#Poets bakken
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aad1952 · 1 year ago
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492. Ze bakken me een poets
Ze is 88 jaar oud. Woont nog zelfstandig, maar soms gaan mijn gedachte aan de haal als ik zie wie ze is, wat ze doet en hoe haar leven er uit ziet. Ook op het dorp waar ik woon kan je eenzaam zijn. Eenzaam in de zin dat je eigenlijk niemand toelaat in jouw bubbel. Zo’n vrouw is de vrouw die ik heb leren kennen door de ritten met de MUS. Het vervoersproject in de gemeente Midden-Delfland. Elke…
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years ago
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Birthdays 1.10
Beer Birthdays
William Copeland (1834)
Nancy Johnson (1961)
Todd Alstrom (1969)
Eric Salazar (1973)
Frances Michelle (1987)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Pat Benatar; rock singer (1953)
Jim Croce; pop singer (1943)
Donald Fagen; musician (1948)
Bernard Lee; actor, "M" (1908)
Max Roach; jazz musician, drummer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
John Acton; English historian (1834)
Stephen Ambrose; historian, writer (1936)
Earl Bakken; inventor (1924)
Sune Bergström; Swedish biochemist (1916)
Katherine Blodgett; inventor, scientist (1898)
Ray Bolger; actor (1904)
Francis X. Bushman; actor, director, and screenwriter (1883)
Jared Carter; poet and author (1939)
Shawn Colvin; singer (1956)
Eldzier Cortor; painter (1916)
Roy E. Disney; businessman, Disney CEO (1930)
Dean Dixon; American-Swiss conductor (1915)
Aynsley Dunbar; English drummer and songwriter (1946)
George Foreman; boxer (1939)
Cynthia Freeman; author (1915)
Al Goldstein; pornographer (1936)
Evan Handler; actor (1961)
Ronnie Hawkins; rockabilly singer (1935)
Paul Henried; actor (1908)
Barbara Hepworth; sculptor (1903)
Rosella Hightower; ballerina (1920)
Walter Hill; film director (1942)
David Horowitz; activist and author (1939)
Frank James; outlaw (1843)
Robinson Jeffers; poet, writer (1887)
Janet Jones; actor (1961)
Jeffrey Catherine Jones; comics and fantasy artist (1944)
Donald Knuth; mathematician, computer scientist (1938)
Philip Levine; poet (1928)
Martin Lichtenstein; German physician and explorer (1780)
Linda Lovelace; pornstar (1939)
Willie McCovey; San Francisco Giants 1B (1938)
J.P. McEvoy; writer (1897)
Sal Mineo; actor (1939)
Cyril Neville; musician (1948)
Milton Parker; businessman, co-founder of the Carnegie Deli (1919)
Johnnie Ray; singer-songwriter and pianist (1927)
Charles G. D. Roberts; Canadian poet and author (1860)
John Root; architect (1850)
Michael Schenker; German guitarist and songwriter (1955)
Tony Soper; English ornithologist (1929)
Rod Stewart; pop singer (1945)
Scott Thurston; American guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Bill Toomey; Olympic gold medalist for Decathlon (1939)
Robert Woodrow Wilson; physicist and astronomer (1936)
Johannes Zick; German painter (1702)
Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg; German composer (1760)
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finishinglinepress · 1 year ago
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FLP POETRY BOOK OF THE DAY: A Habit of Landscape by Shelley Armitage
On SALE now! Pre-order Price Guarantee: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/a-habit-of-landscape-by-shelley-armitage/
RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY
A Habit of Landscape celebrates the convergent meanings of #habit and #habitat. each sharing the words “to dwell.” These poems hold sensate moments—#family experiences, inner revelations, transformative places. A realized kinship between the human and natural worlds signals the inclusiveness of place. Not something “out there,” this shared space—personal or global– often surprises in the poem’s turn. Like flash narratives these poems contain worlds in the vibrating fabric of the instant— forgotten, dismissed, previously unseen. Whether an elegy for a brother, an encounter with a pronghorn, or the whispers surrounding adoption, these lyric pieces speak to the sacrality of the moment.
Shelley Armitage, professor, writer, naturalist, conservationist lives in the Chihuahuan desert in Las Cruces, New Mexico. She is author of eight award-winning books, most recently Walking the Llano: A Texas Memoir of Place, a Kirkus starred book cited as one of the best memoirs of the year, and a finalist for the May Sarton prize, the New Mexico-Arizona Book Award, and the Collins P. Carr award from the Texas Institute of Letters. Her work has been featured on NPR and among her other honors are a Wurlitzer Foundation fellowship, a Distinguished Chair in American Literature Fulbright in Warsaw, Fulbright awards in Finland and Portugal, a National Endowment for the Arts grant, three National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships, and a Rockefeller grant. Armitage is professor emerita at the University of Texas at El Paso where she held the Roderick Professorship and is a member of the Texas Institute of Letters. She manages the family grasslands near Vega, Texas—inspiration for how landscape may draw us into a greater understanding of ourselves and others as we experience kinship with the places we inhabit.
PRAISE FOR A Habit of Landscape by Shelley Armitage
Shelley Armitage’s poems hold and withhold, gathering artifacts and tracing the demarcations of landscape and life—barbed wire, schist, igneous escarpments, a cellar’s dirt walls—while also acknowledging what cannot be contained, nor ever secured by words. To do the work of “ancestral ecology,” she roots and uproots, considering what might be salvaged by “looking/in a world wound down.”
–Christopher Bakken
Shelley Armitage is a poet aware of mythmaking–of the way we all fill the inexplicable with figures of the imagination. In her poems, she makes a world of presence, of the actual, of the body. She lives inside and celebrates the earthly condition of humanness, of being a thinking animal. A Habit of Landscape is a wonderous collection that reminds us of states of being so fundamental they can only be described as holy.
–Juliet Patterson, Threnody
“Crisply vivid, witty, and at once far-seeing and a-whisper with intimacies, Armitage’s poems are a rare and splendid pleasure. Above all, she reminds us to use the heart to see, to hear, to sing, even unto antelopes, baby foxes, rocks. Hers is a Texas that shimmers and leaves an afterglow.”
–C.M. Mayo, author of Meteor
Please share/please repost #flpauthor #preorder #AwesomeCoverArt #poetry #read #poetrybook #poems #nature
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rudilejaeghere · 3 years ago
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Gezegdes spreken waarheid
Een vos verliest wel zijn haren, maar niet zijn streken.
Ik denk dat er toch wel velen zij die dit spreekwoord zullen kennen. Ik heb het altijd een heel goede gevonden omdat ik eens iemand heb gekend. De man heette ‘Voske’ althans dat was de naam die men hem gaf vanwege zijn familienaam Devos. Hij was zo kaal als een knikker, maar hij liet geen mogelijkheid liggen om zijn vrienden een poets te bakken. Tot zijn laatste dagen was hij een echte deugniet. Men zegt ook wel eens: ‘De wolf (vos) ruit wel van baard, maar niet van aard’, maar voor mij is deze minder bekend......
Lees verder op Artikel.nl
https://artikel.nl/gezegdes-spreken-wijsheid--2209
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brookston · 3 years ago
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Birthdays 1.10
Beer Birthdays
William Copeland (1834)
Nancy Johnson (1961)
Todd Alstrom (1969)
Eric Salazar (1973)
Frances Michelle (1987)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Pat Benatar; rock singer (1953)
Jim Croce; pop singer (1943)
Donald Fagen; musician (1948)
Bernard Lee; actor, "M" (1908)
Max Roach; jazz musician, drummer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
John Acton; English historian (1834)
Stephen Ambrose; historian, writer (1936)
Earl Bakken; inventor (1924)
Sune Bergström; Swedish biochemist (1916)
Katherine Blodgett; inventor, scientist (1898)
Ray Bolger; actor (1904)
Francis X. Bushman; actor, director, and screenwriter (1883)
Jared Carter; poet and author (1939)
Shawn Colvin; singer (1956)
Eldzier Cortor; painter (1916)
Roy E. Disney; businessman, Disney CEO (1930)
Dean Dixon; American-Swiss conductor (1915)
Aynsley Dunbar; English drummer and songwriter (1946)
George Foreman; boxer (1939)
Cynthia Freeman; author (1915)
Al Goldstein; pornographer (1936)
Evan Handler; actor (1961)
Ronnie Hawkins; rockabilly singer (1935)
Paul Henried; actor (1908)
Barbara Hepworth; sculptor (1903)
Rosella Hightower; ballerina (1920)
Walter Hill; film director (1942)
David Horowitz; activist and author (1939)
Frank James; outlaw (1843)
Robinson Jeffers; poet, writer (1887)
Janet Jones; actor (1961)
Jeffrey Catherine Jones; comics and fantasy artist (1944)
Donald Knuth; mathematician, computer scientist (1938)
Philip Levine; poet (1928)
Martin Lichtenstein; German physician and explorer (1780)
Linda Lovelace; pornstar (1939)
Willie McCovey; San Francisco Giants 1B (1938)
J.P. McEvoy; writer (1897)
Sal Mineo; actor (1939)
Cyril Neville; musician (1948)
Milton Parker; businessman, co-founder of the Carnegie Deli (1919)
Johnnie Ray; singer-songwriter and pianist (1927)
Charles G. D. Roberts; Canadian poet and author (1860)
John Root; architect (1850)
Michael Schenker; German guitarist and songwriter (1955)
Tony Soper; English ornithologist (1929)
Rod Stewart; pop singer (1945)
Scott Thurston; American guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Bill Toomey; Olympic gold medalist for Decathlon (1939)
Robert Woodrow Wilson; physicist and astronomer (1936)
Johannes Zick; German painter (1702)
Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg; German composer (1760)
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avondurenvanroos · 7 years ago
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#24 Een ritme is goed voor me, zegt mijn psycholoog.
7:00 
Wakker worden van mijn wekker.  Kijken naar de tijd.  Me omdraaien met een kreun.  De volgende wekker afwachten.  Niet meer kunnen omdraaien en het wel doen.  Op staan en constant herinnerd worden aan mijn heerlijke bed.  Ontbijt naar binnen werken. Koffie.  Koffie.  Koffie.  Vijf minuten te laat mijn spullen in een willekeurige tas gooien terwijl ik mijn tanden poets, mijn haar borstel en mascara op doe.  Roken op de fiets.  Fiets op slot zetten aan de overkant van de straat.  Zuchten.  Wachten op het stoplicht, het moment dat ik mijn zonnebril af zet en een glimlach op plak met tegenzin zien naderen.  Peuk weg gooien.  Al verlangen naar die ene die ik in mijn pauze hopelijk kan roken.  Binnen gluren of het druk is.  Koptelefoon af, zonnebril af, over de drempel stappen. 
8:50
‘Goede morgen!’ Hier gaan we dan, blij en vrolijk. Ik kan dit.  Schort om knopen.  Zuchten waar ze me niet zien.  ‘En hoe gaat het met jullie?’ Pannenkoeken bakken. Eieren in de pan. Borden vullen. Neerzetten. Glimlachen.  ‘Smakelijk eten!’ Stiekem op de klok kijken.  Koffie.  Me eindelijk wakker voelen. Vrolijkheid op voelen borrelen. Hard werken, met plezier. Of hoe ver dat kan in de hitte van de keuken en het zweet op mijn rug en mijn warrige haar.  Kletsen met collega’s. Verhalen delen.  Herinneren dat ik een slecht ontbijt heb gehad en nog steeds niet heb gegeten.  Kiezen om te roken.  Op het bankje voor het raam mijn drang naar nicotine eindelijk sussen met lange trekken en gehoest.  Boterham met kaas naar binnen werken tussen bestellingen in.  Koffie.  Meer willen roken.  Stiekem op de klok kijken.  Eten op de grond laten vallen, rondkijken, het terug in de pan gooien. Schouders ophalen naar collega.  Lachen zodat alles lichter voelt. Vaat na vaat wegwerken. 
15:00
Keuken dicht. Van binnen juichen, van buiten ook. Met tegenzin schoon maken.  Vegen.  Tafels afdoen.  Vaat na vaat wegwerken.  Hopen dat alles klaar is voor vier uur en we dicht gaan.  Kletsen omdat er uiteindelijk geen fuck meer te doen is.  Zo min mogelijk nog uitvoeren.  Stofzuigen.  Dweilen.  Luisteren naar weer een preek van mijn baas.  Irritaties proberen te onderdrukken.  Overduidelijk op de klok kijken.  Sigaret achter mijn oor stoppen.  Kijken of hij de hint snapt.  Helaas.  Zuchtend naar buiten stappen.  De vermoeidheid voelen.  Collega’s uitzwaaien.  Naar fiets sjokken.  Peuk aansteken. Diep inhaleren.  Langs de Jumbo fietsen.  Al het eten wat ik klaar heb gemaakt ruiken terwijl ik door de winkel loop. Eetlust verliezen.  Diepvries pizza pakken.  Kassameisje een fijne dag wensen.  Wiet halen bij de shop in de straat.  Verder fietsen. 
17:15
Pizza in de koelkast gooien.  Mijn bed omarmen.  Joint draaien.  Liggen. Smoken.  Pizza eten.  Niet meer weten wat ik in gods naam moet kijken op Netflix.  Mijn voeten voelen.  Liggen. Smoken.  Me zo min mogelijk bewegen.  Op de klok kijken.  Zuchten.  Morgen weer werken.  Niet aan denken, serie kijken. 
23:30
Fuck, is het al zo laat? Tanden poetsen. Make-up eraf vegen.  Nog laatste beetje jonko roken.  Masturberen.  Slapen. 
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10breadcrumbs · 8 years ago
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“She has received...”
“...research grants from the American Antiquarian Society (kudos) and the Bakken Museum of Electricity in Life.”
                                    - Said of the poet Kathryn Nuernberger
she has received:
      two false
               diplomas
from my
        cheating spouse,
(one Red Hen)
The ability to say 
      “no”
       while thinking “yes”
           and an 
understanding of the Universe
                        I
      find comforting.
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brookstonalmanac · 10 months ago
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Birthdays 1.10
Beer Birthdays
William Copeland (1834)
Nancy Johnson (1961)
Todd Alstrom (1969)
Eric Salazar (1973)
Frances Michelle (1987)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Pat Benatar; rock singer (1953)
Jim Croce; pop singer (1943)
Donald Fagen; musician (1948)
Bernard Lee; actor, "M" (1908)
Max Roach; jazz musician, drummer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
John Acton; English historian (1834)
Stephen Ambrose; historian, writer (1936)
Earl Bakken; inventor (1924)
Sune Bergström; Swedish biochemist (1916)
Katherine Blodgett; inventor, scientist (1898)
Ray Bolger; actor (1904)
Francis X. Bushman; actor, director, and screenwriter (1883)
Jared Carter; poet and author (1939)
Shawn Colvin; singer (1956)
Eldzier Cortor; painter (1916)
Roy E. Disney; businessman, Disney CEO (1930)
Dean Dixon; American-Swiss conductor (1915)
Aynsley Dunbar; English drummer and songwriter (1946)
George Foreman; boxer (1939)
Cynthia Freeman; author (1915)
Al Goldstein; pornographer (1936)
Evan Handler; actor (1961)
Ronnie Hawkins; rockabilly singer (1935)
Paul Henried; actor (1908)
Barbara Hepworth; sculptor (1903)
Rosella Hightower; ballerina (1920)
Walter Hill; film director (1942)
David Horowitz; activist and author (1939)
Frank James; outlaw (1843)
Robinson Jeffers; poet, writer (1887)
Janet Jones; actor (1961)
Jeffrey Catherine Jones; comics and fantasy artist (1944)
Donald Knuth; mathematician, computer scientist (1938)
Philip Levine; poet (1928)
Martin Lichtenstein; German physician and explorer (1780)
Linda Lovelace; pornstar (1939)
Willie McCovey; San Francisco Giants 1B (1938)
J.P. McEvoy; writer (1897)
Sal Mineo; actor (1939)
Cyril Neville; musician (1948)
Milton Parker; businessman, co-founder of the Carnegie Deli (1919)
Johnnie Ray; singer-songwriter and pianist (1927)
Charles G. D. Roberts; Canadian poet and author (1860)
John Root; architect (1850)
Michael Schenker; German guitarist and songwriter (1955)
Tony Soper; English ornithologist (1929)
Rod Stewart; pop singer (1945)
Scott Thurston; American guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Bill Toomey; Olympic gold medalist for Decathlon (1939)
Robert Woodrow Wilson; physicist and astronomer (1936)
Johannes Zick; German painter (1702)
Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg; German composer (1760)
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brookstonalmanac · 4 years ago
Text
Birthdays 1.10
Beer Birthdays
William Copeland (1834)
Nancy Johnson (1961)
Todd Alstrom (1969)
Eric Salazar (1973)
Frances Michelle (1987)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Pat Benatar; rock singer (1953)
Jim Croce; pop singer (1943)
Donald Fagen; musician (1948)
Bernard Lee; actor, "M" (1908)
Max Roach; jazz musician, drummer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
John Acton; English historian (1834)
Stephen Ambrose; historian, writer (1936)
Earl Bakken; inventor (1924)
Sune Bergström; Swedish biochemist (1916)
Katherine Blodgett; inventor, scientist (1898)
Ray Bolger; actor (1904)
Francis X. Bushman; actor, director, and screenwriter (1883)
Jared Carter; poet and author (1939)
Shawn Colvin; singer (1956)
Eldzier Cortor; painter (1916)
Roy E. Disney; businessman, Disney CEO (1930)
Dean Dixon; American-Swiss conductor (1915)
Aynsley Dunbar; English drummer and songwriter (1946)
George Foreman; boxer (1939)
Cynthia Freeman; author (1915)
Al Goldstein; pornographer (1936)
Evan Handler; actor (1961)
Ronnie Hawkins; rockabilly singer (1935)
Paul Henried; actor (1908)
Barbara Hepworth; sculptor (1903)
Rosella Hightower; ballerina (1920)
Walter Hill; film director (1942)
David Horowitz; activist and author (1939)
Frank James; outlaw (1843)
Robinson Jeffers; poet, writer (1887)
Janet Jones; actor (1961)
Jeffrey Catherine Jones; comics and fantasy artist (1944)
Donald Knuth; mathematician, computer scientist (1938)
Philip Levine; poet (1928)
Martin Lichtenstein; German physician and explorer (1780)
Linda Lovelace; pornstar (1939)
Willie McCovey; San Francisco Giants 1B (1938)
J.P. McEvoy; writer (1897)
Sal Mineo; actor (1939)
Cyril Neville; musician (1948)
Milton Parker; businessman, co-founder of the Carnegie Deli (1919)
Johnnie Ray; singer-songwriter and pianist (1927)
Charles G. D. Roberts; Canadian poet and author (1860)
John Root; architect (1850)
Michael Schenker; German guitarist and songwriter (1955)
Tony Soper; English ornithologist (1929)
Rod Stewart; pop singer (1945)
Scott Thurston; American guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Bill Toomey; Olympic gold medalist for Decathlon (1939)
Robert Woodrow Wilson; physicist and astronomer (1936)
Johannes Zick; German painter (1702)
Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg; German composer (1760)
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brookstonalmanac · 5 years ago
Text
Birthdays 1.10
Beer Birthdays
William Copeland (1834)
Nancy Johnson (1961)
Todd Alstrom (1969)
Eric Salazar (1973)
Frances Michelle (1987)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Pat Benatar; rock singer (1953)
Donald Fagen; musician (1948)
Bernard Lee; actor, "M" (1908)
Linda Lovelace; pornstar (1939)
Max Roach; jazz musician, drummer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
John Acton; English historian (1834)
Stephen Ambrose; historian, writer (1936)
Earl Bakken; inventor (1924)
Sune Bergström; Swedish biochemist (1916)
Katherine Blodgett; inventor, scientist (1898)
Ray Bolger; actor (1904)
Francis X. Bushman; actor, director, and screenwriter (1883)
Jared Carter; poet and author (1939)
Shawn Colvin; singer (1956)
Eldzier Cortor; painter (1916)
Jim Croce; pop singer (1943)
Roy E. Disney; businessman, Disney CEO (1930)
Dean Dixon; American-Swiss conductor (1915)
Aynsley Dunbar; English drummer and songwriter (1946)
George Foreman; boxer (1939)
Cynthia Freeman; author (1915)
Al Goldstein; pornographer (1936)
Evan Handler; actor (1961)
Ronnie Hawkins; rockabilly singer (1935)
Paul Henried; actor (1908)
Barbara Hepworth; sculptor (1903)
Rosella Hightower; ballerina (1920)
Walter Hill; film director (1942)
David Horowitz; activist and author (1939)
Frank James; outlaw (1843)
Robinson Jeffers; poet, writer (1887)
Janet Jones; actor (1961)
Jeffrey Catherine Jones; comics and fantasy artist (1944)
Donald Knuth; mathematician, computer scientist (1938)
Philip Levine; poet (1928)
Martin Lichtenstein; German physician and explorer (1780)
Willie McCovey; San Francisco Giants 1B (1938)
J.P. McEvoy; writer (1897)
Sal Mineo; actor (1939)
Cyril Neville; musician (1948)
Milton Parker; businessman, co-founder of the Carnegie Deli (1919)
Johnnie Ray; singer-songwriter and pianist (1927)
Charles G. D. Roberts; Canadian poet and author (1860)
John Root; architect (1850)
Michael Schenker; German guitarist and songwriter (1955)
Tony Soper; English ornithologist (1929)
Rod Stewart; pop singer (1945)
Scott Thurston; American guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Bill Toomey; Olympic gold medalist for Decathlon (1939)
Robert Woodrow Wilson; physicist and astronomer (1936)
Johannes Zick; German painter (1702)
Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg; German composer (1760)
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finishinglinepress · 6 years ago
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FINISHING LINE PRESS BOOK OF THE DAY:
It Started with the Wild Horses
by Ingrid Keriotis
$18.99, Full-length, paper
https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/it-started-with-the-wild-horses-by-ingrid-keriotis/
Ingrid Keriotis is published in the anthology More Than Soil, More Than Sky and her poetry has recently appeared in Blue Unicorn, Poetry Now, and Steam Ticket. Ingrid received her MFA from Eastern Washington University and now lives in the Sierra Nevada foothills where she teaches English to community college students.
Mother, spouse, teacher, citizen: it’s easy for life to pull us away from art, but Ingrid Keriotis reminds us we might be drawn toward it just as insistently. Everywhere in her collection, It Started with the Wild Horses, we find a longing to stall time, so we might remember other selves we’ve left behind, or selves we’ve overlooked, so we might recall “what was good in the world,/and where it could be found.” In both elegy and celebration, her acts of seeing are acts of empathy, broadcast in all directions.
–Christopher Bakken, author of Eternity & Oranges
The poet voice of Ingrid Keriotis is full of a delicate passion for people, herself no more than the ones she knows well or only passes by, and the person behind that voice feels so vulnerable and exposed we feel protective of her, wandering around almost skinless as she seems. Her view of the world is full of pain and wonder, and her images are fresh. This is a poet whose voice is clearly growing stronger with each passing year, and in her most complete and powerful poems, poems like “Nighttime,” “Philadelphia, 1973,” “Puppies” and “Naptime,” she achieves a clear, lucid vision of a world below the everyday one, a world she opens up to our eyes. This is a wonderful first book full of promise and compelling personal truth.
–Gail Entrekin, author of Rearrangement of the Invisible
In this collection, Ingrid Keriotis explores topics ranging from mother- and daughterhood to teacher, wife, traveler, and especially as a thinker in the wider world, and her poems take the reader to the most tender and sometimes achingly raw parts of the female experience. The poems offer up a world in which we are all a part of the difficult terrain. In her poem “Winter Night,” Keriotis writes, “Your own complicity comes to you/as dawn does—/arriving from so far away to stretch itself/across the tips of your eyelashes.” The world of these poems is not always an easy place, but it is a place where readers can find their own footing and where the beauty of these understated and deeply personal poems becomes quietly and complicitly universal.
–Gillian Wegener, This Sweet Haphazard (Sixteen Rivers Press, 2017)
RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY
PREORDER SHIPS MARCH 22, 2019
https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/it-started-with-the-wild-horses-by-ingrid-keriotis/
#poetry
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