.li/Q01MHp_10

Rattle (@rattlepoetry) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Of course I picture the actual house, my little peaked roof riding the plate southward back through Neocene … —Amy Miller Amy Miller rattle.com/on-seeing-my-h…

Daniel Litt (@littmath) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Here are the numbers from 10 to 100 in alphabetical order: 18, 80, 88, 85, 84, 89, 81, 87, 86, 83, 82, 11, 15, 50, 58, 55, 54, 59, 51, 57, 56, 53, 52, 40, 48, 45, 44, 49, 41, 47, 46, 43, 42, 14, 19, 90, 98, 95, 94, 99, 91, 97, 96, 93, 92, 17, 70, 78, 75, 74, 79, 71, 77, 76, 73,

Amy Miller (@amymillerpoet) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thrilled that Narrative Magazine chose my poem “The Aging Body as a Japanese Garden” as a finalist for their annual poetry prize and are featuring it as their poem of the week. Aging sucks sometimes, but we get to write about it.