Day 2 of the WordCrafter “Poetry Treasures 4” Book Blog Tour
Posted: April 9, 2024 Filed under: Anthology, Blog Tour, Book Release, Books, Giveaways, Poetry, Poetry Readings, WordCrafter Book Blog Tours, WordCrafter Press | Tags: Andrew McDowell, Poetry, Poetry Anthology, Poetry Readings, Poetry Treasures 4: In Touch with Nature, WordCrafter Book Blog Tours Leave a comment
Today were over at Merril’s Historical Musings for Day 2 of the WordCrafter Poetry Treasures 4 Book Blog Tour with a lovely reading from contributing poet, Andrew McDowell. Join us in launching this delightful poetry collection and support the contributing poets. And don’t forget to leave a comment for a chance at a free digital copy in the #giveaway!
Welcome to the WordCrafter “Poetry Treasures 4: In Touch with Nature” Book Blog Tour
Posted: April 8, 2024 Filed under: Anthology, Book Promotion, Books, Giveaways, Nature, Nature writing, Poetry, Poetry Readings, Treasuring Poetry, WordCrafter Book Blog Tours, WordCrafter Press 100 CommentsIt’s day 1 of the WordCrafter Poetry Treasures 4 Book Blog Tour, and today we have contributing poet D.L. Finn with a reading of her poem, “The Island”. Stick with the tour for the rest of the week for readings and guest posts from contributing authors Andrew McDowell, Patricia Furstenberg, Merril D. Smith, Selma Martin and Robbie Cheadle, an interview with contributing author Emily Gmitter, and a review on Carla Loves to Read. If you leave a comment at each stop, you’ll be entered in our great giveaway.
Giveaway
Leave a comment for a chance to win one of three free copies of
Poetry Treasures 4: In Touch with Nature.
Leave a comment at each stop for additional chances.
Winners chosen by random drawing.
You can keep up with the tour through the links in the schedule below, but they won’t work until each stop goes live.
Mon. April 8 – Writing to be Read – Reading by D.L. Finn
Tues. April 9 – Yesterday and Today: Merril’s Historical Musings – Reading by Andrew McDowell
Wed. April 10 – Book Places – Interview w/ Emily Gmitter & Reading by Selma Martin
Thurs. April 11 – d.l. finn author – Guest post by Patricia Furstenberg
Fri. April 12 – Colleen Chesebro, Author & Poet – Guest post by Merril D. Smith
Sat. April 13 – Carla Reads – Review/ Reading by Robbie Cheadle
Book Trailer
About the Anthology
This volume of the Poetry Treasures series is a special one for me because it is the first volume to feature my works. I am proud to be featured along side such talented poets as Colleen Chesebro, D.L. Finn, Frank Prem, and Robbie Cheadle who I have gotten to know and I am familiar with their works. In addition, I got to work woth many creative poets who were new to me, introduced through Robbie’s “Treasuring Poetry” series right along with the series readers. These include Andrew McDowell, Patricia Furstenberg, Emily Gmitter, Marcia Meara, Selma Martin, Luanne Castle, and Merril D. Smith. Without their contributions and willingness to pitch in with the promotions, there would be no anthology. I have so enjoyed working with this group of poets, who have stuggled to meet tight deadlines and put up with my confusions as I shuffled through emails to & from hosts and contributors, and contributors who were also acting as hosts as I put this blog tour together. A big thanks goes out to them for all their efforts and hard work.
The quality of poetry in this volume makes it a poetry treasure to be sure, and I’ve had several contributors thank me for all my hard work. It has been a labor of love. But although I co-edited and did the final formatting, this is really Robbie’s baby, and without all of her hard work, this project wouldn’t be. The anthology was born from Robbie’s “Treasuring Poetry” blog series, and it is Robbie who invited the guests to submit their work, compiled and organized them all into a coherent manuscript, and did the first round of editing. Somehow, she fit all that into her very busy life, and it is she who should be commended, not I.
This is my blog post, my addition to the tour as a contributing author, as well as editor of the project. I will not burden you with my photo and bio, which you, my readers, see with every post I make. Instead I will get right to the main attraction for this stop and move on to a reading by contributing author D.L. Finn.
Introduction of D.L. Finn
Author of children’s books, adult fiction and poetry, D.L. Finn is a multi-talented Califirnia author. Her Haibun and syllabic poetry draw vivid pictures in the mind and I am pleased to feature her works within this volume of Poetry Treasures. She shares with us today a reading of her poem, “The Island”.
Reading of “The Island”, by D.L. Finn
About D.L. Finn

D. L. Finn is an independent California local who encourages everyone to embrace their inner child. She was born and raised in the foggy Bay Area, but in 1990 she relocated with her husband, kids, dogs, and cats to Nevada City, in the Sierra foothills. She immersed herself in reading all types of books but especially loved romance, horror, and fantasy. She always treasured creating her own reality on paper. Finally, surrounded by towering pines, oaks, and cedars, her creativity was nurtured until it bloomed. Her creations include children’s books, adult fiction, and poetry. She continues on her adventure with an open invitation to all readers to join her.

About Poetry Treasures 4: In Touch with Nature
Open the cover
and you will discover
Poetry Treasures
from the guests on
Robbie Cheadle’s 2023
“Treasuring Poetry”
blog series
on Writing to be Read.
Included are poetic gems from: Andrew McDowell, Robbie Cheadle, Patricia Furstenberg, Marcia Meara, Luanne Castle, D.L. Finn, Emily Gmitter, Kaye Lynne Booth, Selma Martin, Merril D. Smith, Frank Prem, and Colleen Chesebro.
Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/u/mlM5YA

____________________________________________
That wraps up today’s stop. Don’t forget to leave a comment and enter the giveaway for a free copy of this lovely poetry collection. Tomorrow will find us over at Colleen Chesebro, Author & Poet with a guest post by contributing poet, Merril D. Smith. Join us and don’t forget to leave a comment for another chance to win a free digital copy of Poetry Treasures 4: In Touch with Nature.
______________________________________
Book your WordCrafter Book Blog Tour today!
Reviews of my poetry collection, “Small Wonders”
Posted: April 7, 2024 Filed under: Book Review, Books, Collection, Poetry, Review | Tags: Kaye Lynne Booth, Poetry, Poetry Collection, Small Wonders, WordCrafter Press Leave a commentOn sale for National Poetry Month – Only $2.99
Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/SmallWonders
Robbie Shares Her Poetry
Posted: April 6, 2024 Filed under: Poetry | Tags: Poetry, Robbie Cheadle 2 CommentsRobbie Cheadle shares her poem “He Walks Away”.
A Look at Poetry Reviews from the Past Year: Ever So Gently
Posted: April 6, 2024 Filed under: Book Review, Books, Collection, Poetry, Review | Tags: Book Review, National Poetry Month, Poetry, Poetry Collection, Writing to be Read Leave a commentIt celebration of National Poetry Month, I’m reblogging my poetry reviews from the past year on Saturdays throughout April in case you missed any of these noteworthy poetry collections.
Today’s selection is Ever So Gently, by Lauren Scott
WordCrafter Press Celebrates National Poetry Month
Posted: April 4, 2024 Filed under: Anthology, Book Sales, Books, Collection, Photography, Poetry, WordCrafter Press 10 Comments
Celebrating National Poetry Month with a Great Price
During the month of April, all poetry volumes on the WordCrafter Press backlist are on sale for only $2.99 each. That’s right. Any poetry volume on the WordCrafter Press backlist can be purchased for this great low price all month long. So, check out the list below and add these great poetic volumes to your library of poetry today.
WordCrafter Press Poetry Backlist
- Poetry Treasures: https://books2read.com/PoetryTreasures
- Poetry Treasures 2: Relationships: https://books2read.com/PT2-Relationships
- Poetry Treasures 3: Passions: https://books2read.com/PT3Passions
- Feral Tenderness, by Arthur Rosch: https://books2read.com/FeralTenderness
- Behind Closed Doors, by Robbie Cheadle: https://books2read.com/BehindClosedDoorsCheadle
- Small Wonders, by Kaye Lynne Booth: https://books2read.com/SmallWonders
:)_____________________________________:)
Mind Fields: Poetry Space Ship
Posted: March 29, 2024 Filed under: Mind Fields, Poetry | Tags: Arthur Rosch, Mind Fields, Poetry, Writing to be Read 3 CommentsSilly Humans
Feb 2022
We are so silly: humans. Show a man
a little cleavage, nothing but a teeny crevice
between a woman’s breasts, squeezed
beneath a garment. An inch of divide and all hungry eyes
go to that crease, as if it had the answers
to every riddle but one: why are we so silly?
Is it the mother-drive, so vast and potent
is it social conditioning, appetite fed by hints
of sex promise? Cleavage is immodest to some
but envied by others. It seems silly
at my age but it wasn’t silly to me twenty years ago.
Piano Lessons
I have ten fingers.
The piano has…really…
twelve notes plus octaves therefrom.
I tell my fingers
each day
“land somewhere new. Somewhere
you’ve never been. If it sounds good
then lead me forward. IF it does not.
We go again.
Ten fingers. Twelve notes and octaves.
Fingers: spread yourselves newly. Knuckle middle finger
rise a bit. Good.
Now…listen. OK?
send five left fingers to the lowest octave
teach them where they belong
repeat the patterns repeat the patterns
bring the fingers back up
then throw them like dice
at the keyboard let them fly
repeat the patterns again
repeat the patterns: over time
my fingers know things, acquire sense and pitch
before my ears know
before my brain knows
my fingers know.
And, strange as it may sound, always listen to your fingers.
Ukraine
It is one thing to think
“aw fuck, not again.”
Then it’s another thing to do
nothing, from a sense of overwhelm
at the misery of the world. Many of these miseries
were created by human beings. They are capable of un-creating them but that would take a lot of work. Humans have
a streak of lazy when it comes to inquiry about themselves.
One can say “My bad”
as if that dismisses responsibility. I’ve been bad
but it’s over. That is not enough. You can’t say “My good”
but you’ve got to do “my good”,
you must keep making beautiful things in the face of ignorance.
Help other people with small daily tasks.
Use everything you’ve got
because in the face of this calamity,
it’s not going to be enough.
It’s just a motive to keep working so that,
some day,
it will be enough.
About the Author
Arthur Rosch is a novelist, musician, photographer and poet. His works are funny, memorable and often compelling. One reviewer said “He’s wicked and feisty, but when he gets you by the guts, he never lets go.” Listeners to his music have compared him to Frank Zappa, Tom Waits, Randy Newman or Mose Allison. These comparisons are flattering but deceptive. Rosch is a stylist, a complete original. His material ranges from sly wit to gripping political commentary.
Arthur was born in the heart of Illinois and grew up in the western suburbs of St. Louis. In his teens he discovered his creative potential while hoping to please a girl. Though she left the scene, Arthur’s creativity stayed behind. In his early twenties he moved to San Francisco and took part in the thriving arts scene. His first literary sale was to Playboy Magazine. The piece went on to receive Playboy’s “Best Story of the Year” award. Arthur also has writing credits in Exquisite Corpse, Shutterbug, eDigital, and Cat Fancy Magazine. He has written five novels, a memoir and a large collection of poetry. His autobiographical novel, Confessions Of An Honest Man won the Honorable Mention award from Writer’s Digest in 2016.

More of his work can be found at www.artrosch.com
Photos at https://500px.com/p/artsdigiphoto?view=photos
___________________________________________________________

A lifetime of poetry and photography gives a unique view of life, nature, the world, and the universe.
Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/u/bPXpoA
_________________________________________
Want to be sure not to miss any of Arthur’s “Mind Fields” segments? Subscribe to Writing to be Read for e-mail notifications whenever new content is posted or follow WtbR on WordPress. If you find it interesting or just entertaining, please share.
Book Review: Cashing Checks with Jim Morrison
Posted: March 15, 2024 Filed under: Book Review, Books, Collection, Poetry, Review | Tags: Book Review, Cashing Checks with Jim Morrison, Lindsay Martin-Bowen, Poetry, Poetry Collection, Writing to be Read 12 CommentsAbout the Book

“CASHING CHECKS with Jim Morrison offers a surreal cascade of archetypes from, among others, ancient Greece, the Bible, American Literature, and pop culture. Moving through it is the speaker’s companion spirit and guru, Jim Morrison-Lizard King, Narcissus/Adonis. Set in a world where, in Albert Einstein’s words, ‘reality is merely an illusion, ‘ Lindsey Martin-Bowen’s poems are alive with wit, evocative imagery, insight, and sometimes downright playfulness. Through heeding Morrison’s counsel to ‘go weirder, ‘ she’s made this collection reader-friendly.”-William Trowbridge, Missouri Poet Laureate, 2012-2016 Author, Call Me Fool (2022)
“In Lindsey Martin-Bowen’s CASHING CHECKS with Jim Morrison, I relish every word, compelled by the poet’s stories and singing voice. Fantasy and fact merge in these invocations of the seminal American rocker Morrison and of his spirit. Join me as a reader in exploring this exciting testament to the power of language to resurrect history and wonder.”-Denise Low, Kansas Poet Laureate, 2007-2009 Poetry Unbound Featured Poet
My Review
I was thrilled to receive a print copy of Cashing Checks with Jim Morrison, by Lindsay Martin-Bowen. The title alone, was enough to peak my interest, and lend anticipation as to what I could expect within its covers.
This collection of poems is all about hanging out, and philosphizing with the spirit of the late, great, Jim Morrison. I was amazed by the way the author captured the voice of Morrison in many of the poems, enough to let me believe briefly that maybe the author truly does converse with the dead musician. Included are poems that serve as social commentaries on life and love, on the state of the world today, and on possible futures; topics which every one of us can relate to.
So many of these poems struck a chord with me that it is impossible to pick one favorite. but I really loved the imagry in “Coming Back to Me”.
The dawn inhales and holds its breath, drawing
wisps of clouds up the foothills, where theyb hover.
Jim steps out of the mist, unsteady as some soldier
searching for his platoon on a surreal battlefield.
He wedges boot heels into fissures be3tween rock
ledges, ambles down to where gravel meets asphalt.
Then he steps onto the road leading to my Dutch
Colonel on a corner in this mountain college town,
where I chose to spend many of my remaining days,
watching parades of seasons pass in the hills’
keleidescope of colors revolving — in fall, scarlet,
gold, and bronze. In winter, cobalt blue and white.
Spring brings a rushed array — one week yellow,
the next red, then purple, and green never leaves
till late August, just before the aspen twitter
with orange and gold coins glittering in sunlight.
I don’t see a move to Kansas or any spot east, wonder
if Jim and I will land in Venice, his California beach.
He raises a hand and yells, ‘lo,’ his voice echoing
down the street, falling at my knees, now trembling.
When he heads my way, I smell his Jade East, see
his hazy body morph into solid physique, black
leather pants, jacket, and sandaled feet. He lifts his chin,
shakes his curls, then lowers his face and stares at me.
Still trembling, I remember our jaunts on a motorcycle
and a persnickety jeep — wonder if I’ll ever be free again
or if I’ll ride highways like some banshee for eternity.
And I also enjoyed the section of Tanka strings, always the sucker for syllabic poetry. Most have five Tankas, but “Jim Morrison and I Lose Our Way on a Moon Dog Night” isonly two, and short enough to share with you here.
The drive home’s always
this way — too long, when sudden
changes shakes us up.
After a few warm, sunny
days, cold winds hit us again.
Tonight, an odd haze
encircles the moon like white
light in an X-ray
outlining a frail hip bone
fallen into necrosis.
An unusual collection of poetry through which to view the world through different eyes; perhaps through the eyes of Jim Morrison. I thoroughly enjoyed Cashing Checks with Jim Morrison, and I give it five quills.
______________________________________
Kaye Lynne Booth does honest book reviews on Writing to be Read in exchange for ARCs. Have a book you’d like reviewed? You can request a review on the Book Review tab above.
































