SPEED ROUND! Here's ALL the Released Prompts for the last 40ish years! Do some "lightning round" practice... Read each prompt and decide in no more than 30 seconds which of your prepped books would answer it! If one of your preps doesn't easily work, what will you do? Practice 'stretching' one of your prepped works OR drawing on a "light review" text...
Poetry Foundation: Poem Guides
Read as many as you like. Make notes if you want or just think about them. THIS is how you approach AP poems on the exam. Open your mind and think deeply and you'll USUALLY be able to write something interesting and thoughtful.
Owlcation: Analysis of the Poem Articles
Usually pretty interesting and brief, these mini analyses are another whetstone to sharpen your mind. Read and make notes, or just think. If you need more 'language' for how to write about poems, there's usually good mentor sentences here as well.
Practice with Textbook Poems/Passages and Questions or any Optional Essays on Google Classroom!
TED ED has some good videos as well! They're always pretty short and engaging!
Crash Course videos are a fun way to review as well. You may not see THESE poems on the test, but practicing/reviewing how to THINK about poetry will still help make you feel prepared for whatever poems you face! I like the videos on Sylvia Plath, Langston Hughes, and Emily Dickinson.
Review your vocabulary a bit each day. Don't try to do all of them every day. Pick 2-3. Read them to someone. Write them out 10 times in your journal. Say them aloud. Use them in a sentence about one of the books/poems/stories. Use them in a normal conversation. Come tell ME about one of your word. Tell another teacher! It doesn't take long and they'll become a part of your working vocabulary forever.