Friday, October 21, 2011
Read A Good Book: With Love Artists’ Letters and Illustrated Notes by Liza Kirwin and Joan Lord
Liza Kirwin and Joan Lord have produced a beautiful book showcasing the love letters and affectionate exchanges of lovers, artists, and long-time friends. Inside you will be inspired by the postcards, letters, and illustrations that the authors have carefully collected and exposed to the world at large. Letters from Frida Kahlo, Nancy Douglas, Moses Sawyer, Walter Gray and many more. Letters from parents to their children, from lovers to their beloved, and from friendships spanning grand distances are all included here.
The romance of letter-writing is captured at its best and I cannot put this book down. Every morning I crack it open and every evening I pore over details I hadn’t noticed before. The illustrations capture my imagination the most. There are drawings of men in love, of the family cat, of cows romping in the field, so many interesting illustrations it is hard to name them all here! The hand-writing is varied and beautiful, the collages from artists are entertaining, the photographs and the stories behind each couple is endearing. It has also inspired me to tuck sweet hand-written notes into my husband’s lunches and send packages to friends I rarely get to see. I can tell you that if this book doesn’t inspire you to create your own lovely letters to old friends that you must not be the type who loves old-fashioned mail. If I had the time and money I’d be buying old fashioned wax seals to stamp onto my old-fashioned letters and packages, that’s for sure.
If you enjoyed this review, I urge you to pick up a copy for yourself. It may be found at your local library or book-store, I found mine in an adorable boutique in a small town here in Florida so I’m sure other boutiques would carry it, too.
To purchase a copy of With Love Artists’ Letters and Illustrated Notes by Liza Kirwin and Joan Lord for yourself on-line, visit the link at Harper Collins to lead you to several venues available for purchase at:
http://www.harpercollins.com/books/With-Love/?isbn=9780061441509
Thanks always for reading, please drop by again next week…
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Lilliput Review Open Submissions
Open year-round, Don Wentworth accepts up to 3 poems that are 10 lines or less via old-fashioned snail mail, please include your contact information on each page and include a Self-Addresses, Stamped Envelope.
*About that return envelope: Simply by submitting your poems you will receive a free issue of Lilliput Review in return regardless of whether your poems are accepted. It’s a beautiful thing, so I urge you to go for it!
Please send your poems to:
Lilliput Review
Don Wentworth, Editor
282 Main Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
For more details go to:
http://sites.google.com/site/lilliputreview/home
To visit the Lilliput Review blog, please visit:
http://lilliputreview.blogspot.com/
Good luck to all who submit, please drop in again tomorrow for another Read A Good Book Feature…
*About that return envelope: Simply by submitting your poems you will receive a free issue of Lilliput Review in return regardless of whether your poems are accepted. It’s a beautiful thing, so I urge you to go for it!
Please send your poems to:
Lilliput Review
Don Wentworth, Editor
282 Main Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
For more details go to:
http://sites.google.com/site/lilliputreview/home
To visit the Lilliput Review blog, please visit:
http://lilliputreview.blogspot.com/
Good luck to all who submit, please drop in again tomorrow for another Read A Good Book Feature…
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Poems Found by Poet Hound
https://sites.google.com/site/rhpissue45/the-note
The introduction to Issue 45 by Mr. Wisely is dedicated to his mother. This is not a poem, it’s a story about love. It’s a story you should read because it is a beautiful story.
https://sites.google.com/site/rhpissue45/robert-s-2
“Elsewhere” by Robert Scotellaro
https://sites.google.com/site/rhpissue45/luis-cuauhtemoc-berriozabal
“In the Clear Silence” by Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal
Thanks for clicking in, please drop in tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
The introduction to Issue 45 by Mr. Wisely is dedicated to his mother. This is not a poem, it’s a story about love. It’s a story you should read because it is a beautiful story.
https://sites.google.com/site/rhpissue45/robert-s-2
“Elsewhere” by Robert Scotellaro
https://sites.google.com/site/rhpissue45/luis-cuauhtemoc-berriozabal
“In the Clear Silence” by Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal
Thanks for clicking in, please drop in tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Excuse me while I wring this long swim out of my hair by Sarah J. Sloat
Ms. Sloat’s poetry has appeared in Barn Owl Review, The Dirty Napkin, Opium, and many others. Her collection published by Dancing Girl Press in 2011 is titled Excuse me while I wring this swim out of my hair and is filled with ethereal poems. I feel like I’m taking a walk down the lane in Autumn next to Ms. Sloat as she shares her thoughts and I am happy to share a few tantalizing poems:
Training
I’m thinking of living forever.
I think that way I might finally
get my gig straight and solve the crosswords.
I’m considering outlasting everyone
although I know I’d have a hard time
explaining not having read Ulysses
past the first chapter.
I don’t care if death smells like nutmeg.
I don’t buy the plotline on eternal rest.
By staying alive someday
I might manage to hail a taxi,
and fulfill my father’s wish
of reaching town without a red light.
I couldn’t expect to avoid anger or brooding
or to make the journey with my beasts appeased.
But I might walk vast expanses
of earth and always be beginning
and I love beginning
or could learn
to love it.
I love that living forever means conquering the small things: crosswords, no red lights at a single stretch, walking large expanses. We forget it is the little things that matter and what would living forever mean if not for the little things? I also love that despite living forever Ms. Sloat never gets past the first chapter of Ulysses, she is honest with herself and therefore endearing. This poem makes me grin ear to ear.
On Stopping to Smell Perfume on the Way Home from Work
Do you remember Ecuador?
How our luggage burst like bulbs
from the underground cave
of the baggage claim?
A wrist circled in jade.
Have you ever licked rain from your fingers?
Imagine the drops falling faster.
Biofuel. Bioether. Bioephemeral.
Have you ever peeled moss off a stone,
then pressed it against you, inside out?
Dew, nutmeg and suede.
I’ve promised to stop on the way home
to feed the neighbor’s rabbits.
They are quiet, and have such cold noses.
This poem strikes me because of its sensuality. The scent of the perfume draws memories of a foreign country, the taste of rain, the feel of moss. Even an errand at the end of the day turns into an experience of the senses that may otherwise be overlooked, that rabbits have cold noses and are quiet, an absence of a sense. This poem makes me want to hike in the woods and smell the pines, feel the needles crunching under my feet.
My Money is on Fire
Whenever I read the newspaper
I learn my money is going to hell.
It’s lubricating a chute to the furnace
every time I eat meat or sip whiskey.
Every time I wear green or live
my secret life, no matter what
innocence I’m up to,
I’m sponsoring a disease
somewhere, making
souvenirs of the populace.
My money is minted a clean
but the moment I open my purse
to buy a popsicle, it trickles out
as acid rain. I sit sunning myself
in the park while my money
is felling the redwoods, adding rage
to hurricanes. I’ll have to tell
the drunk approaching my bench
I can’t give him a red cent. Look
at us. My money has done enough.
I’m posting this poem out of self-indulgence, really. I am a finance junkie, thanks to my father. So a poem about money is always exciting to me and this one excites me. The idea that the media constantly portrays is that money to be the source of all evil, disease, and catastrophe. I love that the poet displays her guilt as she takes money out to eat meat (killing innocent wildlife), sipping whiskey (sponsoring alcoholism perhaps?) and perhaps accidentally sponsoring disease. The popsicle as acid rain is fantastic and fascinating to me, I’ll never look at a popsicle the same again. This is my favorite poem of the collection, personally.
If you enjoyed this sample of poems you may purchase a copy of Excuse me while I wring this long swim out of my hair by Sarah J. Sloat for a mere $7.00 from Dancing Girl Press at:
http://dulcetshop.ecrater.com/p/12011922/sarah-j-sloat-excuse-me-while-i
You can also visit Sarah J. Sloat’s wonderful blog at:
http://theraininmypurse.blogspot.com/
Thanks always for reading, please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
Training
I’m thinking of living forever.
I think that way I might finally
get my gig straight and solve the crosswords.
I’m considering outlasting everyone
although I know I’d have a hard time
explaining not having read Ulysses
past the first chapter.
I don’t care if death smells like nutmeg.
I don’t buy the plotline on eternal rest.
By staying alive someday
I might manage to hail a taxi,
and fulfill my father’s wish
of reaching town without a red light.
I couldn’t expect to avoid anger or brooding
or to make the journey with my beasts appeased.
But I might walk vast expanses
of earth and always be beginning
and I love beginning
or could learn
to love it.
I love that living forever means conquering the small things: crosswords, no red lights at a single stretch, walking large expanses. We forget it is the little things that matter and what would living forever mean if not for the little things? I also love that despite living forever Ms. Sloat never gets past the first chapter of Ulysses, she is honest with herself and therefore endearing. This poem makes me grin ear to ear.
On Stopping to Smell Perfume on the Way Home from Work
Do you remember Ecuador?
How our luggage burst like bulbs
from the underground cave
of the baggage claim?
A wrist circled in jade.
Have you ever licked rain from your fingers?
Imagine the drops falling faster.
Biofuel. Bioether. Bioephemeral.
Have you ever peeled moss off a stone,
then pressed it against you, inside out?
Dew, nutmeg and suede.
I’ve promised to stop on the way home
to feed the neighbor’s rabbits.
They are quiet, and have such cold noses.
This poem strikes me because of its sensuality. The scent of the perfume draws memories of a foreign country, the taste of rain, the feel of moss. Even an errand at the end of the day turns into an experience of the senses that may otherwise be overlooked, that rabbits have cold noses and are quiet, an absence of a sense. This poem makes me want to hike in the woods and smell the pines, feel the needles crunching under my feet.
My Money is on Fire
Whenever I read the newspaper
I learn my money is going to hell.
It’s lubricating a chute to the furnace
every time I eat meat or sip whiskey.
Every time I wear green or live
my secret life, no matter what
innocence I’m up to,
I’m sponsoring a disease
somewhere, making
souvenirs of the populace.
My money is minted a clean
but the moment I open my purse
to buy a popsicle, it trickles out
as acid rain. I sit sunning myself
in the park while my money
is felling the redwoods, adding rage
to hurricanes. I’ll have to tell
the drunk approaching my bench
I can’t give him a red cent. Look
at us. My money has done enough.
I’m posting this poem out of self-indulgence, really. I am a finance junkie, thanks to my father. So a poem about money is always exciting to me and this one excites me. The idea that the media constantly portrays is that money to be the source of all evil, disease, and catastrophe. I love that the poet displays her guilt as she takes money out to eat meat (killing innocent wildlife), sipping whiskey (sponsoring alcoholism perhaps?) and perhaps accidentally sponsoring disease. The popsicle as acid rain is fantastic and fascinating to me, I’ll never look at a popsicle the same again. This is my favorite poem of the collection, personally.
If you enjoyed this sample of poems you may purchase a copy of Excuse me while I wring this long swim out of my hair by Sarah J. Sloat for a mere $7.00 from Dancing Girl Press at:
http://dulcetshop.ecrater.com/p/12011922/sarah-j-sloat-excuse-me-while-i
You can also visit Sarah J. Sloat’s wonderful blog at:
http://theraininmypurse.blogspot.com/
Thanks always for reading, please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
Monday, October 17, 2011
Blue Collar Blog
Find out what’s going on in the world of Blue Collar Review where you’ll hear about poetry, the economy, and the postal service. Good stuff to be read, check it out at:
http://bluecollarholler.blogspot.com/
Thanks for dropping in, please drop by again tomorrow for another featured poet…
http://bluecollarholler.blogspot.com/
Thanks for dropping in, please drop by again tomorrow for another featured poet…