Pond 80 - April 2024 |
Along with the wonderful authors and poets in this pond, I’m featuring the Author Profile of John Steinbeck which appeared in Pond 21 back in, oh my goodness, 2016. Feels like forever ago.
- Ken |
FLASH
Denise Longrie - The Photographer’s Lament
FLASH
Robert Runté - Preliminary Exploration of Diacron-C
SHORT STORY
Harrison Kim - The King Of The Walk
SHORT STORY
Ken Foxe - The Red Ugly Old Big House
FROM THE EDITOR
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POEM
Bob Carlton - Cave Painting/A Poetics
FLASH
Logan Markko – Daybreakers - Flash
SHORT STORY
Bari Lynn Hein - When I Said Her Name
POEM
Linda Holmes - In Pursuit Of Shape
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Authors' Row
Click on any image to order.
Cheryl J. Fish
With age 40 looming, Nate, Nora, and Lulu find their lives unraveling, their aspirations dashed. Nate, dead broke, in his eighth year of graduate school delves into yoga. Nate's ex-girlfriend Nora finagles a position in Finland where she tries on men like miniskirts and embraces sisu, the Finnish concept of perseverance, in pursuit of motherhood. And yogi Lulu, Nate’s talented teacher, yearns to get to the bottom of her nightmares of childhood abuse. OFF THE YOGA MAT takes the reader on three risky coming-of-middle age journeys through sensuality, emotional evolution, and breathing deep.
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Terry Tierney
Set in the Vietnam War era, Lucky Ride tells the story of a recent veteran, an unraveling marriage, and a hitchhiking trip steeped in hippie optimism, post-war skepticism, and drug-induced fantasy.
“A bang-zoom road trip novel with the queasy high-flying pace of Easy Rider and the breakneck prose of On the Road” --Douglas Cole, author of The White Field. |
Vali Hawkins-Mitchell
Now more than ever we are all well served by truly deeply listening; to the voices that come from within and from the voices of others. Reading some of these voices may help you find your own.
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Kim Malinowski
Kim Malinowski's verse novel plays The Phantom of the Opera the novel by reflecting the original characters' roles onto modern day characters. Who wears the true mask--The Phantom or the protagonist protecting her agency?
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Richard Sipe
In his new book of poetry Richard Craig Sipe explores what happens in the aftermath of a life, a town, or a love. These are the LOVELY DREGS: what is left over, what remains, what is never the same, except that, somehow, oddly, it is.
LOVELY DREGS is available from Atmosphere Press |
Patrick T. Reardon
Prompted by the suicide of his brother David, Patrick T. Reardon undertook a deep exploration into their shared childhood as the two oldest siblings in a family that grew to 14 children and into his own painful babyhood. Puddin’ is told from the perspective and in the voice of a baby. Each of this small book’s 101 single-page chapters is imagined. Yet, each is rooted in reality, in facts and feelings. In an Afterword, Reardon, a journalist for half a century, explains in detail how created a special language for Puddin’ as the baby sought to understand his life.
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John Michael Flynn
Dreaming Rodin is Flynn's second story collection, available from Publerati. All proceeds of the book's sale go to funding literacy programs worldwide. John can be reached at Delays Flights.
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Terence Gallagher
Conrad is an office techie long past obsolescence, who spends his days at work waiting for the axe to fall. His refuge at night is his cool, dusty house teeming with memories, and his dreams–dreams of another world, an empire peopled by robber knights, kidnapped ladies, and a sinister warrior brotherhood. It's no wonder Conrad gets a little addled, and no surprise that the dream empire and the waking world begin to run together.
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William Quincy Belle
A post-apocalyptic Sci-Fi thriller.
Antigravity: floating cites. Pandemic: 80% dead. Flesh-eating disease: artificial body parts. Insects as food. And murder in dystopia. |
Patrick T. Reardon
This exceptional book enables us to see, as if for the first time, something that is right under our noses. It is almost impossible to imagine downtown Chicago and the Loop ‘L’ without each other, and Patrick T. Reardon explains just why that is so in a lively narrative full of information and insights.”
—Carl Smith, author of Chicago's Great Fire: The Destruction and Resurrection of an Iconic American City |
Peter Dabbene
Complex Simplicity reprints the first 101 entries from Peter Dabbene's monthly column in the Hamilton Post newspaper, plus assorted essays focusing on comic books, movies, social media, politics, mixed martial arts, astronomy, and more. With humor and style, these pages probe the important and not-so-important issues of everyday life in New Jersey, and America at large.
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Ken Poyner
A collection of fantastical mini-fictions. A man who encounters mammoth rustlers. Houses that begin to move on their own, forcing the inhabitants to finally introduce themselves to their neighbors. Giant chickens that are hunted for processing in the chicken sandwich industry. And much more.
Humor, irony, mythical realism, surrealism, soft science fiction. |
Fred McGavran
"McGavran’s are stories of obsession and experience. They are the stories of characters who are nearing death and who are thinking about what they will leave behind. They are deeply human, and entirely serious, with a touch of humor and a little bit of magic to light the way." - Anna Kasik, Englewood Review of Books
Hear Roberta Schultz's review on WVXU |