“In her radical and vibrant memoir, Camille Dungy plants poems next to critical analysis next to environmental history next to African American history.”
Read the review here!

“In her radical and vibrant memoir, Camille Dungy plants poems next to critical analysis next to environmental history next to African American history.”
Read the review here!
Read “Last year’s sunflowers save this year’s garden” here!
In which [the magazine gets] to know [their] favorite writers better by exploring the sacred and mundane. Read the conversation here!
“Fans of Dungy’s poetry will delight in her sparkling prose, and the wide-ranging meditations highlight the connections between land, freedom, and race. It’s a lyrical and pensive take on what it means to put down roots.”
Podcast hosts James Allen Hall and Aaron Smith and guest poet Diane Seuss read and discusses poems by Camille Dungy, Richard Siken and Whitman. Listen here!
Camille is one of the many narrators for her poem “On Brevity” about the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham. More here!
“The idea that Black people can write out of a personal relationship to nature and have done so since before this nation’s founding comes to many as a shock.” Read more here.
Read the poem and learn about Tree Lines, the anthology that includes her poem, here.
To open Season 3 of How it Looks from Here, podcast hosts Gary Ferguson and Mary Clare had the opportunity to record a panel of five authors for the first and second episodes of Season 3. Mary facilitated a conversation that included poets, fiction and nonfiction writers, Beth Piatote, Camille Dungy, J Drew Lanham, Gary Ferguson and Pam Uschuk. Check out the link to the first part of that conversation.