Treasuring Poetry – A chat with poet and blogger, Marsha Ingrao, and a review #TreasuringPoetry #poetrycommunity #bookreview
Posted: June 18, 2025 Filed under: Book Review, Books, Interview, Poetry, Review, Treasuring Poetry, Women's Fiction and Poetry | Tags: Embracing the Power to Live, Marsha Ingrao, Poetry, Robbie Cheadle, Treasuring Poetry, Writing to be Read 68 Comments
Today, I am delighted to host blogger and hostess of Story Chat about which she says the following: “Story Chat is more than a writing challenge. It is a unique and proven online program that encourages interaction between authors and readers. It’s part writers group, part beta readers, part fun fiction, and pure enjoyment.”
You can find out more about Story Chat here: https://alwayswrite.blog/story-chat-2025-a-unique-blogging-program/
Now, over to Marsha.
Robbie, thank you so much for inviting me to be on your blog. It is such an honor. I’ve spent a lot of time reading and researching poetry since you sent these questions to me, so it’s taken me a long time to come up with the answers.
What is your favourite style of poetry to read i.e. haiku, ballad, epic, freestyle, etc.?
I adore reading tankas, but my favorite style to read is freestyle, words that are natural without the constraints of order.
What is your favourite poem in your favourite style to read?
Mary Oliver is a new author to me, but well-known to many. I picked her because I have so many favorites among our friends, and I don’t want to choose. Mary Oliver published poetry from 1963 to 2015 before she passed in 2019. She was well known for her observations of the natural world, tying them to deep emotions or emotional events, as you can see in the following poem.
Gethsemane
By Mary Oliver
The grass never sleeps.
Or the roses.
Nor does the lily have a secret eye that shuts until morning.
Jesus said, wait with me. But the disciples slept.
The cricket has such splendid fringe on its feet,
and it sings, have you noticed, with its whole body,
and heaven knows if it ever sleeps.
Jesus said, wait with me. And maybe the stars did, maybe the wind wound itself into a silver tree, and didn’t move,
maybe
The lake far away, where once he walked as on
a blue pavement,
lay still and waited, wild awake.
Oh the dear bodies, slumped and eye-shut, that could not
keep that vigil, how they must have wept,
so utterly human, knowing this too
must be a part of the story.
(Mary Oliver Devotions p. 129, © 2019 by NW Orchard LLC, Penguin Books)
What I loved about this poem is that it takes a familiar biblical event way outside the box. When you saw the title, Gethsemene, did you think about the grass sleeping or the wind winding itself into a silver tree? I didn’t, until her poem suggested that I think about it.
How can I train myself to think past and around the outer edges of my topic? That is my goal this year.
What is your favourite style of poetry to write?
I like free style, acrostic, limericks, and tankas best. But I also enjoy other syllabic poems and some of the French form poetry when I want a challenge. What I want to improve this year are some of the nuances that I’ve missed in writing syllabic poetry as well as thinking outside the box with freestyle poems.
What is your favourite of your own poems?
Messages From the Cat (free verse)
Poems, no longer innocent kittens,
Intentionally sneak up on you at night,
Concise imagery padding silently across the carpet,
Weaving its way into your dreams.
Rhyming couplets stealthily leap onto your bed,
Pretending they would curl at your feet for a long nap,
Or lie warm against the curve of your spine,
But instead, they pounce on your head, tearing it open.
If you cry out, call for help,
Precise verses slip away, leaving only an open gash.
Life’s language drips from the wound.
You jump to consciousness, capture each phrase
As it percolates from your throbbing skull
Like slush melting away from Frosty on a sunny day.
At sunrise, linguistic gems gleaming,
Iambic felines sun themselves
In a streaming hot shower of midmorning light,
Licking their forms to glistening perfection,
For all to stroke with admiration,
While you trod off to work,
Exhausted from your sleepless scratch with immortality.
Please tell us about your poetry book, Embracing the Power to Live. How did this book come about? What would you like readers to take away from this collection?
You’ve asked several important questions, Robbie. I hope I’ll answer the first question as I answer the second and third ones.
I’ve written (and kept) poems since the 1980s when my first husband and I moved to Visalia, California, to pastor a tiny church in the rural community of Ivanhoe, California. At that time, I experimented with different styles of poetry, most of which were out of date, but writing them challenged me.
After I retired in 2012, I wanted to write a book, but my blog led me in a different direction. Arcadia Books contacted me because of some of my posts about Woodlake, California. Five months later, they published my book, Images of America Woodlake.
Then I tried fiction, and struggled for years trying to write a bestseller that would become the next Netflix series. That didn’t happen.
I loved blogging, and that’s what I did best, so I gave up my dream of publishing a book of my own work until I met Colleen Chesebro and had a year of writing Haiku and other syllabic poetry under my belt. Meanwhile, several of my blogging friends started publishing poetry books. I was intrigued. Normally, I struggled to read a whole book of poetry. However, Robbie, when I read your book, Lion Scream, that changed for me. I was not ready for this poem. I had to put the book aside and wait for my heart to calm down. I had never read such moving poetry in my life.
Rhino Dilemma
Near-sighted eyes observe
Through tall, swaying grass
Yellowish curtain hides heavy-set body
But, camouflage fails him
The poachers close in
Small bird cries a warning
Animal reacts
Stands upright, facing the wind, ready for flight
Tranquiliser gun fires
Ground shakes when beast falls
Savage men move quickly
Hack out valued horn
Animal left bleeding;
awakes to sure death
Tears of pain and anguish
Slide from fading eyes
Cheadle, Robbie. Lion Scream: Syllabic Poetry About Southern African Wildlife (pp. 22-23). Kindle Edition.
As I read the poem aloud to a friend, while I prepared for this interview, it brought tears to my eyes and made my stomach churn. I wanted my poems to matter, but I didn’t have an agenda. So, I fell back on what I do naturally, which is to encourage people to do what they do best.
When I picked my word of the year for this year, the title fell into place. I wanted to create something that would be uplifting to others and would help them fulfill their own dreams. So, somehow, I had to go from the poems I had written about random topics and pull them together with new poems that would minister to people’s souls and encourage them to find their own creativity.
I drew a lot from Sunflower Tanka and Cindy Georgakas’s book Celebrating Poetry. As I read her book, I fell in love with certain poems and the titles of poems. For example, isn’t her title “Messages from the Moon” a great title? The idea of the moon sending me messages set my imagination on fire. It became “Messages from the Cat” in Embracing the Power to Live. There were no similarities in the poetry or the subject, but I loved the title.
I have already started to realize the joy that comes from reaching the goal of helping others. I’ve shared on social media and my blog about my neighbor Dan Daniels. Dan started writing poetry at age 11 when he was a rough and tumble New York City kid in a large family. He started working at about age seven.
As he handed me an aged sheet of paper with a typewritten poem, he told me I was only the second person he had ever shared his poem with. I was blown away. He is now in his 80s, and he and his wife inspired one of the poems in my book, “Aging Gracefully.” This is his poem, and I am proud to announce that you are now collectively the third person he is sharing it with.
Stand Amongst the Flowers Gentle
By Dan Daniels
Stand amongst the flowers gentle
Look and smell and feel their power
How they light the day with beauty
Not long enough to stay an hour.
Stand amongst the flowers gentle
Let them fill your soul inspired
Touch them all with love and kindness
Nothing more of you required.
Nature all around us speaks
We, who hear, must answer strongly
Love all that nature has to give
Stand amongst the flowers gentle.
Robbie, I can’t wait to read what your readers say about Dan’s poem. When I called to ask permission to use his poem, he and his wife were sitting in their living room reading Embracing the Power to Live and talking about where he might have hidden the other poems he wrote through the years. Dan has Parkinson’s Disease, so I am going to help him publish them in a small book that he can give to his family as part of his legacy to them.
Another friend called me the week the book came out to tell me she was ordering it for a couple of relatives of hers who had stopped communicating with each other and with her. She thought somehow my book might encourage them to start talking. Helping Dan come out of his poetry shell and helping people find ways to communicate their feelings exemplifies the reasons I wrote the book, Embracing the Power to Live.
Thank you again for inspiring and encouraging me, and for inviting me to take part in this project. It means so much to me.
Thank you, Marsha, for this wonderful interview. It is truly amazing how much you have gained from being part of this on-line poetry community. I am deeply honoured that my poem resonated with you and thank you for the contribution of Dan’s gorgeous poem as well as detailing how Sunflower Tanka and Celebrating Poetry inspired and guided you.
My review of Embracing the Power to Live

What Amazon says
Embracing the Power to Live is a poetic journey of a woman’s perseverance despite life’s hard knocks. This collection taps into the true spirit of poetry—reaching ordinary people with the message that they are enough. Some poems hold profound meaning. Others are included simply for the fun of playing with words – a joy reborn when she stepped into the world of syllabic poetry.
Told by different authority figures in her life that she would never marry or achieve her dreams, the author defied the discouraging voices. Her poetry shatters shame uplifts the spirit, and encourages readers to embrace the strength to do the same.
This collection isn’t a self-help guidebook—it’s an invitation to laugh, weep, grow, and live together, connecting hearts through poetry. Embracing the Power to Live is for anyone who seeks to rise above a spinning world to gain strength, perspective, and a new beginning.
My review
This is a most unusual and enjoyable collection of poems, photographs, memories, and religious quotes that collectively tell the story of the poet’s life. A most interesting memoir, the poet has not shied away from sharing her human experience in all its marvelous highs and compelling lows. The short paragraphs embellishing the poems with additional colour and memories are enlightening and the photographs make the whole experience more visual and vivid.
This book is presented in different chapters, each focusing on different aspects of life and living to highlight and reveal in. While the poems are all encompassing and share moments of sadness and discomfort, the collective package is a positive experience of finding contentedness and peace to support the poet on her journey through life in all its manifestations. Religion, the poet’s guiding light, is threaded throughout the book as a common thread of hope and support.
I am sharing one poem, It’s hard being semi smart (pantoum) which I feel embodies the spirit of this book and its relatability to us all.
It’s hard being semi-smart because,
It’s so hard to choose.
I have many skills with several flaws
And activities that enthuse.
It’s so hard to choose
Because I’m sort of good.
And activities that enthuse
Make me think I should.
Because I’m sort of good,
I try to do too much.
Makes me think I should,
But nothing has the master’s touch.
I try to do too much.
I have many skills with several flaws.
But nothing has the master’s touch.
It’s hard being semi-smart because.
In closing, I must mention the cover of this book which I think is gorgeous.
Purchase Embracing the Power to Live from Amazon US here: https://www.amazon.com/Embracing-Power-Live-Marsha-Ingrao-ebook/dp/B0F6423PSJ
Find Marsha Ingrao’s Amazon Author page here: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0CJ9ZLQ9C
About Marsha Ingrao

Marsha’s newest book, Embracing the Power to Live, a poetry anthology and memoir, is set to come out in late May or early June. She is the contributing editor for Story Chat Volumes I and II. Previous works include a chapter in This Is How We Grow (2023) by Yvette Prior, contributions to Sunflower Tanka, a Poetry Anthology by Colleen Chesebro and Robbie Cheadle (2024), and Images of America: Woodlake – Arcadia Publishing (August 13, 2015), available on Amazon. In addition, Ingrao published numerous poems and articles. She has blogged since 2012.
She earned a Bachelor of Arts, Teaching, and Administrative Credentials from Fresno State University. As a bilingual teacher, she earned a CLAD Certificate. While employed at Tulare County Office of Education, she earned her Master’s in Curriculum and Instruction from Fresno Pacific University. At the county office, she developed curriculum for Migrant Education and later served as a History Consultant for the county’s Educational Resource Services.
Ingrao believes in lifelong learning. Today, she remains active as a blogger, writer, photographer, and history buff.
She grew up in Indiana and Oregon, moved as an adult to Colorado, then near the Giant Sequoias. After living in Arizona for four years, she and her husband, Vince, her dog, Goldie, and her cat, Moji, have recently returned to the land of the big trees in California.
About Robbie Cheadle

South African author and illustrator, Robbie Cheadle, has written and illustrated sixteen children’s books, illustrated a further three children’s books, and written and illustrated three poetry books. Her work has also appeared in poetry and short story anthologies.
Robbie also has two novels and a collection of short stories published under the name of Roberta Eaton Cheadle and has horror, paranormal, and fantasy short stories featured in several anthologies under this name.
You can find Robbie Cheadle’s artwork, fondant and cake artwork, and all her books on her website here: https://www.robbiecheadle.co.za/
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Did you know you can sponsor your favorite blog series or even a single post with an advertisement for your book? Stop by the WtbR Sponsor Page and let me advertise your book, or you can make a donation to Writing to be Read for as little as a cup of coffee, If you’d like to show your support for this author and WordCrafter Press.
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This segment of “Treasuring Poetry” is sponsored by WordCrafter Press and the Poetry Treasures series.

Get Your Copy Today!
Poetry Treasures: https://books2read.com/PoetryTreasures
Poetry Treasures 2: Relationships: https://books2read.com/PT2-Relationships
Poetry Treasures 3: Passions: https://books2read.com/u/b5qnBR
Poetry Treasures 4:In Touch With Nature: https://books2read.com/PT4-Nature
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[…] Treasuring Poetry – A chat with poet and blogger, Marsha Ingrao, and a review #TreasuringPoetr… […]
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Lovely interview with Marsha.
So enjoyed this post Robbie.
Thank you for sharing.
Wishing Marsha the best of success with her book.
Many thanks to you both.
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Thank you Maggie. I appreciate your well wishes. You are an inspiring poet, and your words mean a lot. I haven’t known you long, but long enough to know that your poetry has already made an impact. I wish you continued success as well, and I hope that I can create as meaningful poetry in my short career as you have done with your poetry. 🙂 xxx
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Hi Marsha
Truly my pleasure.
I am so happy to have connected with you here.
I enjoyed Robbie’s post very much and her review for your book was fabulous and it is on my TBR.
From my heart, thank you so much for your kind words.🥰 xx
Have a lovely day 🤗
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💛🌈
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Thank you, Maggie. You have a great day, too! xxx
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Thank you Marsha xox
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It is a wonderful interview. Thank you, Maggie 🩵🦋
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It is Robbie 💖 thanks again for sharing 🙏 and to Marsha too 💖
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Such an insightfully revealing post
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Hi Derrick, thanks for commenting. I hope revealing is a good thing! LOL
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It is, indeed. I could’t think of a similar word that would be unambiguous
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For better or worse, I tend to be an open book. In the case of an author, that might be a good thing. We don’t want our books to lie closed gathering dust on a bookcase. 🙂 Thanks for the lovely response.
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🙏🌹
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I also found this post very inspiring and interesting.
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Robbie, thank you for hosting me here. I am more than honored. I didn’t realize that you were going to do a book review as well. Thank you for featuring my poem, “It’s Hard Being Semi Smart” (pantoum). It is one of my favorites. 🙂 xxxx
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Hi Marsha, it is my pleasure to host you and share my review of your wonderful book
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Lots of love, my friend. I love your new picture, BTW. I used it in my post today.
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Thank you 🙏. I’ll be over later today
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Wonderful interview, Robbie and Marsha. I enjoyed “Messages from the Cat,” and yes, “Rhino Dilemma” is a powerful, emotional poem.
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Thank you, Priscilla. This really is a lovely interview. It’s wonderful how much support and encouragement Marsha has received and given to the WP community.
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I’m overcome by all the support here. Without this community, I would never have even considered publishing a book of poetry – or even expanding and building on my skills as a poet.
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💗🌈
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Thank you for your lovely comment, Priscilla. Robbie writes such powerful poetry. Sadly, the conditions exist that are the fuel for her potent poetry.
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What a super post this is. I loved it all 🥰
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I’m so pleased to know that, Esther 🌈💝
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Awwww, thanks, Esther. Thanks for reading and commenting. You’ve been busy today visiting Story Chat and here, too! See you soon on your blog. 🙂 xxx
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Thanks, Marsha 🥰 xxx
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How delightful to read Marsha features here Robbie and hear more in depth about her process as favorite poems and poets. Your poem is one that definitely makes one stop and feat through puffy eyes and broken heart! I see how she loved it so! I am so honored for the mention and it elates me to know Marsha found inspiration from me as well! Nothing could make my heart happier! I love Daniel’s poem that was so moving! Thank you for sharing that and do tell him it was so moving!
Hugs and love!
❤️
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Hi Cindy, I am getting ready to send him the link to this post this morning. He is going to be shocked and awed. Can you imagine that I was only the second person in the WORLD that had ever read that poem? It gives me goose bumps that now probably hundreds of people are going to see it. What more can you ask a book to do for people, Cindy. What yours did for me, mine did for Dan. It is a thrill! 🙂 xxxxxxxxxx
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Oh Marsha, I love your heart and the pleasure you are getting by being an inspiration and him feeling safe enough with you to share it. I can’t wait to hear his elation! You are an inspiration and what a lovely gift you are to him and so many. I’m so happy to hold the honor of your words, thank you so much. Shivering with you! 💕
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I haven’t heard back from him, yet. Vince and I will probably call them tomorrow. They are both doing a lot of doctor things as well as family around Father’s Day. His wife is my counselor friend (neighbor) whom you would absolutely adore and she would love you, too. You are kindred spirits.
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Keep us posted dear one.. I know I would love them as well.. Any friend of yours is a friend of mine! 💕
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I will. I called him yesterday. I suspect the link went to his spam folder. They are so precious, and so interesting.
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Sounds good! I haven’t checked my spam for ages I shudder to think!
So sweet! 🩷
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💝🙏
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A fabulous interview with Marsha, with great poetry examples.
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Thank you, Darlene. Marsha is a generous person and her book is lovely.
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Your comment made me think of a Bible verse. I can’t quote it, but I’m sure you’ve heard it. “Silver and gold have I none, but what I have I give to you. In the name of Jesus, rise up and walk.” Something like that anyway. I don’t have silver, gold, or healing powers, but what I have, I love sharing. I think my treasure is in encouraging others.
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I do know that verse. It is also included in a song I used to sing with the children at Sunday School.
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That’s probably how I know it, LOL! I can almost hear it.
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🌝
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Thank you, Darlene. Thanks for stopping by to comment. xxxxxxx
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A wonderful interview! So many of Marsha’s comments resonated with me, as did every poem chosen for the post.
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Hi Liz, it’s a great interview. Thank you for visiting 🩵🦋
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My pleasure, Robbie!
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Thank you for such lovely words, Liz. You are so kind. I loved all the poems, too.
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You’re welcome, Marsha.
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🙂
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[…] On another note, but still pertaining to Robbie, she interviewed me a few weeks ago, and I am honored to announce that the interview was posted today on a blog she hosts with Kaye Lynne Booth. I hope you will take a second and read it. Treasuring Poetry – A Chat with Poet and Blogger, Marsha Ingrao … […]
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wonderful interview! I loved all the poetry shared and found a new book to read.
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I am delighted to know that, Denise 💓
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You are so kind, Denise. I can’t wait to hear what you think. I’ve already started writing for the next one. 🙂 xxxxxx
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lovely chat… awesome poetry choices, and what a remarkable book, Marsha offers for us here. Wow!! Thank you,
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Hi Annette, you are exactly right. Hugs
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Thank you so much for reading and commenting, Annette. It’s such an honor to be here and to read your comment. 🙂 xxx
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💚🌹
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There is so much good writing here, it’s hard to choose just one thing to focus on. Most of all, I like the way the interview shows that the connections we make help us to grow and expand who we are. (K)
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Hi Kerfe, the interconnectivity and support in this community are what I loved most about this post to. 🌹💗
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Thank you Kerfe. We are nowhere without others, are we? They are the key.
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Yes they are.
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I enjoyed this interview, Robbie and Marsha. Mary Oliver is one of my faves, so that part resonated. I have Devotions, as well. Lovely poem, Marsha, and I agree about Robbie’s book, Lion Scream. The poem you shared makes my heart ache. Congrats, Marsha, and I wish you great success with your book. 💞
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Hi Lauren, thank you for your lovely. Moment and on-going support of poetry.
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[…] To continue reading and learn Martia’s answer visit: https://writingtoberead.com/2025/06/18/treasuring-poetry-a-chat-with-poet-and-blogger-marsha-ingrao-… […]
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It is a fascinating interview, and the story of how Marsha came to publish her book and what she hopes to achieve with it (and it seems she’s achieving already) are inspiring. I love Dan’s poem, and I am sure his book will be wonderful as well. Oh, and great review. I thoroughly identify with the poem you’ve chosen to quote, Robbie.
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Hi Olga, I am pleased you like the poem I chose. Marsha is a wonderful poet and generous and supportive blogger.
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Lovely post!
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Thank you, Dawn 🩵
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