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The Cherry Flames, a book of poems by Benjamin Rosenbush is a poetry collection that leaves one hushed in thought and reverie. In these stressful times, we all need to find a place just to be, and Rosenbush's poems speak--with an energetic calming-- to the quietest part of oneself. The book is an introspective journey: each poem is personal, yet inviting and universal, like smooth and imagistic pathways for all to enjoy. Read it and enjoy it too!
Michael Hathaway lives in St. John, Kansas in his childhood home with his family of felines. By day, he works as Keeper of History for Stafford County, and by night edits and publishes Chiron Review literary journal which he founded in 1982. He's worked many day jobs to enable his poetry habit including newspaper typesetter/compositor, society editor, librarian, janitor, chauffeur, painter, wall-paperer, ladies clothing store clerk, babysitter, pet-sitter, house-sitter, and living assistant to the mentally disabled. He served 12 years on the Goodman Library city board, and currently serves as secretary/treasurer for the Stafford County Central Democratic Party. In 2008, he accidentally became an ordained minister of Spiritual Science (which has its roots in Theosophy and Gnosticism). He's had 12 books of poetry and prose published, as well as 300+ poems in journals and anthologies. He was founding chairman of Poetry Rendezvous that celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2018. For more information about Chiron Review: http://www.chironreview.com.
Chiron Review #126 (summer 2022) is devoted to work by Vietnam vets. Andrew Gettler did much of the work of assembling the issue. There are poems, fiction, frank book reviews by experts. This issue amounts to a full report of the achievement of the Vietnam veteran poets active in the small presses, drawing on years of passionate involvement in that scene by Andrew Gettler. The poets represented form a community of individuals in touch with each other's work, not just a gang of logrollers. There is fine sensibility consistent throughout the book, that has to do with remaining faithful to some rather vivid early experiences while trying not to just moan on about blood and guts. This matter is discussed with taste and intelligence and experience in the book reviews. This issue would be an excellent teaching text for any course on the literature of the war, and richly deserves to be developed into a textbook.
Michael Hathaway lives in St. John, Kansas in his child-hood home with his family of felines. By day, he works as Keeper of History for Stafford County, and by night edits and publishes Chiron Review literary journal which he founded in 1982. He's worked many day jobs to enable his poetry habit including newspaper typesetter/compositor, society editor, librarian, janitor, chaufeur, painter, wall-paperer, ladies clothing store clerk, babysitter, pet-sitter, house-sitter, and living assistant to the mentally disabled. He served 12 years on the Goodman Library city board, and currently serves as secretary/treasurer for the Stfford County Central Democratic Party. In 2008, he accidentally became an ordained minister of Spiritual Science (which has its roots in Theosophy and Gnosticism). He's had 12 books of poetry and prose published, as well as 300+ poems in journals and anthologies. He was founding chairman of Poetry Rendezvous that celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2018. For more information about Chiron Review: http://www.chironreview.com.
A practical guide to the management and conservation of plant resources in their natural habitats. It aims to facilitate better management of protected areas and innovative approaches to plant conservation, and focuses on collaboration with local communities.
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