Some Thoughts on Writing: Throughlines
I have come to believe that there is nothing inherently poetic about a particular place. The commonplaces, or loci communes if you want to get fancy with it, that poets return to so often
I have come to believe that there is nothing inherently poetic about a particular place. The commonplaces, or loci communes if you want to get fancy with it, that poets return to so often
I have a new short story — Dads on Deck — now available to read online at X-R-A-Y. This was a fun one to write for me, not least because
A literary friend and editor of the great Great Lakes Review wrote a very thoughtful, kind review of Yeoman’s Work on its two-year publishing anniversary. You can check out Mitch
I’ve got a new poem up with The Lindenwood Review. Interestingly, they only publish prose poems (paragraph form) which can be fine and challenging. You can find my prose piece,
I did admit these would be sporadic, but consider this a good faith effort to keep the stove from dying completely. The previous dispatch covered the recording and maintenance of
I have two new poems available in the Autumn 2021 issue of 3rd Wednesday. You can find the poems here, pp. 41-42. ‘Obol for the Boatman’ was inspired by a
I have a new poem appearing with the wonderful journal up in Ludington, Making Waves: a West Michigan Review. They’re a cool writing group that produces their own magazine, which
I have the great fortune of teaching creative writing. It’s a mostly wonderful endeavor because it provides people with an outlet and a guaranteed readership for their ideas and feelings.
A very cool journal, Lucky Jefferson, has published one of my new poems. You can check it out here. It’s titled “When the old man at the grocery asks you
I have a new short story, “A Friend from School,” now live and free to read at your leisure. It’s about what happens when different points of your life collide.