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Archive for November, 2007

Prayer: In These Days of Fire, by John and Sarah Gibb Millspaugh

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

“Red Sun,” photo by Rev. John Millspaugh
This prayer was written on October 24, 2007, by Rev. John Gibb Millspaugh, minister of Tapestry, a Unitarian Universalist (UU) Congregation in Mission Viejo, California, and Rev. Sarah Gibb Millspaugh, Adult Programs Director for the Unitarian Universalist Association. The Santiago fire, which had burned almost 20,000 acres that night, […]

Pigheaded Pills and Other Personality Patent Medicine (Conversation Starter)

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

If you could choose some aspect of your personality to improve…and all it took was taking a pill, what would you choose? Choose something fun.
Pig-headedness, say?
Tell us the trait you’d like pills developed for to make you just a little bit nicer to be around. Just don’t make me agree with you. At […]

Susan J. Tweit on The Power of Story

Monday, November 19th, 2007

I first became acquainted with Susan Tweit through Women Writing the West. Last Spring, in Texas, at the Story Circles conference “Land Full of Stories” I finally got to hear her speak, and chat with her and her artist-husband for a bit. Susan is a strong, clear, dedicated, and delightful writer. You can learn more […]

Riehl interviewed on Writers in the Sky

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Yvonne Perry, that whirling dervish of a writer-editor-word-choreographor-woman has posted an interview with me about the publication of my debut poetry collection “Sightlines: A Poet’s Diary.” Go to Writers in the Sky (TM) (A blog, newsletter and podcast for the craft and business of writing, publishing and book marketing with tons of tips for freelance […]

A Young Boy Learns to Pray: bedtime vespers

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

My niece Janean (by way of my brother Gary) is such a good mother. She wrote this touching email to my father who shared it with me. Now Janean has agreed to share it with all of you. It’s a fine example, I think, of moral and spiritual education…of giving structure, but also, giving space. […]

Exploring Inwood Hill Park - An Old Growth Forest in New York City

Friday, November 16th, 2007

J.J. Murphy, naturalist
For a half-century, writer and passionate naturalist JJ Murphy, has been providing nature programs, original curricula, articles, product reviews, books and open discussion to children and eco-aware adults across the USA. She lives in Harriman, NY.Creative Content for Your Nature Endeavors….Since I live blocks from Forest Park in St. Louis, I can really […]

(African Culture of Story Series) Damaria Senne: Stories from The Place of the Mist, Part 2

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

For me, the difficult part of storytelling as a career was telling the stories I wanted to tell, in my own way. Locally, there is a growing movement towards the telling of indigenous stories. You’d think I would fit within that movement, wouldn’t you? Yet, I feel like a square peg in a round hole. […]

(African Culture of Story Series) Damaria Senne on “Stories from the Place of the Mist”: Part One

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

Damaria Senne
We begin by enjoying the cover of Damaria Senne’s adult reader titled BOITSHOKO (meaning “perseverence” in Setswana). The book was published by Heinemann Publishers, and was translated into a number of local languages.

The book is of interest (in the context of the essay about the story) because Damaria named the title character after her […]

Clive Matson on “Remembering John Wieners” (1934-2002)

Monday, November 12th, 2007

In the early 1960s I was captivated by John Wieners’ THE HOTEL WENTLEY POEMS (Auerhahn Press, San Francisco, 1958). I memorized those poems. Their appeal was so strong I felt compelled to search book stalls in New York City on Fourth Avenue, in the West Village, on the Upper West Side for other poems he […]

How Clive Matson’s “Squish Boots” was placed in the coffin of his mentor, John Wieners

Monday, November 12th, 2007

CLIVE MATSON (MFA Columbia University) has published poetry since 1964, and says the most interesting thing he’s done lately is help edit the anthology of 9/11 poems AN EYE FOR AN EYE MAKES THE WHOLE WORLD BLIND (Regent Press, Oakland, 2002). Mostly he writes from the itch in his body. He has taught more than […]