Poet Cameon Wade on Creative Instinct and a Life Shaped by Story
Moving between the written, spoken and on-screen world, she is creating a growing body of work and personal style that reflects the same lived-in honesty
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Not every poet is easy to recognize.
There’s no uniform. No fixed setting. No single way the work is supposed to appear. No perfect moment or atmosphere. The muse turns up in trenches, and a working poet but be prepared.
Cameon Wade creates on the move, telling stories in real time that readers recognize themselves inside. Her work evolves as she does.
In doing so, she has carved out a space in contemporary poetry that meets people where they are, giving language to difficult experiences that often struggle to discuss and, in the process, making them feel a little less alone.
Here, we meet her in that movement, following how ideas take shape and how they are expressed, offering us a glimpse into the life of working poet, in real time.
Sylvia Plath, Still Singing
Art, mental illness, the ache of perception
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Some poetry doesn’t age because it never belonged to its moment of conception.
Sylvia Plath wrote from a place that continues to feel familiar to anyone who has lived inside their own mind for too long.
Her work sits at the intersection of brilliance and fragility, without ever asking the reader to choose between them.