Poetry and Prose By Britt Wolfe
I never thought I’d be the kind of person who writes poetry—let alone organizes it into something coherent, slaps a spine on it, and calls it a series. But here we are. Me, a caffeinated contradiction with a laptop and an emotional support husky, stringing together metaphors like I’m trying to outrun therapy.
Poetry and Prose is what happened when I stopped pretending I didn’t have anything to say. It’s a collection of the things I’ve felt too deeply, overthought at 2AM, and then tried to make sound intentional. It covers everything from rage to romance, feminism to fur babies, and all the messy moments in between. Basically, if you’ve ever cried while folding laundry, picked a fight in your head that you never had, or said “I’m fine” while clearly not being fine—you’ll feel weirdly at home here.
These aren’t just books. They’re mood swings in paperback form. Each one explores a different emotional flavour, from the ones that simmer slowly to the ones that punch you in the throat and then offer you tea. And because feelings are nothing if not persistent, a new volume gets added to the collection every six months—like clockwork, if the clock was occasionally powered by spite and a little bit of wine.
So, welcome to the inside of my brain. It’s a bit chaotic, frequently tender, sometimes furious, and always honest. Read if you dare. Or just pet the husky on your way out—she’s the real talent here.
Coming May 15th
Slip off your shoes, press play on the mixtape, and come home to the glow of a computer screen humming with possibility. In Dial-Up and Daydreams, Volume I of the Poetry and Prose series, Britt Wolfe captures the aching tenderness of growing up in a world that was just beginning to log on.
With each page, Wolfe resurrects the magic of the in-between—the era of landlines and late-night chats, VHS tapes and voicemails, daydreams and dial-tones. It’s a love letter to friendship bracelets and fuzzy butterfly clips, to the girls we were and the women we’ve become.
This anthology blends poetry and prose into an intimate, emotionally resonant collection that speaks to anyone who ever scribbled in the margins of a notebook or fell in love with the idea of someone through a glowing screen. Dial-Up and Daydreams is tender, nostalgic, and beautifully honest—a mirror held up to a generation raised on MSN Messenger and messy first love.
For everyone who still remembers the sound of the internet connecting, and the feeling of yourself disconnecting just to survive—it’s time to log back in.