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Wallace Lane

Wallace

Wallace Lane is part of The Baltimore Banner's Creatives in Residence program, which amplifies the work of artists and writers from the Baltimore region. Wallace is a poet, writer, and author from Baltimore. He received his MFA in Creative Writing and Publishing Arts from the University of Baltimore in May 2017. His debut collection of poetry entitled Jordan Year was also released in May 2017. Additionally, Wallace works as an English and Creative Writing Instructor with Baltimore City Public Schools. Wallace's writing has been published in several print and online publications, including Little Paxtuxent Review, Welter Literary Journal, Lolwe Magazine, Salon.com, Poetry and Covid Magazine, The Indianapolis Review, Jupiter Review and will appear in several upcoming anthologies in 2022.

Latest content by Wallace Lane

It’s easy for some to assume Black men all vote the same, but Wallace Lane and his friends are divided on who should be our next president.
Commentary: Kamala or Trump? Why Black men are divided
It’s easy for some to assume Black men all vote the same, but Wallace Lane and his friends are divided on who should be our next president.
Wallace Lane's mother's car caught on fire a few months ago, shortly after returning from church. She and his sister got out before it burst into flames and the incident has restored Lane's faith in God.
Opinion: My mom and sister avoided a car fire. My faith in God is now restored.
Wallace Lane’s mother’s car burst in flames shortly after she parked it after church a few months ago. She and his sister had just left the vehicle.
Rappers Kendrick Lamar, left, and Drake are at odds.
Commentary: Why I could never hate Drake or Kendrick
How the Drake vs. Kendrick Lamar rap feud has refreshed one writer’s hunger for the genre.
Wallace Lane carries his gun in a holster on Friday, March 29, 2024.
Commentary: I’ve lost family members to gun violence. I still got my gun license.
Wallace Lane reflects on his complex relationship with guns.
Valentine's Day is a day for lovers. I used to be a lover—a certified lover boy at that. Or at least that’s what I thought I was until I experienced what I’m calling a Valentine's Day from hell.
Commentary: Why I became a Valentine’s Day Grinch
Wallace Lane once bought the girl the wrong gift and it jaded him on the holiday of love. But now he's willing to give it another chance.
Illustration shows black man in foreground wearing dark red shirt, arms open and raised toward a giant aluminum pan of meatballs on top of a pedestal. The man holds up a fork. There are small figures of other black folks dressed for a baby shower, including a pregnant woman.
An ode to baby shower meatballs
Wallace Lane explains why meatballs are an essential part of any celebration.
A screenshot from the show 'Tonight's Conversation.'
10 things I don’t want to see on my Instagram timeline this year
January is when I refocus and cleanse my social media platforms.
Teacher Wallace Lance writes about what happened when his students found his INSTRAGRAM account.
What one teacher learned when students found his Instagram account
Wallace Lane was reminded that teachers are role models and the meaning of the Gen X phrase, “having motion.”
Wallace Lane getting a haircut.
How a haircut tells the legacy of one man’s family
Poet Wallace Lane writes on family legacy and the fade.
Wallace Lane, is photographed in the Inner Harbor for a story he wrote about in a hoodie.  (L-R) William Moffatt, Wallace Lane, Antonio Young and Antwan Young,
How wearing a hoodie in the summer heat helped me understand Gen Z
What I learned from the whole ordeal was that Gen Z cares a lot but in a different way than I may.
Wallace Lane: Body of star, Body of light
Wallace Lane: Body of star, body of light
A poem about a father celebrating his son’s imagination and wonder on everyday and cosmic scales.
Notes on everything a year taught me - Wallace Lane
Wallace Lane: Notes on everything a year taught me
Baltimore poet Wallace Lane writes about passing time, lessons learned and finding strength in the bad days.
An illustration of a ramen cup, rebranded as Instant G, like instant gratification with the contents being spilled out.
Is InstaGratification hurting us in the age of social media?
Too many people believe success lives and dies by social media validation. We need to show our youths that success isn’t about instant gratification.
Five basketball courts that influenced poet Wallace Lane.
Five Baltimore City basketball courts where I learned life lessons
Poet Wallace Lane shares the basketball courts that helped him build his confidence.
Wallace Lane video still.
Wallace Lane: My life as a ’90s hood drama movie
A poem about lives that aren't utopias and glamorized scenes in movies.

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