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

Poetry
Collected Poems
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus Giroux (1997-02)
Author: Robert Lowell
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Average review score:

collecxted poems of Robert Lowell
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
Not having read Robert Lowell's poems previously, I was delighted with their acessiblity and being a Boston area resident, I enjoyed their local references. I think I had hesitated to read another "confessional" poet having had my fill of Plath, but Lowell is very different and poem after poem pleased me.

A great collected poems
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
A great collected poems by one of America's masterful minor poets. Much to see and enjoy. Great for any poet who wishes to apprentice himself to someone with a subtle and sophistaced understanding of the English language and a wide and nuanced emotional range. Sturdy hardback volume. Will last an entire lifetime.







A Masterful Collection (and very well-edited)
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-07
I believe that Lowell's work is best viewed through this expansive collection. No single book of his poetry truly captures the full breadth of his literary accomplishments. Of course, if you're only looking for an introduction to his work, Life Studies or For the Union Dead would probably do.

But if you really want to understand the full scope of his talent, then this book is indispensable. I would even go so far as to say that this book will probably cement Lowell's place among America's finest poets in years to come.

A Tribute, Not a Review
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
I studied with Robert Lowell at Harvard in 1963 & 1964. I wouldn't presume to review his Collected Poems, only to testify that he was a giant of a human -- witty, sensitive even toward brash young would-be poets, immensely knowledgeable, immensely conscientious. Having known him remains one of the great privileges of my life. Reading his poems is a great privilege for all of us.

In His Exasperating Wholeness
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-07
The publication of this book was doubtless necessary to begin understanding Lowell correctly. Creator and destroyer, careful wordsmith and subversive deconstructor, encountering just one of his volumes along the strange parabola of his career can be confusing. Lowell always set out to carefully craft each of them, with special attention to the arrangement of his resonant poems and their slow, grand, building cumulative effect. To let you know the game, Lowell presented almost each of his volumes with an evocative frontpiece engraving by Francis Parkman -- the poet thus visually setting forth each of his works, in advance of his death, as another controlled chess move against the great opponent Fame -- the act of a control fanatic if there ever was one.

Yet somewhere in the middle of Lowell's career of creating the little volumes, more violently toward the end of his years as diseases took over, the mad Doppleganger Cal (Lowell's nickname to his insider pals) enters, seeds the serene clouds with fury, and all hell breaks loose. At worst, all is botched: mere beautiful poetic scraps, a line or two amongst literary gossip for insiders, yesterday's obnoxious news. In hindsight Cal indeed did a pretty good job; it is easier to just turn away from the mess. But Lowell is so good at his best, so earnest even in his madness, that we are going to miss something significant about our own history -- the subject which most deeply concerned him -- if we do. And finally, even at his worst, there is always something very endearing about this voice, something very human and honest. Lowell was plagued with true and furious organic disorders which disrupted his personality; his issues were not only self-inflicted. In an earlier age he would not have lived out the length of career he did; in significant ways, then, his voice is a truly new one on the block. Unfortunately for him, the hyped up madness of his period identified with his genuine madness and made a pathetic celebrity of him, which didn't help the brave and fragile personality struggling to make poetic sense of a disturbed time.

Bidart has picked up the pieces and presented Lowell as one, that's all, in all his exasperating wholeness. Now it is easier to see that Lowell and Cal were one, that the lasting work of worth emerges from their furious wrestling. Over time he was many kinds of a writer and a poet, and certainly not all of them will last. He left some absolute foolishness he only got away with because of his name and the looniness at large which seized on him about the same time it seized on Batman and Laugh-In -- junk like the plays in the Old Glory. But when you remember that this was a truly sick man and not just another boozed out writer, you wonder at the absolute clarity of the best work, and the occasional glimmers which never entirely disappeared. Doubtless much later, a generation free of the diseases we still to a degree share with this poet will make the appropriate selection. In the meantime, in a real sense, the record Bidart has compiled shows that the bell tolls for us, too.

Poetry
The Color Wheel (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction)
Published in Hardcover by The Johns Hopkins University Press (1994-10-01)
Author: Timothy Steele
List price: $30.00
New price: $54.95
Used price: $37.77

Average review score:

simple question
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-29
With poetry like this available, why do we continue to read Rita Dove and Billy Collins?

A RAINBOW OF DELIGHT FOR THE ERATIC(ERATO) SENSE
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-17
Quite simply one of the best poets writing today producing some of the finest work of rhyme that actually makes sense to heart and mind. Cogent and cajoling; humble and humourous;impassioned and yet not impulsive. If Richard Wilbur has an heir apparent to the great legacy of New Formalism, it would be hard to deny Timothy Steele a full reading of the will. College Prof. at Cal.State L.A., he makes sure his poetry is not steeped in musty,over-erudite academia. He's down in the streets of Southern California or under the Golden Gate Bridge or in a classroom or describing his wife after a shower or comfortable with Biblical metaphors. An example (not in the current volume, but on the internet-Poetry Daily): Toward the Winter Solstice (excerpt)

'Some wonder if the star of Bethlehem/Occurred when Jupiter and Saturn crossed;/It's comforting to look up from this roof/And feel that, while all changes, nothing's lost/To recollect that in antiquity/The winter solstice fell in Capricorn/And that, in the Orion Nebula,/From swirling gas, new stars are being born.'

A great New Year's resolution is to feed your poetic soul. Take and read anything by Richard Wilbur, Timothy Steele, Dana Gioia, and bon apetit!

solid collection from a solid poet
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-08
Tim Steele has already proven his strength as a poet, and has quite a reputation for his work in meter. This collection only solidifies his reputation. The poems are well written (and Steele does some interesting things with meter and rhyme). Anyone interested in formal poetry should read his work.

One of the Best and Most Neglected Poets of Our Time
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-07
Extending the range and depth of his two previous collections of poetry (available from the University of Arkansas Press as a single volume, SAPPHICS AND UNCERTAINTIES), THE COLOR WHEEL confidently establishes Steele not only as the premiere metrical poet of his generation, but also as one of the very best poets writing in English today.

THE COLOR WHEEL takes its title from one of the volume's central poems, "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Child," a witty and wise meditation that begins with a description of a small child coloring with crayons and segues smoothly into the poet's memory of first seeing a color wheel, a spectrum of choices not only for the budding artist, but also, on a metaphorical level, for the poet and reader. The poem ends with one of the most beautiful passages I've seen in recent poetry: "You're off and traveling through the wheel/Of contrasts and of complements,/Where every shade divides and blends,/Where you find those that you prefer,/Where being is not linear,/But bright and deep, and never ends."

This enticing invitation to choose freely from the world's variety extends to Steele's entire collection, which ranges from a mock-Stevensian anecdote about a sugar bowl to a sobering recollection of doomed Holsteins in "Georgics." The Horatian alcaics of "Luck," in which the poet confronts the good fortunes of others, complements the mildly brooding blank verse of "Pacific Rim," in which the poet hints at the luckless victims of 20th century brutality. Yet the tenor of the collection is decidedly hopeful, and perhaps no title (or poem) in the book better exemplifies this than the charming "Beatitudes, While Setting Out the Trash."

Steele's art, which frequently explores the interrelationships between nature and human nature, regards human consciousness as fragile and in need of preservation. His superb meditation on "The Library" draws upon and condenses some of the material to be found in his magisterial prose critique of the free verse movement, MISSING MEASURES, and yet the emphasis in this poem is on the wit of foraging squirrels as well as the cleverness of archiving humans.

The volume contains a number of exquisite lyrics, including the opening "Aurora" with its subtle echoes of Valery, and the delicate homage to Thom Gunn, "Vermont Spring." Readers who admire the poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson will certainly enjoy "Cory in April," a poem about a drunken homeless man who was once a boxer, and admirers of Frost will be tickled by the humorous and moving "Fae," one of the most memorable poems in Steele's outstanding ouevre.

With his flawless ear, deft rhymes, and penetrating intelligence, Steele is already a poet for the ages. Read THE COLOR WHEEL and SAPPHICS AND UNCERTAINTIES to discover why.

One of the Best and Most Neglected Poets of Our Time
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-11
Extending the range and depth of his two previous collections of poetry (available from the University of Arkansas Press as a single volume, SAPPHICS AND UNCERTAINTIES), THE COLOR WHEEL confidently establishes Steele not only as the premiere metrical poet of his generation, but also as one of the very best poets writing in English today.

THE COLOR WHEEL takes its title from one of the volume's central poems, "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Child," a witty and wise meditation that begins with a description of a small child coloring with crayons and segues smoothly into the poet's memory of first seeing a color wheel, a spectrum of choices not only for the budding artist, but also, on a metaphorical level, for the poet and reader. The poem ends with one of the most beautiful passages I've seen in recent poetry: "You're off and traveling through the wheel/Of contrasts and of complements,/Where every shade divides and blends,/Where you find those that you prefer,/Where being is not linear,/But bright and deep, and never ends."

This enticing invitation to choose freely from the world's variety extends to Steele's entire collection, which ranges from a mock-Stevensian anecdote about a sugar bowl to a sobering recollection of doomed Holsteins in "Georgics." The Horatian alcaics of "Luck," in which the poet confronts the good fortunes of others,complements the mildly brooding blank verse of "Pacific Rim," in which the poet hints at the luckless victims of 20th century brutality. Yet the tenor of the collection is decidedly hopeful, and perhaps no title (or poem) in the book better exemplifies this than the charming "Beatitudes, While Setting Out the Trash."

Steele's art, which frequently explores the interrelationships between nature and human nature, regards human consciousness as fragile and in need of preservation. His superb meditation on "The Library" draws upon and condenses some of the material to be found in his magisterial prose critique of the free verse movement, MISSING MEASURES, and yet the emphasis in this poem is on the wit of foraging squirrels as well as the cleverness of archiving humans.

The volume contains a number of exquisite lyrics, including the opening "Aurora" with its subtle echoes of Valery, and the delicate homage to Thom Gunn, "Vermont Spring." Readers who admire the poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson will certainly enjoy "Cory in April," a poem about a drunken homeless man who was once a boxer, and admirers of Frost will be tickled by the humorous and moving "Fae," one of the most memorable poems in Steele's outstanding ouevre.

With his flawless ear, deft rhymes, and penetrating intelligence,Steele is already a poet for the ages. Read THE COLOR WHEEL and SAPPHICS AND UNCERTAINTIES to discover why.

Poetry
Colors
Published in Paperback by Rexdale Pub (2002-08-22)
Author: Jack L. Bartlett
List price: $9.95
Used price: $4.00
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Jack Explodes in Colors
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-14
I've known Jack for years, and he always worked at writing but considered himself more acoomplished as a painter. The quality of the writing, the sensitivity to the rhythms of nature, breath, language, the soul, the colors, the honesty and intellectual and artistic maturity, all are fabuously exhibited throughout this uncompromising book.

This is the writing of a man walking steadily in beauty. In many ways, this book brings poetry along in that it combines the muscle of humanity with the inexplicable image suddenly realized. It has all of the best qualities of poetry without the pretentious opacity that has alienated so much of poetry's potential audience.

"Breakfast in the Shadows" for example shows the man with nature. But the man is Jack Bartlett, not Robert Frost. Here's an example of what amazes me: "At ensuing dusk the light wilts like a frost touched rose . . . the green is gone from the rhododendrun./the clouds go to pink/and tease the forest with a sprinkle,/the frogs say, 'Yes, Yes' . . ."

Man can be at peace without despising all others! What an amazing and hopeful concept. What a heck of a book of poems.

Beauty in Simplicity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-15
It was an exceptional treat to read Mr. Bartlett's book, Colors. Reading his poetry took a while since I felt compelled to close my eyes and envision the pictures he had painted. I found myself traveling down some of the same paths that he had written about, even though for me those paths were travelled a few years ago. There are some constant truths in life and I believe Mr. Bartlett has captured them in his book. Bravo!

Colors by Jack Bartlett
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-16
Jack Bartlett's poetry will become classic. His keen insight draws the reader into his world and causes them to see things through his eyes. Common themes in his poems are color, water and nature. One poem, tucked halfway through the book deals with Sept 11. But not all of the poems are so serious...he pokes fun at The New Yorker at one point, which I suppose is comic relief for the lyrical seriousness of the other poems.

A series of memorably impressive poems
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-05
The very best poets use words like the very best painters use color, form, texture, and composition. Jack Bartlett employs his verse on the pages of Colors, like a kind of verbal Rembrandt is a series of memorably impressive poems that linger in the mind well after the volume is placed back upon the shelf. Trout Water: In cold water with a line/it is not just the fish or the catch,/not the mountains cracked by water,/not the boulders painted with impasto moss,/the hemlocks and spruces hanging/over deep eddies and shallow shoals;/it is not just the rocks polished/like marbles at my feet,/the offerings of cold springs/and fern framed seeping pools.//It is not the complex circle/of creature dependencies,/not the wonder of where all this water goes,/but the water itself, the perpetual flow,/shaping all in its path, even trees.//It is knowing that if I were a fish/and had a wish it would be/to be a cutthroat waiting here timelessly,/methodically, for a caddis fly to come my way.

A Painter who is a Poet
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-16
This is a collection of 72 poems written by a painter with a flair for visualization and a love of words. Sensually and intelligently written, the reader has a glimpse into the mind of a visual artist as he evaluates his experience of nature and the human situation. Concise, enriched, filled with internal rhyme and metric devices it invites a slow reading and thoughtful contemplation. "Colors" misses no beats with it's crafted insights. I had not been aware of this gifted poet previously, but after reading the book in its entirety I was left asking for more of this richness. Particularly for the visual artist there are lines here that remain on the mind and make one's own creativity seem more worthwhile.

Poetry
The Complete Poetry and Selected Prose of John Donne
Published in Hardcover by Modern Library (1978-01-12)
Author: John Donne
List price: $17.00
New price: $35.00
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Average review score:

Donne, the greater poet
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-21
As the years go by, and my range of knowledge grows, I find myself being drawn back again and again to John Donne. Unlike one of the previous reviewers, I do share his religion and even practice a more modern version of his denomination. Still there is something more there. As far as comparing Donne with Eliot, although I think Eliot was a great poet, there is more depth of feeling in Donne's work. However, one must consider that Eliot put his wife away (literally) when she became an embarassment because her mental problems. Since these turned out to be hormonally driven, this betrayal is all the more tragic. Donne, on the other hand, after years of carousing, found his soul mate and his one true love and continued to be devoted to her years after she died. As great as this love was, his writings show that, although he was afraid to trust the promises made by his God, he loved him even more. Now, that is devotion and that is the root of wonderful and beautiful thoughts he put to paper.

A Literary Giant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-23
Few words of poetry are more quoted and misquoted than John Donne's "the Bell tolls for thee". This volume contains some of the most beautiful verse ever written in the English language. Donne Was a giant and his language while archaic is beautiful and resonates over the centuries.

A wonderful addition to anyone's library.

John Donne makes Shakespeare read like Bukowski
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-26
John Donne, the greatest poet to write in the English language.
John Donne's poetry cries truth from blood.
John Donne writes with blood
Blood is spirit.
The mind works against the spirit.

Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

Plees updeight th' speling for moderne readeres
Helpful Votes: 28 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-27
I agree with all the positive things said about Donne on this page. Also, this book's great strength is its breadth, including poems, letters, sermons, and other writings of Donne. One gets all the poems and most of his available prose. The only difficulty I had is that all of the poems are presented without any effort to modernize the spelling of words. Often, this distracts from a more perfect enjoyment of Donne's wit, sentiment, conceits and emotions. For those who might find antiquated spelling a distraction, I recommend they find another edition.

classy courtly love poems and musings on God
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-08
Although I care less about his prose, John Donne wrote some very impressive and intuitive so-called love poetry, as well as religious poems that I like. A master of metaphor, he also shows great range of emotions, insight, and passion. My favorite work is his "divine poems" and his "songs and sonnets". Some really beautiful use of language and wise "deep" sentiments. The elegies also have some wonderful lines.

David Rehak
author of "Poems From My Bleeding Heart"

Poetry
Consuming Whispers: Poems Positively Profound
Published in Paperback by Vantage Pr (2001-05)
Author: Demetria M. Leday
List price: $7.95
New price: $16.66
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Average review score:

Heart Felt
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-29
A wonderful collection of poems dealing with the many issues of 'Love'. It touches the heart and brings back many lost memories.

You will laugh, cry, and love this book.

A Powerful Peace
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
I certainly enjoyed the book!!! I was just touched by God. The author's words healed me and gave me such comfort. I could not put the book down. I called my best friend and read her several of the poems, especially 'My Virginity' and 'Definition of Love'. Those poems blew us away and confirmed things in our spirits that we have wrestled with constantly. So I'm just ecstatic that some one, a sister has put into words what most women feel...I thank the writer for her gift of ministry that has already healed me. We want more copies of this fabulous book, for our nieces, sisters, mothers, and girlfriends who haven't found the words to their pain.

Touching
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
They say, "still waters run deep." Well, this young lady show through her writing that her waters have an immeasurable depth. I had the pleasure of meeting the author of this book at Fort Bragg and to look at her you would never think that such a petite person could have so much power. She is a great orator and an outstanding writer.
1LT LeDay communicates passion in life and love matters quite eloquently. I thought initially that I would treat this book like a devotional, reading one or two daily. I read one poem and had to read the next, and before I knew it I was almost finish. Truly, Consuming Whispers, is captivating as well as thought provoking. It elevates and eases the mind through the use of rhythm and rhyme. I am sure that it would be a blessing to anyone who reads it, it was and continues to be to me.

Deeply Moving
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
'Consuming Whispers' wonderfully portrays a sense of wholeness and hope during and after the storms of life. Ms. Leday's words compelled me to self-evaluation and renewal. I admit curiousity caused be to get the book at first, but boy was I in for a big surprise. I had read a number of devotions and always seemed to end up asking where am I in this? How does it relate to me and my issues? Needless to say, I never imagined that this book of poetry would call me out of the depression I was slowing dying in. If you want to be deeply moved this is the vehicle...read this book and travel through time, space, and grace.

'All Together Lovely'
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
LeDay captures the essence of humanity. She exposes the aches and pains of the struggles of this life while emoting healing through each meditation. Her poems take you through the halls of spirituality, sensuality, self-esteem and restoration. "Accept Me For Me" one of her poems, speaks of a strength, a power in 'me' and declares that I am beautiful and complete, and I do not have to compromise who I am for the approval of others. The book itself is empowering and I am a better person because of it. I can hardly wait for her next one.

Poetry
Contemporary Martyrdom
Published in Paperback by Birch Brook Press (2002-05)
Author: John Popielaski
List price: $14.00
New price: $13.99
Used price: $12.50

Average review score:

Incredible
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-04
This book is quite possibly the funniest poetry book I have ever read. J Pops is one of the coolest men to ever walk the earth.
1)God
2)J Pops
3)Chuck Norris

That's how cool he is.

Considerations
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-11
Interesting. . . a long way from Connecticut Avenue to Connecticut State. Not Considerations or the Cockroaches Ball but 3 points none-the-less.

J Pops is the man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-10
yo i just read Mr. P's book...he is the greatest.... his book is so great.... he is the greatest teacher ever.... he is my idol.... i hope he writes another book real soon

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-04
I love this book. It make me feeel warm inside. I want everyone to read this book. I like the poems. I Also like men. And poem about condoms. BOy,that one was great! I liked it becaus it was great. Buy this book

hey P
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-26
i read this book over and over again (according to my college english class, thats the best way to understand good poetry)...the best way to describe this is a pulp ficktion type of darkness to the humor...even my english teacher loved this book and is going to have me do a report of a poem (:-( thanks mr. P)...anyone who appreciates poetry, true smokey room, depressed gusy w/ long hair complaining about the world poetry...dont buy this book...but anyone who loves real poetry...the kind thats in-your-face, yet, contains a gentle humor in the end...this short book is perfect. i hope mr. P wrights his short novel next...that would be something even stephen king would be proud of...peace mr. P

Poetry
Creatures of the Night
Published in Hardcover by Purple Sky Publishing (2005-09-15)
Author: Stephen J. Brooks
List price: $16.95
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Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Creatures of the night
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
I volunteer at a nature & wildlife educational museum. Creatures of the Night is the perfect book to read to visiting young children especially during the month of October. The pictures are delightful & inspire discussion in the 3 to 7 yr old age group. (If you order this book be sure it is a Creatures of the Night written for young children not one for adults with the same title but different authors)

Bedtime Favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-28

Written in rhyme, this colorful picture book will soon become your child's favorite bedtime story. Creatures of the Night will explain the often scary sounds heard at night, shedding light on the creatures that come out to play.

The little "masked bandit" raccoon wears his clever disguise. The cute little field mice run, jump, and play. Perhaps one of the most prominent nighttime noises is the melody chirped by the crickets. They are pictured as happy smiling little critters. The frogs and toads join in the serenade, as the lightening bugs dance along. The coyote calls his friends to come and play. They walk and jump and run. They dance and sing their serenades until the night is done.

Written for children ages three to seven, it is also a book an older child will enjoy reading to a sibling. Creatures of the Night is colorfully illustrated by Rodger B. Wilson, who is the recipient of many awards for graphic design and illustrations. Author, Stephen J. Brooks has written several children's books. He has served as a Federal Agent for over a decade and writes to comfort children.

Mayra Calvani -- TCM REVIEWS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-03
Has your young child ever wondered about those noises in the night, or about those creatures that come out to play only at night?

Creatures of the Night is a lovely rhyming story about those nocturnal creatures that "Come out to run and play," like "The sly and wily old raccoon,/With a mask around its eyes,/Sneaks about in search of food/in his ever so clever disguise."

Other creatures of the night mentioned in the book include the owl, field mice, crickets, frogs, fireflies, coyote, opossum, and muskrats.

The rhymes are delightful and the illustrations beautiful, with a serene, peaceful quality to them, bringing to life the magic of the night and its creatures. It is the kind of book young children will want to listen to in bed at night many times, if only to look at the lovely images of the animals.

A book that both teaches and stimulates young children's imagination, Creatures of the Night is a keeper, and well-worth its hardcover price.


Perfect Bedtime Story!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-22
This is my daughters favorite night time story. She loves the gentle images of the animals and the wonderful rhyming text.

Creatures of the Night
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-08
This is an awesome book for your children to read! It's a fun storyline with cute illustrations of nocturnal animals. It's nice to have a book that exposes kids to animals and a fun outdoor environment.

Poetry
Crossing with the Light
Published in Paperback by Tia Chucha (1995-05-01)
Author: Dwight Okita
List price: $6.95
New price: $6.91
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Average review score:

Life in poetry
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-08
Okita is a poet with a unique style. If you are looking for poetry that is off the main stream, but quite artistic, his work is for you.

When creating the setting for the poem, pieces of the environment are linked to emotions, creating a world of the tangible that creates a better understanding of the intangible. "Love, that busy street" is the environment for "Crossing with the Light". In "Kitchen" the room is really more like a secluded cell for the main female character. "Parachute" takes Dwight and his friend on a playground swing ride of human relations.

And there are many other poems to explore in this collection. Give this one a chance and you won't be disappointed.

DwIgHT
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-28
i cannot start by simply praising his words. he is beyond that. he has a way of making the ordinary incredible. making you think twice about each second in life. enough for you to cherish the unimaginable. his eyes see, what others cannot. i recommend his words to enrapture you......

This is a masterful collection.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-12
Dwight Okita offers us a masterful achievement in Crossing with the Light. This slim volume contains 60 poems that build a cohesive vision in a highly accessible style. The poems are at once loving, bold, and humorous. Most of the poems describe relationships as a subject, but the collection is not about relationships. Okita has something far deeper in mind. The poems are a triumph in combining tone and image. The images are everyday, powerful, and elegant, even delicate.

Quoting poetic elements out of context is a dangerous trade, but I cannot resist a few examples. "Kitchen" tells of a woman whose dreams are dashed in a marriage. The poem opens "Here in this room/ where many women go under...." We see the despair and loss the woman experiences. At one point she silently asks her husband while he is sleeping "What have you done with my husband?" Reminiscent of Nora in Ibsen's Doll's House, but we hear no slamming doors, no screaming arguments, no threats. Okita does not do histrionics. Rather the last lines tell us "When she leaves that room, she leaves for good, / she does not bother to push in the chair." Okita here reminds us that most of life is made up of small things, small things done and left undone.

In "The Life I'm Walking Towards" we read: "I buy green bananas/ and put them on a rattan tray./ I watch them bring yellow into this house/ a brightness./ I wish I could do that,/ whatever the place." "Letter to a Friend Who Left" tells of the unexpected announcement by a shop clerk that a mutual friend has died: "your Iranian friend working behind the counter/ told me you died as he was giving me my change. / I can still hear the quarters fall, / hitting the floor with a metal sound.... //Funny how things slip through your fingers."

There is a zen moment on almost every page. You should not miss this poet.

A New Way of Seeing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-25
With his vivid and beautifully haunting images, Dwight Okita shows the reader a new way of seeing the world. "Facing the Mannequin" takes the reader into the world of a department store mannequin. I will never forget the image of the mannequin watching the narrator's shirt move as he breathes.
Also in this collection are the widely anthologized "Note for a Poem on Being Asian American" and "In Response to Executive Order 9066: All Americans of Japanese Descent Must Report to Relocation Centers." Both poems hold up to being read again and again, as do the other poems in this fine collection.

Evocative Images
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
In "Crossing with the Light," readers can see, feel and taste Okita's words. His clean, vivid images evoke many different worlds: the scientific and the romantic, the foreign and the familiar. He delicately links familiar objects to intangible feelings, such as in the following poem, "My Next Life":

A young man coming into his own, you said of me
and in my head I see seedless green grapes
dripping in a glass of icewater on the terrace,
a grand piano I could press my fingers against
when I am lonely. And big parties:
celery stalks swirling on glass platters,
staircases to descend from--everyone
I have ever loved climbing down them:
forgiven, delivered. (Okita 3)

These concrete images of "seedless green grapes/dripping in a glass of icewater" and "celery stalks swirling on glass platters" subtly express the abstract feelings of maturity, loneliness, and love.

A wonderful first book of poetry, hopefully to be followed by many more.

Poetry
D & D Poetry: Expressions of Ebony Love
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2004-02-18)
Author: Alexander Smith
List price: $9.94
New price: $6.22
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

(RAW Rating: 3.5) - Many faces of love...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-01
Love can be found in our happiness, sadness and our desires. In D & D POETRY the author puts his poetic skills, of soulful love, to pages of honest and emotional prose. With 15 thoughtful expressions of love, he tantalizes readers with poems to edify the deepness of one's heart when they find themselves in love. The poems cover love that is unrequited, love so deep nothing else matters, love gone astray and sensual love.

Alexander Smith has put his honest emotions regarding, love, into some in-depth poetry. The prose at times is lyrical and features a nice cadence throughout the collection. I enjoyed the different ways love is expressed because I could feel the pain, joy, sadness and desire in most of the poems. Although not all the poems reached my emotional depths, it is a fine compilation. D & D POETRY extols the multifaceted sentiments of love, being loved and love lost.

Reviewed by Cashana Seals
of The RAWSISTAZ™ Reviewers

The Right Stuff
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
I've read the reviews on this book at Barnes and Nobles, but the place to buy it is here at Amazon. I put this book on my coffee table and it always sparks a discussion. Very well done! I truly loved it!

What I Want From A Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-30
My girlfriend introduced me to this book over the past weekend. I still haven't been able to part with it. It's nice to know that men are capable feeling to this level. This is a must read!

Buy This Book Today!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
I borrowed a copy from a friend and then immediately went out and purchased this book. Every man in this world, regardless of his ethnic background, has been here before in his life. If women wonder how we feel, think, or love, this is a must read. The author really hits the nail on the head. Awesome!!

A Must Read For Women In Love - Melissa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-26
This book renewed my faith in MEN IN LOVE. I couldn't put it down. Whenever you need confirmation that men actually feel emotions not related to sports or their jobs. Read this book!!!!! Alex definitely says what women always wondered and doubted about men. They do have feelings and emotions. I am not a poetry reader but these really spoke to me.

Poetry
Dandelions Are Free
Published in Spiral-bound by Dandelions Are Free (1997-10)
Author: Joanne J. Henry
List price: $14.95
New price: $50.00
Used price: $80.00

Average review score:

Delightful book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-14
I bought my first copy of this book at a book fair in New York. The lyrical text of the introduction invites you into the delightful world of dandelions and excites your curiosity about the plant. I bought 3 as gifts for cherished friends who adore the book.

Great recipes and a bit of nostalgia!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-04
A delightful book! For the first time in years I enjoyed a dandelion salad this spring--inspired by these recipes. I'm looking forward to attempting dandelion wine later, my only problem being which wine recipe to choose. Maybe I'll try a couple! The drawings are enchanting. Besides being useful the book has a nostalgic flavor bringing back memories of my childhood.

Rain, rain go away so I can pick some dandelions today!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-02
I grew up in Israel and altho we had dandelions I never paid them any mind. A friend gave me this book and it's changed my mind about this common plant. Who would have thought there was so much to be desired about one of our wildest weeds? As soon as it stops raining I'm going out to gather some fresh leaves and make a salad using a recipe from the book. The poems are great, too. I am amazed at what is in this book.

Beautiful...lyrical--fall under Joanne's spell!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-21
Joanne Henry has an enchanting writing style. She will bewitch all who read Dandelions Are Free easily and completely. One will NEVER regard the dandelion in the same way again. Joanne is a gifted writer and researcher, a gentle soul whose own tender feelings about the plant are obvious on every page. Yet her writing also invites the the reader to share in the dandelion's special magic. I feel privileged to have my own work wrapped within hers.

Makes you love that unusual yellow flower
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-09
This book is a wonderful array of recipes, stories from people's experiences with that awesome little yellow flower that most people would like to obliterate, and whispy illustrations done by an extremely talented artist. Joanne has such a wonderful flow to her writing and you begin to love that dreaded yellow flower that pops up in our yards. I started the book and couldn't put it down. I wish everyone could read it and enjoy the many aspects of this lovely plant.


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