Poetry

Review: Gimme Liberty I Can Smell! by J. Flaherty

Gimme Liberty I Can Smell! by J. Flaherty

In Gimme Liberty I Can Smell! (autonomy for ordinary personage), poet J. Flaherty kicks down the doors of poetical convention and rattles off a diatribe of thoughtful verse and bold demands that is difficult to put down.

A self-professed neobeat poet, there are certainly jazzy echoes of Kerouac and Corso in this collection, with urban references wildly blended with classical mythos, juxtaposing intensity and some timeless goofiness. While the topics of the poetry vary greatly, the voice is clear and consistent – he is a bold observer keeping his eyes peeled for the mystery and beauty of the world. […]

2020-10-06T02:39:14+02:00October 7th, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews|Tags: , |

Manna for the Hungry by Linda Perry McCarthy

Manna for the Hungry by Linda Perry McCarthy Poetry has long been linked to spirituality and religion, and Linda Perry McCarthy carries on that proud tradition with Manna for the Hungry, a subtle and powerful collection of her message-laden poetry. Set within the framework of our fast-paced modern lives, in which religious fervor is beginning to wane across the world, McCarthy blends a love of nature and a deep belief in God’s love with a whimsical voice and uniquely memorable verse.

Whether she is exploring the nature of her own dreams or the peaceful switch between seasons, the connections she makes between lived experience and spiritual satisfaction […]

2019-10-01T08:24:26+02:00September 30th, 2019|Categories: New Releases|Tags: |

Review: Paddle to Paddle by Lois Chapin

Paddle to Paddle by Lois Chapin

Offering readers a brutally honest mirror, Paddle to Paddle is a surprising new collection of poetry from Lois Chapin, a therapist who has channeled her ample wisdom and experience into a raw display of truth-telling and wise insight.

When most poets embark on releasing a new body of work, it is with a general theme in mind, an intention for their verses, some message they want to share, even if that message is opaque or buried in metaphor. There are other poets, however, like Chapin, who touch on life in all of its messiness and truth without a clear focus, […]

2019-09-20T09:56:20+02:00September 20th, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews, Lead Story|Tags: |

Review: Sweetiebetter by Terry Minchow-Proffitt

Sweetiebetter by Terry Minchow-Proffitt

In the broad and varied tradition of American poetry, there has always been room for aspirations right beside hard truths, for optimism and darkness. In Sweetiebetter, the latest collection of poetry from Terry Michow-Proffitt, this tradition is upheld in stark and surprising fashion, through simple language, deep cultural cuts, and simple themes that percolate into much larger ideas.

Like a mystical journalist, Minchow-Proffitt firmly grounds these poems in the tangible, but there is a surreal subtlety to certain selections, where his thoughts meander outside the real, into the shadowy realms of memory and belief. There are people and muscles […]

2019-09-19T09:45:50+02:00September 19th, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews, Lead Story|Tags: |

Review: Can’t Forget the Motor City… by Joseph Nicks

Can't Forget the Motor City by Joseph Nicks

The tradition of travel writing in America is a long and proud one, but travel poetry doesn’t have the same mainstream following. However, in Can’t Forget the Motor City…, a new collection of poems from Joseph Nicks, the genre gains a strong voice that anyone who has longed for the open road will appreciate.

These poems span four decades of a life spent wandering and wondering, always looking for something new and invigorating. From musings on repetitive youth in the Great Lakes to the sluggish, sunny pace of California, these poems exude a hunger for elsewhere, with the poet […]

2020-08-24T09:10:53+02:00May 20th, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews|Tags: , |

On the Occasion of a Wedding by Ollie Bowen

On the Occasion of a Wedding by Ollie Bowen

On the Occasion of a Wedding is a love-infused collection of poetry written by Ollie Bowen for two of her friends, as the title implies, on the occasion of their wedding. Broken up into four parts, this is an exquisite exploration of love and pain, fear for the future, and recycling of the past.

A heartfelt and subtly tender collection, there is a sense of intimacy behind every word. “Quanta Qualia” is a particularly haunting meditation on reality after love that must be read twice, while “Tears of the Poet” expresses the act of love between artists in a way […]

2019-05-08T05:33:31+02:00May 7th, 2019|Categories: New Releases|Tags: |

Review: Snapshots: Say Cheese! The World is Watching by Cara Cilento

Say Cheese! The World is Watching by Cara Cilento

Poems and short prose pieces are mated with vibrant photos in the emotive collection Snapshots: Say Cheese! The World is Watching by debut writer Cara Cilento.

The two dominant themes are Cilento’s acceptance of herself as a lesbian, and her decision to adopt two boys, a bold move, especially as both children are African American. Cilento is of Italian descent, this made clear as she describes messages (“The Facts”) from her upbringing:

…I was made from two parents

who went to school to get out of the ghetto

who tried to forget their last name had too many vowels in

[…]
2019-05-03T13:09:47+02:00May 2nd, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews, Lead Story|Tags: , |

Review: Colored Armpits: Poems for Social Justice by James Kityo Ssemmanda

Colored Armpits: Poems for Social Justice by James Kityo Ssemmanda

Ugandan born poet Ssemanda casts light on critical issues that we all need to explore in the collection of personal, political, and perceptive works, Colored Armpits: Poems for Social Justice.

Ssemanda’s book of verse is divided in three sections – “The Mzungu,” “The Armpits,” and “The African African.” Each touches on different aspects of the human condition, and particularly, the condition of African and other third world people in connection or confrontation with first world denizens and value systems.

Mzungu is the African language term used in Uganda and elsewhere to designate white people – whether they be colonialists, […]

2019-06-03T08:46:18+02:00May 1st, 2019|Categories: Book Reviews|Tags: |
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