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Click Here to Read: A Review of Reminder by Irene Willis

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Click Here to Read: Rhyme and reason: why poetry is winning over new audiences: Mindfulness and cognitive therapy have given new avenues to explore an age-old genre by Justin Thomas on the National Opinion website on February 3, 2019.
Click Here to Read about and Purchase: Climate of Opinion: Sigmund Freud in Poetry Edited and With an Introduction by Irene Willis.
Click Here to Read about and Purchase: A Path with No Name: A Collection of Poetry and Painting by Mali Mann.
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Click Here to Read about and Purchase: Rehearsal: Poems by Irene Willis.
Click Here to Read about and Purchase: Bone Shop of the Heart: Poems of Memory and Desire by Eugene Mahon. Continue reading Rhyme and reason: why poetry is winning over new audience

Good morning, everyone – and I hope those of you in areas where it’s frigid are able to stay indoors where you can be safe and warm (or hygge, as we’ve learned to say now). I’m always impressed, as you must be, by people who manage to get to work on days like these, still cheerful and smiling, even though they may be worried about how their children are doing when schools are closed.
I met our poet for today, Kate Sontag, only recently, although I’ve had a book of hers on a table close by for many years. Some of you may already know of it: After Confession: Poetry as Autobiograpy, Edited by Kate Sontag and David Graham (Graywolf, 2001). It’s a collection of essays from a number of the best-known poets of our day, some of whom, like Colette Continue reading POETRY MONDAY: February 4, 2019
Click Here to Read: The unimportance of Ernest Hemingway: why should we bother reading him anymore? He was once considered the master craftsman of American letters, but on close inspection the entire corpus is full of artistic failure by Paul Levy on the Spectator website in January 2019.
Ernest Hemingway with Lauren Becall. Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.
