POETRY MONDAY: August 2, 2021

Good morning, everyone.  It’s not often that I introduce a brand-new poet to you in this column; in fact, this may be the very first time.

Felicity Sheehy’s name was sent to me by one of her former teachers, who offered high praise, so I took a look for myself and found it to be well-deserved.  Her chapbook (and only book so far), “Losing the Farm,” published this year, won the Munster Literature Centre’s international chapbook prize.  Her poems have appeared in The New Republic, The Yale Review, Poetry Ireland Review, Narrative, Blackbird, Shenandoah, The Adroit Journal, Alaska Quarterly Review, Colorado Review The Common, Literary Matters, and elsewhere.  A distinguished publication record indeed for one so young (full disclosure: I didn’t ask her age).

Her work has won an Academy of American Poets Prize the Jane Martin Prize, and scholarships to Bread Loaf, the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and Community of Writers. Continue reading POETRY MONDAY: August 2, 2021

After 49 years, Israeli victims of 1972 Olympic massacre honored at Tokyo opener

Click Here to Read:  After 49 years, Israeli victims of 1972 Olympic massacre honored at Tokyo opener For first time, moment of silence held at start of Games for 11 Israeli athletes slain by Palestinian terrorists; victims’ widows: ‘This is the moment we’ve waited for’ By Toi Sfaff and AgenciesS23 on the Time of Israel website on July 2021.
A monument on Yud Alef square in Tel Aviv by Eli Ilan after it was unveiled during the memorial ceremony for the 11 Israeli athletes slain in Munich.  Image: This is available from National Photo Collection of Israel, Photography dept. Goverment Press Office (link), under the digital ID D148-064. Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.