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Where Did All the Water Go? is a mystery!
Delightful/thoughtful/very readable/beautifully illustrated

A story of one among a group of really remarkable men
An Excellent Read!

Greg Breining's WILD SHORE
Great trip around Lake Superior!

"Woman Lake"
The real things ...I hear it in "Hanging Laundry Out to Dry," a poem about his mother -- "the last generation of mothers to make clothes by hand" -- pinning clothes to a line. It seems to be about shirts and sheets and washday, but as you read it, it enfolds you like billowing sailcloth:
I think now
of her lips, the tastes her mouth must
have held over time: wood and steel,
stone and soil, and finally ash.
Hey -- all of life is in those lines, all our striving and eating and dying. And Rich gets to it with a homely memory of his mom in a New Jersey backyard. It is very lovely.
In a companion poem, "Lost in Audubon's Birds of America", Rich thumbs through the old lithographs of birds in their natural habitats -- and suddenly is seeing his father's death:
... the evening
that divides everything into before and after,
as if in dying he fled into this book
to furl his wings in the feather of my eyes.
It is more than melancholy that pulls the poet and reader deeper into these poems. I sense an enormous yearning, in a world of cheap distractions and pretensions, for the things of substance, the real things, the hard-won achievements of those who have gone before, and those who are yet to blossom. One of the nicest poems is this one about his daughter Emma ("Photocopy of My Daughter's Face"). This poem begins as whimsy, which is then put in the service of a parent's terror, the image of one's offspring frozen like a fly pressed in amber. Here is the poem in its entirety:
Young girl, trapped beneath the ice,
What are you trying to tell me?
That life is a cold, deep well,
A series of gray tones
Falling off suddenly into black?
This distortion makes the living
Look and shiver.
How long must you wait, child,
Face pressed against the light?
In what world will you wake up
And take your next breath?
I like very much the unmistakableness of his approach and tone; it's very hard to misread Rich Broderick. He takes care to guide the reader in and through his ideas and images. He's very much a controlling poet in that sense, sure-footed and well-plotted, and he reminds you that poets are supposed to be guides.
Also recommended is a 30-line poem, "Repairing the Five Story Globe," about a replica of our planet on display on the campus where Rich works. Somehow the plastic continents of the globe had come askew, and a girl from the exhibit company was refitting these tectonic sections via a crane. She floats at the end of a cable, restoring the earth to its proper condition. The poem is by turns sexy and mythopoeic:
Dressed in shorts, T-shirt
and climbing boots,
she rappels down the slope
of the Northern Hemisphere
fits one boot into the Yucatan
And commences to set
Jamaica right....
These poems about grandmothers and grandfathers, and mothers and sisters, and daughters and sons, about transoceanic crossings and the still moon over a Minnesota lake, speak to a more complex insight. They say our struggle and suffering reveal both what is heroic in us and the fragility that is our human signature. And what can we do but honor our efforts, and grant safe passage to all departed souls:
They look so peaceful, spinning
and rolling slowly into the arms
of the water, their white limbs folding
and unfolding with the limbs of the river.
I watch until they disappear, until they drift
Out of sight around a distant bend.


Children of the promise seriesI felt like the author took us in with the family and we became apart of their family. It was like being with them when Bro. Thomas had to let his children grow up and make their mistakes.
We hurt for them when they hurt. When they were seperated by war and his mission. Gene's captivity in the war and all he went through. To find out he was still alive was such a relief.
I was so excited to find out Mr. Hughes started his new series.
I just ordered Vol. #1 today. I can't wait for it to arrive.
I Loved This Book

A Great Book
Witty, amusing and sometimes rueful memoirs of a racing fan

A Great Book!!

well done

Use this book if you are planning to bike in Wi.

Another Success!
What a long day it was at school, I couldn't stop thinking about how all my friends, the fish & the birds who would perish without the water & the school bell couldn't come soon enough. What would I find when the school bus dropped me off at the Bay? Would the water still be far away?
With David Aiken's enchanting & whimsical artwork, Carolyn Stearns has written an informative & exciting little book about the comings & goings of salt water bays. Delightful & a keeper! Do check out my full review & many others of neat children's books.