Poetry Books


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Poetry Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Poetry
Shedding Light from My Journeys
Published in Paperback by Lit Noire Publishing (2002-04)
Author: DuEwa M. Frazier
List price: $12.00
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Average review score:

colorful and interesting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-01
I love "The journeys" it takes my mind, heart, and soul through. Her "voice" has colorful and interesting shadows in it, and I'm still swimming in the "Rivers."

Very Deep
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-01
I thoroughly enjoy the poems, particularly "A Nu Love Space Demand" & "Letter to Your Proposition". I also thought "Out of my Queen Self" was very deep and showed a unique literary prowess not seen in a long time.

Passion Through Poetry
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-17
"Shedding Light from My Journeys" is a book which gives passionate feeling to the reader. Through the reading I was deeply moved by many of the poems. Especially by the poem titled "Journeys" which is a reality everyone can relate to.

Reviewed by Tanya Bates for C&B Books -I was inspired! Bravo!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-28
Shedding Light From My Journeys is an intimate look into the mind of this gifted young poetess. Powerful words of wisdom come spilling off of the pages. After each poem, the reader is left with something to think about. Frazier has given the reader encouragement, chastisement, empowerment and the strength to try again another day.

Frazier speaks about this era, but the reader can tell that there has been influence from eras past. Shedding Light From My Journeys is a contemporary, yet nostalgic look at who we are as a people. This collection reminds of our past and the irony of continued mistakes in our future.

Life is a Journey
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-24
SHEDDING LIGHT FROM MY JOURNEYS is exactly what DuEwa M. Frazier does with this extraordinary book of poetry. The book is divided into five sections, each of which takes the reader through various life experiences. The sections, "Journeys of Love," "Journeys of Self," "Journeys of My Sisters," "Journeys of My Brothers," and "The Epic Journeys," each contain poems that relate to the experiences of everyday life. Although all the poetry is intriguing, my favorites include, "Letter To Your Proposition," "No Yells Girl," and "MCs-No More Video."

This is an excellent book of poetry that has a little something for everyone. The poems depict life today and also have a somewhat historical perspective so that the reader sees the past, the present, and hopes for the future. I look forward to reading future works from this author, including her upcoming play Me and Zora.

Poetry
Sheltering Thoughts: About Loss and Grief
Published in Paperback by Tate (2005-06-07)
Author: Sharon Gilchrest O'Neill
List price: $10.95
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Average review score:

Worth reading!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-08
Sharon Gilchrest O'Neill has assembled a collection of thoughts, quotations, and short exercises about grieving, inspired by work with the Connecticut Hospice, Inc. Each page contains a single thought or quotation, or a chance to express the reader's own thoughts or feelings about a particular topic. The book is divided into sections like Memories, Treasured Possessions, Happiness...Sadness, but it's sometimes unclear how the pages in each section relate to the section topic.

What struck me most about the book was that it would offer someone mired in the chaos of grief short bursts of thought, not requiring sustained reading or focused attention. For someone looking for a narrative thread, or a unifying philosophy, this book is not the place to look. I couldn't help but contrast it with Joan Didion's Year of Magical Thinking, a treatise on Didion's own process of grief, of working through the stages of feeling, thought, and emotion.

O'Neill's book, in contrast to Didion's treatise-like work, gives us bursts of thought, short quotations, and the chance to jot down a few of our own thoughts. About the quotations: I am often disconcerted by quotations in a book like this, where people are quoted out of context, and the reader is given nothing to put the quotation in context. Sometimes the quote is from someone familiar, like Carl Jung or Sinclair Lewis. We may not all be familiar with Jung's or Lewis' work, but we have something of a framework in which to place them. We can find their writings, read their novels. But, who is John Gray, and how does he relate to the experience of grief?

The writings of the author seem to be designed to provoke movement in grief, to give the grieving person a different perspective, a way to begin to think about how life has changed, and will change more.

Armchair Interviews says: For someone who needs some inspiration, a sense that they are not alone in this experience, and a way to find brief, accessible musings on grief, this book could be very helpful.







A wonderful way to comfort others (and ourselves)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
This book is a wonderful tool for those of us who are "challenged" when it comes to providing emotional support to others at a time of loss and desire to do more than give/send garden variety bereavement cards. Because the book is spiritually uplifting rather than oriented towards religious beliefs and teachings, it is appropriate for giving to everyone from business associates to close friends and loved ones. A nice touch is a page near the beginning of the book where the sender can dedicate the book to an individual's memory.

Thank you for the comforting thoughts
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-03
I wish I had a copy of "Sheltering Thoughts" to read after my dad died. His sudden passing was confusing and numbing to me and all of my family.

I now keep this collection of inspirational thoughts close at hand. Its passages continue to give me a great deal of comfort whenever I'm missing Dad.

This book is my first recommendation to anyone experiencing the deep feelings of grief and loss.

Highly recommended by Allbooks Reviews
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
Genre: Grief/Inspiration
Title: Sheltering Thoughts
AUTHOR: Sharon Gilchrest O'Neill
For life and death are one,
Even as the river and the sea are one.
Kahil Gibran

Losing a loved one is part of life but a most difficult and emotional time for all of us.
Sharon Gilchrest O'Neill has experienced grief both personally and professionally. As a psychotherapist and consultant, she joined the caring group of professionals that founded the first freestanding hospice in the United States. This book is the result of years of professional experiences with those that have passed on and those that were left behind.

Sheltering Thoughts is the ideal little book for someone who has recently experienced the loss of a loved one. Although a sympathy card is appreciated, this book will help them deal with their grief in a positive way. Each page is filled with inspiration, encouragement and support. The rhythmic poetry and lyricism make this book an enjoyable read in a difficult time. Famous quotes add interest and retrospect to the message.

Filled with heartfelt emotion and a depth of understanding that only one who has worked with the grief stricken could have, Sheltering Thoughts is well written and well presented in 147 pages. The book is small enough to keep in a purse or pocket enabling it to become a comforting traveling companion. A portion of the proceeds will benefit hospice work.

Recommended by Reviewer: Shirley Roe, Allbooks Reviews.


Title: Sheltering Thoughts
Author: Sharon Gilchrest O'Neill
Publisher: Tate Pub.
ISBN: 1-9332904-3-9
Pages: 147
Price: $10.95 Feb. 2006

Finally, something for funerals!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-20
Like most `Baby Boomers', I find myself at more funerals than weddings lately, so (following the suggestion of an earlier reviewer) I have started keeping a couple of copies of Sheltering Thoughts on hand and at the ready. I never know what to say at funerals (what can you say?), so I simply give this gift book filled with words of comfort, support and peace. The author's hospice and family therapist experiences and sensitivities are evident in her tasteful assembly of sayings, poems, and lyrics and in her own personal comments as well. When I read it myself, I found it to be a very moving read that stimulated a surprisingly peaceful contemplation of my own mortality.

One of the things I like most about this book is the feedback I get from the recipients. Different people are comforted by, and hence remember, different passages but the book seems to be appropriate for anyone regardless of their religious beliefs (or non-beliefs), and in that delicate regard this book is a safe and universal gift.

The appreciation from recipients (three so far) has been heart-felt and they said that they too will give it as a gift when the situation arises. It appears that Sheltering Thoughts fills a void not addressed by the traditional bereavement approaches. It is more distinctive, intimate and lasting than a card or flowers, and it is easy to mail when I cannot attend personally. It was written just in time for my generation.

Poetry
A Short History of the Shadow: Poems
Published in Hardcover by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2002-04-07)
Author: Charles Wright
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More Greater Romantic Lyrics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-26
At the beginning of this collection, Charles Wright or his persona looks around his study and wonders "where to begin again?" Well he might ask. In his previous three books Wright compiled one of the most comprehensive long sequences since the Cantos, a massive work he calls the Appalachian Book of the Dead, though it has not yet been published under that title. A Short History of the Shadow, retaining the casually associative open-ended structure of the three preceding collections, concentrates on short poems that may be described as modern pastoral elegy informed by the cross-genre imperative M. H. Abrams has called the "Greater Romantic Lyric," a freely associative first-person meditation rooted in a particularized setting. Coleridge's "Frost at Midnight" and Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" epitomize the form; and Wright, their successor, is the most persistently Romantic of postmodern poets in his transcendentalism, courtship of the spirit of nature, and assertion of the primacy of imagination in the face of phenomena. He filters Coleridge through his love of ancient Chinese poetry, especially as recreated in the work of James Wright, giving his poetry a luxuriantly multicultural overtone. This new collection seems an extension of the material and methods of the Appalachian poems. It is not clear to me why it shouldn't form part of that sequence, since although its poems stand firmly on their own that's also true of those in Appalachia, Black Zodiac, and Chickamauga.

Wright's Mastery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-27
This book isn't Wright's best, and pales a little after the volumes collected in Negative Blue. That it's still very, very good--perhaps the best book from any of the older generation SINCE Negative Blue--is a testament to Wright's power. I reccomend this book highly, but don't fail to read the rest of his books.

compelling
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-07
The sounds of this poetry are amazing. The music is unbound & sprawling. Wholly modern. Of all the Pulitzer Prize winners, Charles Wright is one of my favorites. This poetry is very idiosyncratic.

Full of wonder shared with human frailty
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-02
Chales Wright is an amazingly fine poet. How he is able to look and see things we fastscan everyday and in a mere few phrases turn that blink into quiet monument remains a wonder to all who read him. Read? No, luxuirate. Wright's strange friendship with death introduces us to dark rooms, hand held in his lighted clasp, and gives meaning to all the mysteries nature giggles about in the corner. He is able to pluck the most mundane of ideas and place them in a land of myth and history and encourages us to think? Yes. But also he encourages just to read his poems again and again..........along with the poems of others, he adds, smilingly. Continuingly recommended.

the latest from the master
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-23
"Every true poem is a spark,/and aspires to the condition of the original fire..." (from "Body and Soul II").

In this, Wright's fifteenth volume, the language--urgent and palpable--spills off the page like a shower of sparks. Not since Yeats has a master poet in our language seemed poised to enter such a rich and important later phase. Wright is unquestionably the top dog of our poetry, and in this book his fire shows no sign of dimming.

Personally I think that ths book (and fourteen others) are a must-read for anybody interested in what the English language is capable of.

Poetry
The singer of tales
Published in Unknown Binding by Atheneum (1965)
Author: Albert Bates Lord
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Used price: $5.50

Average review score:

needs no introduction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-25
This is a 40th anniversary reissue of *the* book about the search for the living Homer in then-Yugoslavia organized by Milman Parry and his assistant and successor Albert Lord in the 1930s. Anyone interested in Homer or Balkan traditional epic should know the book. The DVD contains wonderful material that is also available online, so there's no need to replace your older edition.

Essential, But Not Conclusive Reading
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-20
Any student of traditional literary forms needs to read this book, which analyzes in considerable detail the 30 odd years of research done by Lord and Parry into oral epic in Yugoslavia. It is generally more applicable to Homer than to the Bible, but "The Singer of Tales" at least provides a starting point for discussion on aspects of oral tradition and the use of formulas. It can't be ignored!

Ian Myles Slater on: The Original Package
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-05
Albert B. Lord's "Singer of Tales" was published in 1960, as Number 24 of the "Harvard Studies in Comparative Literature," and was picked up in paperback by Atheneum only a few years later (1965). Over the course of four decades, and a variety of reprintings, "The Singer of Tales" has established itself as probably the most widely read book in the monograph series, and the most controversial. It is certainly the best known of its author's books and articles.

"The Singer of Tales" is established as a fundamental work in the study of oral literatures, and literatures which appear to have emerged from oral traditions (Biblical, Old English, African, and others). The book presented to English-language readers studies of oral heroic poetry collected in the Balkans in the twentieth century, analyzed their technique, and compared them in detail to the Homeric poems, and, to a lesser extent, medieval European works with similar traits. Homer's repeated phrases and verses were shown to be explainable as a technical device to assist the rapid composition of poems as they were recited, not a sign of scribal corruption or sloppy editing of independent short songs. The comparisons were not new - French scholars had called attention to the nineteenth-century collections of Balkan heroic songs -- but were presented in a coherent and even attractive package, and included additional material from Lord's own fieldwork.

The heart of the book, however, was the work of Lord's teacher, Milman Parry, who had died in 1935 leaving a seven-page draft of his projected synthesis. Parry's works had not had a great reception from English and American classicists (a major study was then available only in French), but the basic ideas had filtered into classical studies in an unsystematic way. In "A Preface to Paradise Lost" (1942) C. S. Lewis even formulated an "audience-theory" variant of "oral formulaic composition," explaining how it helped listeners as well as the reciter-composers. With Lord's presentation, however, a fairly esoteric theory became a part of the intellectual world of literary scholarship.

A Second Edition of "The Singer of Tales" appeared in 2000. It reprints the existing text unchanged, but includes a useful new introduction, describing the history and reception of the work, with extensive bibliography. It also includes a CD with reproductions of the original audio recordings of the sections of songs quoted in the text; those with the right PC or Mac hardware and software can also access visual material, including a short filmstrip of one of the traditional singers, and other interesting extras. Those not interested in these additions may prefer earlier printings. Harvard University is also making material available on-line; see my review of second edition for some details.

Ian Myles Slater on: So What's New?
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-05
Albert B. Lord's "Singer of Tales" was published in 1960, as Number 24 of the "Harvard Studies in Comparative Literature," and was picked up in paperback by Atheneum only a few years later (1965). It is probably the most widely read book in the monograph series, and the most controversial. It is certainly the best known of its author's books and articles.

Over the course of four decades and a variety of reprintings, "The Singer of Tales" has established itself as a fundamental work in the study of oral literatures, and literatures which appear to have emerged from oral traditions (Biblical, Old English, and others). The book presented to English-language readers studies of oral heroic poetry collected in the Balkans in the twentieth century, analyzed their technique, and compared them in detail to the Homeric poems, and, to a lesser extent, medieval European works with similar traits. Homer's repeated phrases and verses were shown to be explainable as a technical device to assist the rapid composition of poems as they were recited, not a sign of scribal corruption or sloppy editing of independent short songs. The comparisons were not new, but were presented in a coherent and even attractive package, and included additional material from Lord's own fieldwork.

The heart of the book, however, was the work of Lord's teacher, Milman Parry, who had died in 1935 leaving a seven-page draft of his projected synthesis. Parry's works had not a great reception from English and American classicists (a major study was published in French), but the basic ideas had filtered into classical studies in an unsystematic way. In "A Preface to Paradise Lost" (1942) C.S. Lewis even formulated an "audience-theory" variant of "oral formulaic composition," explaining how it helped listeners as well as reciters. With Lord's presentation, however, a fairly esoteric theory became a part of the intellectual world of literary scholarship.

A Second Edition of "The Singer of Tales" appeared in 2000. Serious students of Classical, Medieval, and several other literatures who do not already own a copy, and want (or need) one, will probably buy this edition; it is what is readily available. It reprints Lord's text without change (and rather more clearly than some copies I have seen!), so identifying references in early discussions of the book will not be a problem.

What about those of us who have a copy, or have just read the book several times? Is the Second Edition worth our time and money?

The differences from the first edition and its various reprintings are two.

First, there is an "Introduction to the Second Edition" by Stephen Mitchell and Gregory Nagy, distinguished scholars of Germanic and Greek literature (respectively). It surveys the history of the book, its reception, a variety of responses, and the development of Lord's thoughts on the issues it raises, and concludes with a six-page bibliography (in rather small print). The coverage is pro-Lord (not unexpectedly), but so far as I can see includes the most impressive of his critics. This is useful, and the execution is excellent, but the needs of the student can probably be met by consulting it in a library. Inevitably, as a review of current scholarship, it will be dated more quickly than the rest of the book.

Second, the volume comes with an Audio and Video CD. This contains actual recordings, made in the field by Parry or Lord, of Serbian traditional singers. The audio tracks are accessible on a CD player (or DVD player). For those with an appropriately powerful PC or Mac, it is possible to see the texts and translations as the singer performs. The passages chosen are those given in the text of the book, and are a minute fraction of the audio archive and published transcripts, but they bring the descriptions to life. The sound quality is that of the actual recordings, and has not been "cleaned up" or otherwise enhanced. For those with the right software, it is also possible to see an actual short film of a traditional singer performing, and Bela Bartok's attempts to transcribe some of the music. Assuming that changing technologies (see below) do not make it inaccessible, this should retain its value indefinitely.

(Or until the entire archive, with transcriptions and translations, miraculously shows up on DVD. Meanwhile, a substantial selection of material from the Milman Parry and Albert B. Lord collections, including more Bartok manuscripts and his public letter on the value of the collection, a collection of photographs, and the filmstrip, has been made available online by Harvard University, on a site dedicated to Oral Literature Studies and the Milman Parry Collection; additional material is promised.)

So, if it fits your budget (and the price is quite reasonable, despite my sticker-shock when I remember what I had paid for a copy in 1968), go ahead; just make sure that you are getting the second edition, with CD, not a copy of the first edition.

Note: On the Macintosh side, I have run the CD successfully on an early PowerMac using System 7.5.5, although the "film strip" (which needs a slightly later version of QuickTime) was, predictably, not accessible; completely successfully on a G3 under System 9.2; and again, on a G4 with System 10.2.7 (and later 10.2.8), which needed to open the "Classic" System 9 emulator to display the visual material. The "Classic" mode is supposed to be phased out over time, so problems of obsolence may already be closing in. A report on Windows issues would be useful.

Essential reading in oral tradition
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-10
A great book which changed the way we look at poetry produced by an oral tradition. Based on fieldwork by Milman Parry Lord shows the structure behind the improvisation and applies the theory to Serbo Croation epic tradition, Homer and French medieval poetry.

Poetry
A Singer Without a Song
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2006-04-03)
Author: Anthony Deige
List price: $14.95
New price: $24.26

Average review score:

A Singer Without a Song by Anthony Deige
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-27
a singer without a song is a must read. it makes you want to keep turning the pages. great work anthony

This one can be summed up in one word - Magnificent.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-13
Refined and intellectual, the poetry in this book is moving and emotional. I find its pages seem to turn on its own, it is captivating in ways rare and magnificent. It is beautifully written and well worth the money to own this book, if you're looking for an inspirational book or simply something to spark a thought process in your head, this one is definitely for you.

boyfriend material poem
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-01
the boyfriend material poem is sooo true n soo great i think this poet has a lot of talent and if ur into realistic writtin that touches the heart u should definitely read this poem n book!!

read this book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-27
this had to be one of my favorite books, i love it, i think im going to read it a third time!!!!

As if i was there
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-26
I attended one of his readings of his book at my local cafe. he was quite captivating with his spoken word, so much expression... anyway after his session, he had some copies of his book for sale and i figured why not and get his autograph also? what a great guy.

i read some more of the book later that night and it felt like he was standing in front of me. i understood every line of his well crafted prose and understood every feeling he was conveying. Quite the up and coming author!

Poetry
Sleepytime Rhyme
Published in Hardcover by Greenwillow (1999-08-26)
Author:
List price: $17.99
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Classic bedtime story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
This book is a classic. All of my grandchildren have loved it. It should be on your bookshelf next to Good Night Moon.

Cannot say enough..
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-01
One cannot say enough about how wonderful
Remy Charlip's books are. This book would
make a wonderful "first book" for any child,
boy or girl, to have. They are filled with simple
yet warming verse and amazing pictures.
Enjoy!!!

Sweet Baby Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
Wonderful gift for parents of a newborn (though even some children up to 5 or 6 years old will like to hear how much they are loved - but some this age will be put off by the baby-ish-ness of it). Simple pictures of a mom and baby hugging each other. Other pairs of objects hug, too - such as cloud moms and babies, etc. Lovely rhyme about how much a parent (pictures are of a woman) loves their child.

Wonderful story, well loved illustrations!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-03
My 19 month old daughter loves this book, and brings it to me every night. The illustrations are fun for her to look at, and the text has us snuggling close throughout. A must for any parent who loves to hug and kiss their child!

Beautiful and loving
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-28
The illustrations in this book are really gorgeous and the rhyme is simple and sweet. I really like the way it goes through the different parts of the baby that the mother loves. As my daughter gets older, it will be fun to make a game of naming off her body parts as we read through the rhyme. This is a nice book for parents to read to their new babies, but I think toddlers will really enjoy it too.

Poetry
Soft Touches of Harmony From a Heartfelt Moon
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2006-05-08)
Author: Mickey Pig Knuckles
List price: $17.95
New price: $17.95
Used price: $19.34

Average review score:

Marvelous Muse
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
I saw this book and was completely drawn in by the Author's name of Mickey Pig Knuckles. I became indulged by the beautiful creative spectacle of how this Author so cleverly captivated the cover design and the title of, "Soft Touches of Harmony From A Heartfelt Moon" into such a beautiful form of oneness. This comtemporary poet is sensational with heartfelt passion bursting from the pages of this finely crafted book. A must have most popular addition to anyones night stand and/or library.

Mickey Pig Knuckles is a Genius of modern contemporary poetry
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-07
I originally bought this book titled Soft Touches of Harmony from a Heartfelt Moon by Mickey Pig Knuckles because it contains two of my favorite works- A Picture Of Us and Kiss You And Whisper. I have since found all of Mickey Pig Knuckles poems now my favorites. His work hits to the core of human emotional nature, what we feel about love, when it happens, and when we lose it. Each poem expresses a natural beauty, sadness and joy, all mixed together, much like real human living emotions. If you do not have this book you are missing an important element of living reality through his talented gift of literature.

Emotionally Touching
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-19
My name is Casandra and I teach Literature in college. I want you to know I thoroughly relish your book of poetry titled, Soft Touches Of Harmony From A Heartfelt Moon by Mickey Pig Knuckles. The composed arrangements by you as the author create an emotional atmosphere of harmony shared between you and your readers. This book is sensational and now I will close by saying this book is a must have for all lovers of poetry.

An Eloquent Author
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-03
Laurie Masters. Executive
This author known as Mickey Pig Knuckles is someone I had never read of before a few weeks ago. After just two or three readings of his work, I was and am now hooked for life. Nothing radiates quite as beautiful as his heartfelt collection in his book titled Soft Touches of Harmony from a Heartfelt Moon. His truth to be told masterfully, emotional love uncovered to be deeply felt by all, and raw emotion shot right at you his readers. Emotions will have no choice but to be wrought from his work. I was completely oblivious to this poetic man. But now, after having read what I consider his best, I look forward to further books by him. I can't help but accept him as one of the greatest poets of ALL time! You need to have this book!

Author Introduction
Helpful Votes: 28 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-10
I introduce myself as a world-renowned poet with many poems published in various books along with my own. I was born in Springfield Illinois and family moved to Colorado at the young age of three. I love living in the Rocky Mountains and really love the natural setting of Colorado. I have been an active writer of short stories for many years when I found a very special girl who found and brought out this beautiful gift of poetry within me to be shared with the world. I have two brothers, one step brother, and one sister with many nephews and nieces.

I have always been in tune with my emotional being. Many say I am sensative to life's ups and downs. Each day is a new beginning and should be lived to the fullest. One should always strive to make the best of life; We are only given one life to live. I strive to reach out to the world and share my passion for poetry in hopes of enkindling warm smiles. There is nothing more inspiring than daily life; Life is poetry in motion, great poets reflect emotion. I write on a variety of topics, so there is something for everyone to savor. I hope you enjoy my creative writing style as my poetry flows from my heart to yours.

" Through My Words"
Hey, is that you? Is that you looking at me? I feel you sitting there
Hey, I feel you, I feel you looking at me, reading my words as you stare
I am a famous poet, have you read my works? Do you know me?
I paint with words of art, making them come to life, for you to see
I reach out, Through My Words, so you will know me
I can reach deeply, inside of you, and really touch your soul
Causing a fondness, just for me, as our friendship will grow
Come travel with me, we'll be together, a brief journey of our life
I will comfort you, and for a moment, I will remove your strife
Through My Words, within your minds eye, a vision of your dreams
A real life experience, written for you, better than it seems
For a brief moment, I share with you, would be really great
Together we will, erase this thing, that we all call hate
For a brief moment, together we can, make a better place
When we come back, you will feel, a smile on your face
Sometimes you read, you just might hear, my poet speaking voice
Touching you, Through my Words, gives me total rejoice
I am here, looking at you, while you are sitting there
Through My Words, that you read, as you sit and stare!!!!!

Poetry
Song of the Simple Truth: The Complete Poems of Julia de Burgos
Published in Paperback by Curbstone Press (1995-11-01)
Author: Julia de Burgos
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Julia's Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-12
I bought this as a gift for a couple that loves poetry, but one is fluent in English and the other person in Spanish. Needleless to say, they loved it! It has a very complete collection of Julia de Burgos poetry and the translations are true to the meaning in Spanish.

Song of the simple truth
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
This volume was ok. I did not like the fact that the editor/translator failed to include the original publication year of the poems and the name of the original book that the poems came from. Other than that, it is a very extensive collection of poems by Julia de Burgos.

The passion and politics of a Puerto Rican legend
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-29
"Song of the Simple Truth: The Complete Poems of Julia de Burgos" is a landmark volume for Puerto Rican studies. This book brings together all 203 known poems by de Burgos, who was born in Puerto Rico in 1914 and died in New York City in 1953. This is a bilingual edition, with the author's Spanish poems paired with the English translations by Jack Agueros. Agueros also compiled this volume, and wrote a fascinating introduction.

De Burgos writes about politics, nature, inner emotions, and the poet's vocation. She often advocates Puerto Rican independence, but her political ideas also encompass a vision that is pan-American, and even global. She pays tribute to a number of iconic figures from Latin American culture: Pedro Albizu Campos, Jose Marti, Simon Bolivar, and Jose de Diego.

Much of her work has a surreal, hypnotic quality. She often uses startling, Daliesque language that is rich in images from the natural world. Her love poetry ranges from the melancholy to the ecstatic. Her voice is often paradoxical, often mystical--at times she reminds me of Emily Dickinson. One of my favorite romantic lines comes from poem #63, "Inward Song": "Don't remember me! Feel me! / A nightingale has us in his throat."

In poem #71, "My Road Is Space," de Burgos writes, "I am the dancing imbalance of the stars." This is a good image to apply to her poetry: celestial, joyous, with its own inner logic. All who love Latin American literature or 20th century poetry should explore the bountiful "Song" of Julia de Burgos.

REVIEW QUOTES
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-14
"...The translated poems stand tall as de Burgos herself." --Publishers Weekly

"Perhaps this is an omen, for as we stand on the eve of one hundred years of the United States' colonial relationship with the island of Puerto Rico, perhaps the publication of this book is a symbolic representation of Puerto Rican authenticity and a sign of how seriously it must be taken." --American Book Review

"Julia de Burgos (1914-1953) is considered Puerto Rico's greatest female poet... Seductive in their raw emotional honesty her poems define and make concrete the spongy category of love poetry...Here, poetry is the poet incarnate: defiant, proud, a 'nude of restlessness.'" --Harvard Review

Mesmerizing and Powerful Words to Stir the Mind and Soul
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-28
Julia de Burgos is probably Latin America's greatest female poet. Although she never gained the mass media attention Gabriela Mistral gained after winning the Nobel Prize in Literature, de Burgos' work is eternally mesmerizing. Here is a woman who led an unhappy life searching for love, only to find heartbreak most of the times. A protege of Neruda's, de Burgos' political activisim in supporting various causes (including criticism of the Franco regime in Spain and Trujillo regime in the Dominican Republic, in addition to her passionate support for independence for Puerto Rico) is clearly shown in her work. Her romaticism and her cultural reconnection can also be read in some of her poems. The one that realy captivated me was Poem #37, "I Love You," which will cause the reader to grasp their chest with the emotion she has poured in letting the love of her life know how much he moved her world.

Ms. De Burgos died a tragic death in New York, however after it was discovered she had been buried on Hart Island (New York City's version of a potter's field) a movement to give her a proper and glorious funeral took place and although she left the island as an unknown schoolteacher, she returned a national hero. Her glorious return to Puerto Rico was well deserving. I can tell you that reading this book brought me to tears. The great thing is that the entire book is a bilingual edition, which will allow both English & Spanish-language readers to discover one of the greatest poets of the 20th century.

A must have for readers of poerty, Latin American literature, and Spanish students. I also recommend it for those who love Neruda. Best book of poetry I ever read!

Poetry
Sonnets from the Portuguese
Published in Hardcover by Peter Pauper Pr (1989-06)
Author: Elizabeth Barrett Browning
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Average review score:

The Pillow Talk of a Great Mind
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
In my own opinion, Elizabeth Barrett Browning at her best and most seductive; lie there reading them in bed and let them ravish you! To read them, so intimately sweet as they seem, is almost to feel EBB herself there, her small form snuggling happily in your arms. Of course nobody would have known better than EBB herself what dulcet love songs these sonnets were, since she had never intended them for publication. They were secret, often quite confessional, love poems she wrote about her Robert while he was courting her, all unawares, and then for awhile after their marriage, in which they continued carrying on as two of recorded history's most passionate lovebirds.

It was only after Robert Browning somehow discovered and read them that he managed to convince EBB that they were really too good not to be published. He was right, of course. Even so, Elizabeth was sensitive enough about the matter to want to screen the work off under a somewhat misdirecting title. SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGESE might hope to create a casual impression that they were foreign translations of some mysterious sort ... which, of course, obviously they aren't, but who's philologically analysing; read and enjoy!

In fact, the name settled on was a mere lover's in-joke. Because of her somewhat exotic looks and olive-colored skin, Browning's pet name for EBB, other than the baby-talk "Ba," was "my Portugese;" hence the title. The collection was tremendously successful and deservedly so, and this edition of it, gorgeously illustrated, is very nice indeed.

The truest, most endearing love
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-15
Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote these sonnets for her husband and fellow poet Robert Browning. She is capable to move and haunt without saccharine kitsch & schmalz. Her sincerity and intensity are an example to everyone who wants to write poetry or song lyrics. Two thumbs up!

Wonderful and moving
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-20
This book of sonnets and poems is just wonderful. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's writing is able to get to the very heart of the reader with honesty and beauty. This collection really speaks to the romantic soul with passion and truth. I find her writings to be incredibly moving and this volume touched me deeply.

Sonnets from the portuguese
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-06
These sonnets ease my tension when I read them.

Poems of Love
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
My ex girlfriend, Ashleigh, gave this to me years ago, before she was forced by her family to marry this guy. Long story but she sent this book to me and signed the inside.
Next to Shakespeare, this is the most bittersweet and poetic
poems of love that I have ever read.
It was said that a husband and wife team wrote these so one can only imagine how passionate their marriage was, huh?

Poetry
Source
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (2001-12-01)
Author: Mark Doty
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Elegance! Compassion! A Real Pleasure!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-04
Mark Doty in his latest collection of poems, continues to delight and entertain us with his brilliant style of writing that is elegant, compassionate, and unabashedly, and proudly gay. These poems are of a universal language, speaking to all sexual orientations, for they are not all gay themed verses. Doty's poems are always a real pleasure to read for they speak from the heart on subjects that are important and of interest to many of us who share his same ideals, thoughts, and feelings. I have always been a fan of his poems for that reason. As he describes the degradation of Walt Whitman's vision of a democratic America in "Letter to Walt Whitman", or of the joy and entertainment that "Little Kaiser" brings to so many people in "Private Life", I can not help but smile at the joy he sees and experiences in trying to get close to Whitman, and in exploring the inner thoughts of "Little Kaiser". I have to admit I am a little prejudiced toward these two lovely poems, for each has references to companion parrots. I loved the poem, "Letter to Walt Whitman" that Doty wrote after touring Whitman's home in Camden. He was trying to find something there that would make Whitman seem more real and still alive. He did when he discovered Whitman's parrot preserved by the taxidermist's wax, and wrote, "Then one thing made you seem alive: your parrot." And in "Private Life" we learn all about "Little Kaiser" the African Grey parrot, who has been a fixture for many years at the local headshop on Commercial Street in Provincetown. Doty has a way of describing all life beings with the beauty they so rightly deserve.

This sixth book of verse by Mark Doty is one I will be returning to many, many times. The poems in this collection cover a wide variety of subjects, and this creates an opportunity for everyone to find one of interest to them that will definitely become a favorite. The several poems he writes about Provincetown, a town I have come to care about and call a second home over the past quarter century, are my favorites. Doty seems to have the same feelings for this special place that I have. It is the beauty of his words that keep me looking forward to and eagerly awaiting his next collection of poems. A Real Pleasure!!

Joe Hanssen

"Private Life" much more than it seems
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
I typically don't raise issue with others' reviews. After all, most have been taught that a poem can have many interpretations. Yet to think of "Private Life" as a compassionate description of a beautiful caged creature is missing the point entirely, I think. In the first stanza, the speaker describes Little Kaiser (a caged parrot in a popular tourist destination) as being "confronted" by the noisy hecklers and insensitive tourists who pass him every day, acknowledging, "He doesn't seem to mind," the operative word there being "seem." Two stanzas later, we learn that his cage carries the warning, "I bite." [Obviously, he does mind.]

Then the speaker passively suggests, "He couldn't be said to be/lonely; all day the world comes to him." How could anyone who gets so much attention be lonely? When the speaker then describes the pedestrians as an "endless procession of faces, only a few of them known," the parrot takes on a much more human quality, and that's where the parrot turns into a metaphorical vehicle to describe the human condition in general, but a gay man's condition quite specifically. This metaphor gathers momentum in the last 5 or 6 stanzas, describing his tail as "stunning red,/a frank indulgence of the private life." [wink, nudge]

When the speaker shifts focus from the subject to the speaker ("What does Kaiser dream?"), (s)he develops a more philosophical posture rather than the one of the passive journalist from the beginning of the poem. First we are asked to imagine what Kaiser's not dreaming ("Probably no original paradise;/this little trooper was born in a shop."), invoking of course the story of the heterosexual, biblical Creation, of which we gay men obviously don't have an equivalent. Rather, we have been asked to acquire a gay culture that we're repeatedly relegated to and blindly accept.

The speaker then asks, "should he prefer a single,/perfect other?"...pointing to the cultural stereotype (accepted by gays and straights alike) of the idea that gay men are promiscuous and not easily tied down: "one human form/after another bent over him/in momentary delight, while he takes//their measure, and mouths a limited vocabulary, all greeting and praise." But that's enough communication for our parrot/gay man, the speaker's last description giving it to us most plainly just in case we missed it already: "promiscuous singer, whose tongue/lifts and curls out to the world, performing/all night in his blanketed cage."

Doty has dealt with similar subjects before, lamenting over such gay conundrums as the "austere code of tricks" or that "we are all on display in this town, sweet machines, powerless, consumed." But with "Private Life," [even the title suggests you look beyond the parrot, as Doty's title has] he's turned the sensitive, curious descriptions of a gay man at odds with his own "culture" in addition to the world itself into a more honest, indeed, unflinching, look at the way we move and process and feel...or (unfortunately) do none of these things.

A beautiful poetry collection
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-12
Doty's sixth book of poetry shows his elegant and strong style while exploring both public and private life. These poems luxuriate on the tongue and in the mind, and boldly paint vivid images in the readers' minds. Winner of a Lambda Literary Award for poetry, "Source" is a delightful example of Doty's works.

Revolutionary!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-14
I don't mean to sound cranky, but I'm tired of hearing the words "beautiful" and "moving" in relationship to the work of Mark Doty. Of course his poems are these things, but they're much, much more. They're rigorous in their thinking; they're relentless in their questions about perception and mortality, and revolutionary in their evocation of a social and metaphysical vision. This is a poetry of ideas. It's a poetry that rolls up its sleeves and takes its reader gently--but FIRMLY--down "into the source of spring."

From the Source...
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-17
Mark Doty's, one of America's premiere poets, has done it again with his newest collection of literary gems, "Source".

Doty's poems cover a range of topics, from dead wildlife to working out, all exude a personal flair that enlightens and illuminates our existance while sharing his. His poetry both confounds and inspires; you read and question the meaning, and then, find a diamond mine of a line you cannot let go, and mentally ponder the treasure. Some poets aggreviate by not allowing access into their lives or meaning with their work; Doty opens the door, doesn't shy away from honesty or complex thought, and allows us to wander through his charming maze of words.

As a reader of his work, it's nice to see him returning to old familiar themes, especially those that mention Wally, a heart's love who perished due to AIDS. While we may write and write about those songs that inspire us, perhaps there can be never enough said about some things, and Doty casts a beautiful literary light on those topics with each passing year.

Source is an excellent add to your poetry collection.


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