Poet Marko Capoferri interviewed me for Cutbank, here.
You can watch a recorded reading, conversation, and celebration between me and Montana Poet Laureate Chris La Tray, hosted by the Missoula Public Library, here.
I have an essay in the new craft anthology, Demystifying the Manuscript: Essays and Interviews on Creating a Book of Poems, from Two Sylvias Press. Find it here.
The beautiful eco-art-poetry anthology, Cascadia Field Guide, features my poem “Sage Grouse: A Prayer.” Find it here. And check out a contributor’s reading from the 2023 Montana Book Festival, here.
You can watch my Saturday Storytelling presentation at Traveler’s Rest State Park in Lolo, Montana, here.
My poem “Mercy Me,” originally published in the Kenyon Review, was the Poetry Daily feature on September 30th. Read it here.
Mark Gibbons, Montana Poet Laureate, interviewed me for his Series Poets in Montana. You can watch the recording, with lots of poem-reading, from July of 2022, here.
Aaron Parrett and Russell Rowland interviewed me for their podcast Breakfast in Montana, along with Stephanie Ambrose Tubbs, here.
Poet Indrani Sengupta writes about my poem “Three Bobcat Day” for the 32 Poems Contributor’s Marginalia Series, here.
My poem “Kissing the Good Green Earth” is in the June 2021 Online Poetry Feature over at The Common, here.
My essay about Yellowstone’s annual bison cull, “The Hunt and the Hunger Moon,” was a finalist in Terrain.org’s non-fiction contest, and is available on their website, here.
A recording of my poem “To My Sister, On the Matter of Trees,” from the Winter 2021 issue of The Southern Review, is available on their Sound Cloud Audio Gallery, read by me, here.
My poem “The Pleasuring Ground, or This Week in Animal News,” from The River Where You Forgot My Name, was featured on Verse Daily in December, 2020, here.
The River Where You Forgot My Name was selected by the Montana Library Association as one of four Honor Books for the Montana Book Award! Check out the winner and other fabulous books, here.
Risa Denenberg reviewed The River Where You Forgot My Name for Broadsided Press’ Broadsided to Books feature.
Montana Co-Poet Laureate Melissa Kwasny reviewed The River Where You Forgot My Name over at Basalt.
Broadsided Press released a collaborative broadside of my poem “Science Lesson” alongside the visual artwork of Giang Pham, which you can find, as well as an interview about the process, here. If you feel so inclined, Broadsided encourages printing and sharing their broadsides in your own community.
Want to Sweet Husk? Check out the reading companion for Sweet Husk (and other great Perugia titles) here. Use the contact form to request a workshop or visitation time with your students.
Listen to a 2015 Audio of a reading from Sweet Husk