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In Leaning toward the Poet: Eavesdropping on the Poetry of Everyday Life, Robert Romanyshyn writes in a poetic style about the splendor and simplicity of life. From the light on a summer morning to the appeal of an empty bench, he talks about the miracle of the mundane moments in life that are present, for example, in a spider's web or a smile on the face of a stranger. In an age of information overload and diminishing time spent on the simple things in life, Leaning toward the Poet is an invitation to slow down and pause to attend to those occasions when memory and imagination lead one to unexpected occurrences that make us think about and appreciate what is happening around us. A memoir written by a psychologist, Leaning Toward the Poet awakens us to the poetic qualities of everyday life. Its words and images feel like a homecoming. Sitting with V in the Morning It always starts the same way, with hot coffee, buttered toast, and the newspaper, bought every morning, set out on the table. I like these few moments of silence before V joins me in the garden. I like especially the cloudy mornings, when the trees and flowers in the garden are still asleep, their vibrant green still folded inside the darkness of the night, and the birds are still at rest...
Spirituality isn't what you think and enlightenment is not a bunch of chanting om and lotus petals. "Flowers Leaning Toward the Sun" is a book about the spiritual maturing of a 21st century American. In his book, Ry Downey paints a picture of what it's like trying to find one's soul in the advertisement-soaked, media-driven machine of a late-capitalist American society. Following the highs and lows of a consciousness on the brink of understanding "something about something," "Flowers Leaning Toward the Sun" is a Zen Punk touchstone for understanding what it's like to be a human on planet earth, alive and awake at this critical point in time.This book is a love child of Bukowski and Rumi, combining Bukowski's blunt honesty with the eternal wonder of Rumi. This is something new.
Originally published in 1997 by Houghton Mifflin, this is a collection of true stories, essays and poems which tell of the glories and rigours of living close to the land.
The Tilt Torn Away from the Seasons imagines a human mission to Mars, a consequence of Earth's devastation from climate change and natural disaster. As humans begin to colonize the planet, history inevitably repeats itself. Dystopian and ecopoetic, this collection of poetry examines the impulse and danger of the colonial mindset, and the ways that gendered violence and ecological destruction, body and land, are linked. "This time we'll form more carefully," one voice hopes in "Ecopoiesis: The Terraforming." "We've started on empty / plains. We'll vaccinate. We'll make the new deal fair." But the new planet becomes a canvas on which the trespasses of the American Frontier are rehearsed and remade. Featuring a multiplicity of narratives and voices, this book presents the reader with sonnet crowns, application forms, and large-scale landscape poems that seem to float across the field of the page. With these unusual forms, Rogers also reminds us of previous exploitations on our own planet: industrial pollution in rural China, Marco Polo's racist accounts of the Batak people in Indonesia, and natural disasters that result in displaced refugees. Striking, thought-provoking, and necessary, The Tilt Torn Away from the Seasons offers a new parable for our modern times.
Leaning Toward Whole is special poetry. This chapbook is our first publication at Liquid Light Press, and we feel it embodies our mission to promote the artistic sharing of the human journey to consciousness and inner experiences difficult to express in linear vocabulary. This is the fifth poetry book of the Colorado poet, M. D. Friedman, and contains pieces both poignant and personal. Leaning Toward Whole speaks to both the universal and the everyday, both the moment and the millennium.
This Festschrift for Leslie C. Allen reflects the ferment in studies of Jeremiah. A group of international scholars examine the location of the prophecies in Jeremiah's life and consider the book's social, ethical, theological, political, and devotional implications.