SILVER CITY, NM鈥擶estern New Mexico University celebrated National Poetry Month with a gathering in J. Cloyd Miller Library, April 10, 2025.
Co-hosted by Miller Library and the Department of Humanities, the celebration included readings by published and student poets, as well as the announcement of this year鈥檚 winners of the Creative Writing Award.
Library Director Samantha Johnson welcomed attendees to the event. National Poetry Month, she said, 鈥済ives us a framework to think about what a poem is for.鈥 Audience members shared their own impressions of the purpose of poetry, mentioning expression, communication and exploration.
WNMU Writer-in-Residence JJ Amaworo Wilson also spoke at the event. 鈥淧oetry stops time,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he poet pauses to linger on something worth looking at closely.鈥
鈥淧oetry for me has always been a consolation for life鈥檚 woes,鈥 Wilson added.
WNMU Provost and Acting President Jack Crocker was the first poet to read at the event. The first poem he read, 鈥淵ard Art,鈥 explored nature鈥檚 tendency toward entropy, despite humans鈥 attempts to impose order on it.
Crocker was followed by Assistant Vice President of Academic Affairs and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Kate Oubre, who announced the Creative Writing Award Winners: Anais Orantez Middleton and Katie Ortiz y Pino, who won for prose, and Arielle Certosimo and Natalee Drissell, who won for poetry. Orantez, Certosimo and Drissell all read excerpts from their award-winning works.
Other readers at the event included students in Associate Professor Heather Frankland鈥檚 English 099 class, Assistant Professor Gregory Robinson-Guerra, and Robinson-Guerra鈥檚 students, who read in both English and Spanish. Frankland, who serves as Silver City and Grant County Poet Laureate, read from her chapbook, Midwest Musings.
The audience also heard from two Grant County poets, Cindy McCain and Cheryl Howard, and from students from Aldo Leopold Charter School.
