Poetry Books


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

Poetry
"The Stride of Our Walk...The Root of Our Stand" : A Collection of Performance Poetry
Published in Paperback by Everflowing Publications (2001-03)
Author: Shonnese C.L. Coleman
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New price: $11.00
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Collectible price: $180.11

Average review score:

Agreed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-26
Wonderfully written. Incredibly personal poetry of strength, love, self discovery and womanhood, that worked it's way straight into my mind and pulled some of my most intimate memories. Bringing me closer to understanding that I'm not alone in my experiences. Helping me take a closer look at who I am, and how wonderful the journey has been, however good or bad.

Agreed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-26
Incredibly personal poetry of strength, love, self discovery and womanhood, that worked it's way straight into my mind and pulled some of my most intimate memories. Bringing me closer to understanding that I'm not alone in my experiences. Helping me take a closer look at who I am, and how wonderful the journey has been, however good or bad.

Great Debut!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-22
This a Great Debut for Ms. Coleman!! A wonderful book -- one that is profoundly interesting and thought-provoking.Good Work!!-Rick Worthy

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-05
Shonnese's book is excellent! The poems are thought-provoking, convicting and beautiful...wow...what a gift...brilliant job, brilliant work...however painful waking up can be, I appreciate any wake-up call and the poems in this book have that effect on me...thank you.

A must read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-19
This book of poetry was such an inspiration to me. I'm not a fan of poetry normally but I went through this like it was a novel. I really got a feeling for the writer through the short comments she makes about her life in the book. It gives a three dimensional understanding of it. I enjoyed getting to know the writer a little bit. It gave me an understanding of where certain pieces came from, why they were written and out of what circumstances. I highly recommend this book not only to people of color, but all people. Ms. Coleman deals with life, love, the search and discovery of God and oppression. Oppression as a woman, as an African-American woman, and as a person. I believe everyone can identify with her work.

Poetry
Sylvia Long's Mother Goose Nesting Blocks
Published in Hardcover by (2001-09-01)
Author: Sylvia Long
List price: $19.95
New price: $33.99
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Average review score:

Fantastic on so many levels
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-08
This is a WONDERFUL toy! My 18-month old son loves to stack the blocks and knock them down, figure out how to nest them into one another, and to squirrel some of his favorite smaller toys into the blocks and carry them around. The illustrations are wonderful and each side has something attractive and educational to offer: numbers, letters, pictures, rhymes. I consider this a must-have and a wonderful gift for anyone with children.

Great Baby Shower Gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
I purchased this for a baby shower gift. Each block has a different Mother Goose nursery rhyme, a letter of the alphabet, a number and illustrations. With all the technology out there for kids, it's nice to know that building blocks are still in for kids. I still have my wooden building blocks when I was a child but nothing as beautiful as these.

Great toy for toddlers and older kids too!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-06
When my son opened this toy at his first birthday party my eight year old son flipped out! I couldn't believe how excited he was (how "cool" he thought the blocks were). My toddler of course loved them too and still plays with them now that he's two. Since the older brothers thought it was a great toy, they enjoyed stacking them and knocking them down with their little brother. Even I don't mind stacking and nesting the blocks with my son...over and over and over. I plan on giving this as a baby gift or as a first birthday gift to friends and family in the future!

Best Baby Gift Idea We've Found
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-18
We give this now for all our baby gifts. It's great developmentally for such a wide range of ages -- babies can put one box inside another, toddlers can begin stacking them, older kids can put the alphabet or numbers in order. And unlike the wooden stacking blocks, it doesn't hurt when they fall down!

Beautifully Illustrated Mother Goose Blocks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
We purchased this collection of Mother Goose nesting blocks illustrated by Sylvia Long after we had already purchased the Mother Goose book of Nursery Rhymes. This means we already had the opportunity to see the detail and thoughtfulness of her illustrations up close.

There are ten blocks in all. Below is listed from largest to smallest block:

Number 10, No letter, Nursery Rhyme-"Peter, Peter Pumpkin Eater" with an illustration of such
Number 9, Letters Y & Z, Nursery Rhyme-"Humpty Dumpty" with illustration of such (I should note here that Sylvia Long doesn't show a living egg creature falling off a wall like we saw when we were kids, this is a depiction of an egg cracking and a chick coming out--this is what I meant above by "thoughtful illustration")
Number 8, Letters V, W, X, Nursery Rhyme-"Ring Around the Rosies"
Number 7, Letters S, T, U, Nursery Rhyme-"Hey Diddle Diddle"
Number 6, Letters P, Q, R, Nursery Rhyme-"Mary Had a Little Lamb"
Number 5, Letters M, N, O-Nursery Rhyme-"Hush A Bye Baby" (this depicts a mother bear lovingly patting a very safe baby bear in a crib, not flying through the air)
Number 4, Letters J, K, L-Nursery Rhyme-"Jack Be Nimble"
Number 3, Letters G, H, I-Nursery Rhyme-"Little Boy Blue"
Number 2, Letters D, E, F-Nursery Rhyme-Rain, Rain Go Away"
Number 1, Letters A, B, C-No clue on the nursery rhyme, I just realized I was missing this block! Please make sure you receive all 10 of the blocks.

The nesting blocks were purchased for our near 1-yr old daughter. Because of there paper based composition (albeit very durable it is still cardboard), I would not recommend them for a child still prone to sticking things in their mouth. As far as nesting (each block sets inside the other) and stacking for the sake of teaching, these blocks are wonderful! The letters and numbers are easy-to-read and large. The colors and illustrations are exactly as they appear in the book and they stack nicely in a box with a strap to reduce the ever growing clutter in our home.

As a side note, I also emailed Sylvia Long to see about getting a signed copy of her illustrated book, "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" for my daughter's first birthday. I started early anticipating a long delay in hearing back from her. She emailed within hours and was very pleasant to work with. This was an added bonus for sure!

Poetry
The Tale of Kieu: A bilingual edition of Nguyen Du`s Truyen Kieu
Published in Paperback by Yale University Press (1987-09-10)
Author:
List price: $21.00
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Average review score:

The history of a nation is told through the allegory of a woman's misfortunes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
I read the 1973 monolingual translation with a preface by journalist Gloria Emerson and historical background provided by Alexander Woodside. I also searched the Internet for background information about this epic poem. I found that it is considered to be Viet Nam's most prominent work. I don't recommend embarking on this work without any background information, otherwise it won't make much sense.

A young woman named Kieu's family suffers misfortune due to corruption. Her father is falsely arrested and she ends up having to sell herself to pay his ransom. She then suffers a series of betrayals, lost loves, and setbacks. For the reader to fully appreciate this he/she must have some familiarity with Vietnamese history.

One reviewer complained that the translation is not exactly accurate. Unfortunately, whenever a work is translated there is virtually always some sacrifice of accuracy for clarity or fluidity. Translation is also an art. In this case the translator has managed to create or, more likely, preserve a poetic sing-song quality.

Huyen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-11
I love this book, its great if you want to knowabout the Tale of Kieu. However, I dilike the translation. I don't think they're right in some places. I don't see how they're translated from Vietnamese to English correctly. In some ways, they do not make sense.

A masterpiece.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-26
This is the epic tale of Thuy Kieu, a middle class teenage girl who was as gifted as beautiful. The future, despite its promising outlook turned out to be a life-wrecking nightmare for Kieu. Her travails are beautifully described in this lengthy narrative poem written by Nguyen Du, a 19th century scholar.

The work explores the many conflicting virtues imposed on Kieu by a Confucian society and how they affect her life. It is a classic as it is taught in school and quoted by almost any Vietnamese: the verses are even recited at social gatherings. Huynh Sanh Thong has done a great job in translating this work in English.

Not the best epic, but certainly ranks among the 2nd best...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-19
_The Tale of Kieu_ is engaging in a whistfully episodic sort of way. This version is more complete than the paperback (Vintage press), offering a few dozen extra verses not offered in the earlier edition. Ultimately a victory by the hand of fate, the long-suffering heroine Kieu eventually becomes queen, but only after becoming a prostitute, and suffering a complete loss of social status.

Though Kieu's wanderings are somewhat episodic, the entire epic is rather enchantingly framed by a Cinderella-like relationship with a departed spirit who protects the girl and woman. For Kieu's dependence upon fate (and her impotence as a female within her society), the tale can seem like another tiresome account not of female heroism, but of misogynistic fun with a female lead. Nonetheless, as Thong's introduction explains, Kieu can also be seen as a depiction of strife-torn Vietnam, a country whose history of national sorrow precedes the Vietnam war by centuries.

All things considered, this book is certainly worth the brief effort that will go to reading it. Anyone doing research along the lines of women's studies would definitely benefit from this work.

An Epic of Surpassing Beauty that Helps Explain Vietnamese Tenacity
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-29

Vietnamese, or no, it is difficult not to respond strongly to the tale of Kieu's woes and dignity in the face of misery. Kieu's story is one in which bad fortune, conflicting duties, personal caprices and betrayals, and petty tyrannies all play a role in creating an existence for her that any reasonable person knows would have humbled them to the point of madness and despair--think of King Lear howling as he holds the body of Cordelia in his arms. This is not what happens to Kieu though. Through a life that forces her first to abandon love and to endure all manner of humiliations and heartbreak for the sake of her family's freedom she maintains an integrity and gracefulness that transcends all the suffering the taboos that she breaks. She is a picture of how one can remain strikingly upright in a world where every type of bad fortune from a monsoon to a B-52 air raid carried the temptation to fall down low.

Though it seems naïve to make it explicit, The Tale of Kieu is a morality tale peculiarly suited to speak to the sensibilities of any people under the yoke of tyranny; be it foreign or homegrown. The nature of tyranny is its unpredictability and most of the history of Vietnam could be written as a history of tyranny; whether Chinese, French, American backed, or completely native. In a society where little is certain, moral adaptability coupled with a sense of duty is valuable beyond quantification. Though not a hero in the sense that her lover Tu Hai is, a rebel and a fighter capable of greatness, she is a hero whom it is possible for ordinary people to emulate. Fate that has made her life a tale of woe, but she never becomes disgraced by it and she certainly never descends to depths of hatefulness of Scholar Ma, Dame Tu, and the company they keep. Even though turned into a courtesan and blown through several horrifying winds degradation in her fifteen years of exile, she is still as righteous and as dignified as she was when she ransomed herself to save her father and brother--even if it is only the reader and not she who sees it.

The profound longing for home and hearth is not something peculiar to the Vietnamese. That longing though became much more to so many Vietnamese in the one hundred sixty years after its publication and could be related to by millions because of the experience of Vietnam under colonialism and decades of war. Kieu never finds peace--and it is only peace, certainly not a happy ending--until she makes her way back to her family and rights the wrong she believes she did to her first love, Kim. Her experience will be like that a leaf in the wind until she is able to reach home. For millions of Vietnamese from the time of this poem's publication down to our exile and uncertainty wrought by forces beyond their control have Kieu's lamentations and experiences parallel their own. Whether in the suburbs of Paris or Los Angeles, a foreign worker in Russia or Germany, or simply forced far from home in Vietnam itself to earn a living, Kieu's experience as an exile knowing none of the security she knew at home speaks to a larger collective experience which is something of a national trauma. Her story is their own.

Kieu's story is not only a profoundly a Vietnamese story, it is very much a story where the protagonist has to be a woman. Nothing says that man could not be as much of a victim of vast impersonal forces and of circumstance as Kieu was, but her travails are gender specific--the product of being a woman in a traditional Confucian society. Just as in others. Confucian society values female virginity and chastity very highly, so it is a peculiarly womanly form of suffering when the trick played on her by So Khanh and Dame Tu forced her to part with her own virginity. Though subtle this is still a form of rape and it is a form that a polite society could stomach. Kieu's decision to allow herself to be prostituted has a metaphorical parallel for all those Vietnamese who had to compromise themselves in order to survive because of the capriciousness of forces beyond their control. There is consolation in the actions of Kieu for every person who under the duress of tyranny has been made to bring themselves low.

The scene in The Tale of Kieu where Kieu dispenses justice to all those who have wronged and graces to all those who have shown her kindness while she has been buffeted from one place to the next is one of the most satisfying scenes that I have ever come across in fiction, comparable to Prospero forgiving all his enemies when they are within his clutches near the close of The Tempest. Like The Tempest the trial that Tu Hai allows Kieu to put all her enemies through--rewards for righteous, mercy for the contrite, death for the wicked--shows some of the greatest hopes of the society that it was written in and for. The want for justice, to reward the righteous and to pardon those not as righteous as ourselves and willing to admit as much while living in peace is the great hope that is held out by the trial and ultimately would seem to be the want longing of every Vietnamese, and every person of conscience who has known injustice and insecurity.

Poetry
Ten Redneck Babies: A Southern Counting Book
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (2004-09)
Author: David Davis
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.87
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Average review score:

This book is adorable .
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-11
I think this book is adorable and I love the fact that "rednecks" can have a laugh at themselves. I'm sure there are those that would say this book is politically incorrect.....but I don't agree. The two little kids ages 2 and 3 that I read it to loved it!

Precious Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-30
This book was recommended at a recent math workshop I attended. It provides great counting fun for young children. It is truly a southern book that mixes southern culture with math. No kindergarten classroom should be without.

Ten Redneckbabies
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-30
An absolute delight! Thank you so much, it is the perfect new baby gift!

Adorable!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-27
This book is so cute. I am going to buy it for all my friends who are having babies. A very cute book. A nice baby present to tuck in with all the other gifts.

I can't resist a baby
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-17
A most adorable counting book, lending its southern hospitality, while counting up to ten and back again. Ten Redneck Babies tug at your heart as they shinnie up magnolia trees, gobble down Moon Pies, and lap up buttered grits. The rollickin' verse, accompanied with the extraordinary illustrations makes this book a must read. You will to gather up 'Sounthern Humor and hospitality' that will suggest you read this book over and over again. Whether you're chompin' on watermelon or spending your time trying to treed a possum, this book will stand out in your library and make you know that's it's hard to beat 'Southern Charm'.

Poetry
Tend To Your Garden Within
Published in Paperback by Tiber Pubs, LLC (2009-01-15)
Author: Shervin Hojat
List price: $16.95
New price: $11.55
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Average review score:

Excellent and Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-04-20
This is an inspirational book that I have taken time to savor. Not only do the passages touch poignant human experiences and emotions, they serve also as doorways to deeper wisdom. Many of us have books that we open randomly, and see within the page guidance for the day; insights into life, living, and relationship; and perhaps support for trying times. As well as a wonderful read, "Tend To Your Garden Within" is one of them for me.

From the Author's Editor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-04-10
I had the ultimate pleasure of working with the author Shervin Hojat, as his editor for "Tend to your Garden Within."

The moment I read the first passage, I was enthralled.

I enjoyed editing his superb book, and learned as I worked on it and with Shervin.

This was the most enjoyable edit and co-working with an author than any editor could dream of.

Shervin Hojat's book is wonderful and inspiring. Whether you believe in his spirituality or not, you will be more self-aware and appreciative of life and your journey in this life.

I look forward to more books by this excellent author, Shervin Hojat.

Thank you Shervin for allowing me to be a part of your journey.

Uplifting, thought-provoking, and enjoyable read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-03-11
The book is written in a very enjoyable and accessible manner. The setup as a series of poems, dialogues, and stories make it easy to browse and read small portions at a time. Everything is written in a way that makes you stop and think about your own feelings and actions. I found that reading the book lifted my mood and inspired me about my own personal development.

Tend to Your Garden Within
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-03-09
Beautiful and Refreshing!

You don't have to be a big reader to enjoy this book. The words are fresh and to the point. It is like one of those perfect poetry books that you can open to any page, and that is the right page with the right message to view for that day. There are no barriers- word's are not secular or cultural. Brings a great mix of today's consciousness to the forefront. I recommend it to my clients all the time.

Cindi Koch
PowerStructure, Inc.

Beautiful journey to spiritual healing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2009-03-27
I loved this book! The author's journey from grief to spiritual healing is very moving and beautifully written. Using a combination of poetry and prose, he details his spiritual quest via meditation, shamanic practice, Trance Dance, and journaling. The insights gained are profound, yet this book is an easy read. It's a wonderful departure from the many heavy-handed spiritual "self-improvement manuals" that are out there. Highly recommended!

Poetry
THEOPHIL MAGUS IN BATON ROUGE: a haiku novel
Published in Hardcover by Xlibris Corporation (2008-01-22)
Author: leonard oprea
List price: $29.99
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Average review score:

You have to read this masterpiece!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22

Yes, you have to read "Theophil Magus in Baton Rouge" - a masterpiece made up of 101 haiku. I do not know too many novelists to be a great poet, an outstanding haijin (haiku creator) like Leonard Oprea. His work is so simple, so profound, so universal, briefly, so genius. Just try to read it and you will be totally charmed. I advice every friend of the great literature to own this book.

Great Poetry!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
Great poetry finds truth, witnesses beauty, and gives life meaning. "Theophil Magus in Baton Rouge, A Haiku Novel" does all of these things.

Oprea doggedly transcends a spiritual and aesthetic abyss and challenges his readers to seek beauty, hope, and freedom. By using the simple formula of haiku, this newly immigrated Romanian author simultaneously crushes both linguistic and spiritual barriers with random natural images from everyday experience. The poet finds true solace in nature, divinity in the sky's colors, grace in the songs of birds, and objectifies anger, frustration, and alienation. His lines take us around the LSU lakes in Baton Rouge, under Spanish moss-draped live oaks, to New Orleans' French Quarter in search of a new spiritual home, almost as if he is on a mission to find the very soul of the American South.

His expectations of what one should find in the "promised land" should not be taken as dissatisfaction, but as a reminder of what should be found. Singing with the downtrodden, oppressed, and misfortunate, Oprea's haiku reminds us that beauty and hope must be steadily pursued, perceived, and seized in the here and now.

Ricky Rees

BRILLIANT!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-13
In his THEOPHIL MAGUS IN BATON ROUGE, Mr. Leonard Oprea has done a Wonderful job of capturing ones imagination and taking you to higher grounds. I found myself immersed in more ways than one. When your busy schedule permits find a quiet comfortable place and enjoy. Great Work!

Brilliant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
"... sadness smokes my empty soul... tremor of water... the old road's splendor..." This poetic work of wondering and wandering pays tribute to the author's depth of feeling and insight into a world both alien to him and even lost to itself. Both melancholy yet at the same time punctuated by a lonely hope and a sense of an underlying, spiritual narrative, Mr. Oprea brilliantly paints a tale (whether intended as a tale or not)of pilgrimage, sorrow, and quiet grandeur that lives not just in Baton Rouge, but perhaps beneath all things in all places. "Theophil Magus in Baton Rouge" is astounding and beautiful. I recommend it highly.

An interesting novel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
Leonard Oprea's haiku novel is a reflection of his emotions experienced in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. In short but powerful sentences Leonard Oprea creates a peaceful yet complex image of his beginning a new life. He came to this place as an adult but I could sense in his writing the wonder of a child discovering things for the first time.
I find Leonard's haiku novel very fascinating and I enjoyed reading it very much.


Poetry
This Is the Dream
Published in Hardcover by Amistad (2006-01-01)
Authors: Diane Z. Shore and James Ransome
List price: $16.99
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Average review score:

An Excellent Civil Rights Explanation for Children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-02-10
A wonderfully designed and written children's book to explain the civil rights movement and the issues behind it. That period isn't an easy time to explain, but "This is the Dream" pulls it off. The illustrations are a combination of historical photos collaged with Ransome's illustrations. The text is told in a sing-song way--"These are the buses--a dime buys a ride, but the people are sorted by color inside." The archival photos help provide a sense of the time, particularly the page where slices of angry white faces form a border above the illustration of three African-American children entering a White school under military guard.

"This is the Dream" creates a great starting point for parents and children to discuss the hard issues of racism, bigotry, and what happened during the civil rights movement.

A Dream Come True
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-07
Having grown up during the civil rights era, I find this book has great teaching potential for the non-violent movement. Today so many children see the violence on TV and in real life and this book depicts the historical highlights of the era. James Ransome's illustrations are a complement to the clever rhymed verse and his collage technique on the front and back covers and the inside covers tells the story in pictures. I think the sequence of the book portrays the main events of the era that ultimately changed the way of our nation. This is a book for everyone. The rhymes convey the message in a concise manner which the youngest reader can understand. I think this book should be in every school library.

The Dream
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
This book is an excellent teaching source for young students to learn about Martin Luther King's dream and how it inspired a nation to change. I have used this book to teach civil rights, comparison/contrast, and voice using Six Traits.

"With Many Small Triumphs They Strengthened their Cause"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-27
Many of the reviews already state this, but let me just reiterate: What a fine classroom tool you will find in "This is the Dream"! The story of the civil rights movement is summarized in simple, effective rhyme. It is perfect for all ages. The beginning pages clearly portray the injustice of "separate but equal" and Jim Crow laws. The middle of the story displays the tremendous strength of those who fought, not with guns and fists, but with walking, sitting, marching. Finally, we see the today we have taken for granted. It is a powerful witness to children of what once was and what could be again if we let predjudice take hold once more.
What I particularly enjoyed was the authors' choice to not reduce the movement to the hard work of a handful of people. History books tend to single out Rosa and Martin as the impetus and the leader of the movement. Such status is misleading for children. It was a peaceful militia of millions, a team effort. This book shows the bravery of the many nameless people who changed our country.
I believe this book would be a very worthy Caldecott winner. James Ransome is a "due" illustrator. If you haven't seen his work in other books-especially "Visiting Day" and "Under the Quilt of Night"- I'd encourage you to check it out. He is a master of depicting the subtle emotions of the human face. In "This is the Dream" his rich oil paintings brings history to life once again. And his use of photographs in his artwork is daring and innovative.
This is a suberb, important book.

Great book for the young and old!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-09
As a first grade teacher, it is sometimes hard to find a book about the civil rights movement that is age appropriate. This book has a simple rhyme and beautiful pictures. These pictures simply show the differences before, during, and after the movement. The students in my class were speechless. As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words!

Poetry
Thread Count
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2006-01-11)
Author: Terri Kirby Erickson
List price: $16.48
New price: $10.20
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Average review score:

Wrap yourself in Terri's world
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-17
Terri Erickson has managed to weave, then wrap the reader in a percale of purest poetry. And like the finer fabrics, she has woven a breathable art... each square inch of highest content, which touches the reader like a slight whisper... brushing the ear and turning the head. The longer "Thread Count" is held, the closer it is held... smooth, touchable, fragile. Sheets of every color, emotional hue, pastels and earthy tones... continental and worldy. Everything about Ms. Erickson's work is balanced... but leaves you spinning. The cover captivates. The body fits the hand and lap. But don't think it's "light" reading. The content... at times weighted, lands in your heart like a brick through your living room window... a brick she has covered in silk. A read that transports you back in time and space, exiting the now. She has thrown a percale sheet out her window, knotted, making a rope to link you with her world. An absolute must!

First Book Winner
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-02
Terri Kirby Erickson's first book is rich in metaphors and diverse in subject matter. Her love of language and poetry is evident in each of her spirited and original poems. The poem "Luncheon in Paris" was my favorite and well worth the price of the book. The book is beautiful both inside and out. The cover art is spectacular.

The Matrix we live in.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-18
"Thread Count" by Terri Kirby Erickson, is a finely tuned energy force that transcends us to another world. Feel the true flight of poetry, as you are taken over by the imagery invoked in the mastery of her linguistics. Terri's, "Thread Count", has touched many heart's by more than just magical words.
I will always cherish my copy.
I recommend buying more than one to share with family members and friends. If you don't you may be looking for your copy!
TKE, Thank you Repique

Thread Count--Excellent Imagery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-21
Reading Thread Count was a magnificent experience. I found myself drifting back to my childhood and musing over times I myself experienced the same feelings but lacked the wherewithal to give those experiences poetic expressions such as Terri Erickson has done. Thread Count evokes feelings ranging from exhilaration to profound understanding of loss whether it be loss of a person we are close to or simply loss of ones own health status. Other poems in the book have the ability to propel you into a totally different world in another country. I often found myself with misty eyes and at other times laughed out loud at the vivid imagery reading this poetry brought to mind. I would highly recommend reading this book and gifting it to those you care about.

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Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
I have been able to laugh/cry and identify with Terri in this collection of her poetry. It transcends both culture and time in common experiences that are often unpsoken, but have remained strong inside us all. I look forward to her next work, in the meantime it is a book i will return to, time and again. I have my favourite poems, and urge you to find yours. Excellent!!

Poetry
Ticket to Exile
Published in Paperback by Heyday (2007-11-01)
Author: Adam David Miller
List price: $14.95
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Frederick Douglass meets Scout and Big Fish in this uniquely American story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
With reading and storytelling as important background themes, we learn how one intelligent, sensitive and creative young black man survived Jim Crow's pre-WWII south. In Adam David Miller's memoir, "Ticket to Exile" we stand in an important American literary tradition that began with the slave narratives and carried on through the transitional work of Frederick Douglass, James Baldwin, Alex Haley's "Roots" and even the the wild (yet deeply humane) work of Eudora Welty, Flannery O'Connor, Harper Lee, and Zora Neale Hurston. In Orangeburg, South Carolina, the separation between whites and blacks was not so much a ghettoized apartheid as a separation enforced by the banal daily routines of institutional racism: humiliation, the constant aura of violence, and "laws" and customs meant to enforce powerlessness and subservience, both economic and cultural. In this south, blacks and whites lived near one another, their lives constantly intertwining and mutually influencing. Northerners often don't get this. Miller's writing places us smack-down in an "anytown" America through its uncanny descriptions of that rural/village setting, filtered through a child's lens. Here, people know each other's business all too well, and petty prejudices and stifling status markers play their painful roles. Neverthless--and here is the memoir's comic relief--people (and Miller) get by on their imaginations: storytelling lends a balance to harsh realities; even the stories of catching and eating vermin are not entirely repelling because of the oddly compelling form in which the memories are recounted. Miller's soft-spoken worldliness shows us, too, how West African roots express themselves in southern culture; I'd like more of this in our telling of American history. I love the details of how families and neighbors got along (or didn't) and Miller's understated poetic prose--there's nothing show-offy here, thank goodness. I had a visceral awareness of this time and place, and even when the going was exceptionally rough, I felt the writer's confident hand. The book left me with a deeper vision of race in America and of humanity in its larger sense, for, if anything, the book showed me how the manufacture of "race" always limits our humanity. This book should be required reading in schools, book-groups, and the halls of our political leaders.

EXIT TO EXILE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
VERY INTERESTING MEMOIR,THE IMPACT THAT DRIVE UKNOWN LIMITS TO COLOR PEOPLE,THIS STILL UNRESOLVE, THIS BOOK GIVES YOU THE BIG PICTURE HOW, BACK IN TIME THE WOLRD START TO DISSECT THEMSELVES AND NOT BEING RESPECTED AS REAL HUMANS BEING.

An Honorable Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
Adam David Miller's new memoir is a startling look back at a valuable life that was nearly extinguished by ignorance and fear. The book is a multi-faceted look at the human condition and how we treat one another in a world that would often have us consider one another the enemy. The fact is that Mr. Miller does himself great credit by not hammering on the idea that only white people were dangerous to existence, and emphasizing that race is not the only issue, but difference of any sort. This, despite the central fact that his tale is one of fear and oppression by white people. This lack of hyperbole gives credence to the basis for his story. Here is the tale of a man almost lynched by a mob of white men during the early 40's in the Jim Crow South, a tale that takes the time and care to cover all the ways in which human beings demean and punish one another for their individuality. In doing this, Mr. Miller makes it quite clear that there are good folks and bad folks, although he does not use that nomenclature, but that the hierarchy of oppression from white to black is only one sort of bigotry, and that horror begins with fear of difference. The central and underlying concept of the book impresses anyone who picks this volume up with its certain knowledge of what centuries of oppression does to those oppressed: to turn those of white skin against those whose blood contains so little as "one drop" of African-American blood, those of lighter color against those who have darker skin, male and female against one another, those with education and social standing against their less well-educated, well-heeled neighbors, those from one side of a town against those from the less-desirable address, and homophobes of whatever sexual orientation who fear they might become tainted by what a person does in the privacy of his or her own body against love, and those with the desire for love, however that might be defined. This moving book is the story of a town in the Jim Crow South, but it is also the story of anytown anywhere in the United States of its time - and of anytown anywhere today (despite the current emphasis on politically correct phraseology practiced in public). It is also the story of a boy turned man in one second by circumstances beyond his control, and beyond his ken at the moment he is betrayed. Mr. Miller's young life is held forfeit in the hands of a group of men who know him and his family and yet consider killing him because of his skin color. In addition, it is the story of all of us at that age (19) - bored with our hometown, looking for some new and interesting person/thing/idea, we leave the local setting and set out on our journey to human independence. The difference here is that Mr. Miller is thrown from one sort of exile into another, as much against his journey as his ancestors were against theirs. For most of us growing up with a wish for independence, we find ourselves in new territory, but Mr. Miller finds himself in terrifying new territory in the city jail, and later in completely new territory, both mentally and physically. It is a journey to independence as a human being, and Mr. Miller makes the telling of his odyssey with rare grace and aplomb. We can thank the framers of the Declaration of Independence (some of whom were slaveholders) for the quote "...life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness...," but we owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. Miller for having continued the tradition of citizens who fought for independence so that they might live in a way that honors the individual bravery and honor of all. This reminder is all the more ironic coming from a man whose ancestors were ripped from their own country and culture and exiled into enforced enslavement. Bravo, Mr. Miller! Next installment please!

A Wonderful Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
What an immensely readable treasure. I smiled, I cried, I was provoked, riled against the injustices, 'bled' from the scab of hurt living with this history in my lap. I was kept on the edge of my seat for two nights even though the book is structured with the 'ending' first--what an accomplishment just on that note alone. I'm deliciously confused how the author kept the suspense and incredible tension going in flashback. So all this to say, I'm waiting for the 'next installment...' (a memoir covering the next period of years?)

Ticket to Exile
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
Ticket to Exile The book, Ticket to Exile is a rare intimate portrait of an intelligent mind trapped in an ignorant world. As I read this book I found it to be thought provoking and inspiring. As a person of color, I kept comparing my life to Mr. Miller's childhood. I was amazed by how resilient and resourceful my elders were in stark contrast to how easy my life is today. Ticket to Exile opened my eyes to the subtle and damaging aspects of internal and institutional racism as it was at that time and it made me reflect on how it continues today. If this book doesn't change your mind I hope that it changes your heart. As it has mine. Ticket to Exile is an affirmation of life. Thank you Mr. Miller! I highly recommend this book for all readers, book clubs and especially High School students.

Poetry
Tigers and Songbirds
Published in Kindle Edition by The Muir Studio (2007-09-08)
Author: J. Cruickshank Muir
List price: $12.99
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War. What Is It Good For?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-28
Given this group of poems one might make the argument that war has the capacity to transform and transcend ordinary beliefs. One might even make the point that war confronts us with the logical extension of our animal natures and then raises us to heights of enlightenment through heroic self sacrifice. Certainly Muir brings forth the soul and its despair in his poems of war and war's detritus. However, it is hoped that poetry of this type of breathtaking inspiration could also have come from Muir's life without the bloody chaos. Of course we will never know and as such we can only thank Muir for his expressions of the soul.

For anyone who has served in war (including families)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
Tigers and Songbirds Before he became a teacher himself, I invited John to read his poetry to students from my high school's English Classes. Five separate audiences of over 200 students sat in uncharacteristic silence for 30 miniutes, followed by many thoughtful questions. As we crossed the campus during lunch break, a young man approached and told John that he had always hated the poetry units in English until then. He thanked us for opening his eyes to a new view.

College and High School English and American History teachers who want to help their students have a deeper understanding of our country's war experiences would do well to include this book in their lesson plans. My students were especially moved by "Ephram." One AP History teacher used "Forty-Second Birthday" to spark a discussion on the experience of our veterans. This is a great book for supplemental reading.

A Powerful Journey Through Death and Rebirth
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
The book is a magnficent achievement...True emotion and great thought on everypage..loved it..!

Jackie Lapin, author of The Art of Conscious Creation, How You Can Transform the World

Wonderful book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
I have seen Mr. Muir read his poetry in front of a lecture hall of 150 college students. The students sat in mesmerized silence for over an hour. Reading his poetry in "Tigers and Songbirds" is just as powerful as hearing it live. This book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand what war does to the soul.

Tigers and Songbirds
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
J. Cruickshank Muir's book of poetry is a labor of love and heartbreak. It's a collection of truths often learned in despair and then sometimes doubted or denied or learned anew. It's an affirmation of life in all its joy and grief, penned with cynicism and hope, and wry good humor.
If lessons are offered, they are these: Always question and never despair. Give your all, take what's given, and cherish the new day.
Muir went through a war and lived to tell about it. The war colored his entire life, and yet he loves life for all it's worth, so maybe this is a book that heals in a painful way, or hurts in a healing way.


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