NaPoWriMo 2025: Day 5

Pick one from a list of odd musical notations, a music genre, and a word. I chose: “Like you’ve been hit by an arrow,” interstitial, bones. (https://www.napowrimo.net/day-five-12/)

What makes you move? I ask.
Imagine you’re dodging an arrow.
Fluid grace, balance and flow.
An alignment of bones,
The melting of tension,

Strength through relaxation.

The in-between moments,
Strung together, leading on
To bring you into oneness.

Movement. Breath. Mind.

NaPoWriMo 2025: Day 4

“Write your own poem about living with a piece of art.” (https://www.napowrimo.net/day-four-13/)

There’s a moment when stone comes to life:
It breathes, pulses, warm and supple.
Such an extraordinary thing for stone to do.

How many chisel strokes are required
To imbue life into inert marble?
Ten? One hundred? Hundreds of thousands?

Some say math exterminates the magic.
Kandinsky filled his notebooks with precise geometries,
And on his canvas, chaos reigned.

NaPoWriMo 2025: Day 3

“Write a poem that obliquely explains why you are a poet and not some other kind of artist.” (https://www.napowrimo.net/day-three-11/)

If I were to name what I am
I would say I’m a punnerist
Far more than a poet.
Puns, like poems, play
With language. The distance
Between them closer than
Some imagine. Poems, like puns,
Come at the world simultaneously
Sideways and direct. Face on,
Askance. There’s joy in playing
With meaning, with space, with
Tone, with expectations. There’s
Far less distance between poems
And puns and painting and
Art is how we see the world

Differently

NaPoWriMo 2025: Day 2

“Write a poem that directly addresses someone, and that includes a made-up word, an odd/unusual simile, a statement of ‘fact,’ and something that seems out of place in time” (https://www.napowrimo.net/day-two-12/)

I didn’t include all of these, but that’s OK. This was inspired by an image of Georgia O’Keeffe’s kitchen mixing bowl from the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum.

You owned the same mixing bowl as my grandmother:
Plain, glass, perfect function with no concern for aesthetics.
So utterly in contrast with the beauty of your work.

Maybe you were always more like my grandmother
Than I realized. She lived a life of function
But yearned to create beauty.

The vibe doesn’t match, a frisson of expectations,
Ideals abutting reality, the humanization of you,
The idealization of her. Nested potentialities.

Would you have been her, had your life shunted
Onto a different path? Would she have been you,
Had her treasured dreams come true?

I would have liked to meet the her-that-was-you.
Beauty and function, dreams deferred and dreams fulfilled.
What is, what was, what could have been.

NaPoWriMo 2025: Day 1

“Take inspiration from this glossary of musical terms, or this glossary of art terminology, and write a poem that uses a new-to-you word.” (https://www.napowrimo.net/april-1-it-begins/)

Automatism
Automat
Auto

If ever there was an ism
to encapsulate our times

Car-addicted,
convenience obsessed,

So eager to offload our humanity
to AI,
algorithms

We’re making automatons
to take our place,

And making automatons
of ourselves

NaPoWriMo 2025: Early-Bird Prompt

A portrait poem (https://www.napowrimo.net/na-glopowrimo-are-nearly-upon-us/)

She doesn’t look like someone who changed the world.
If I didn’t know better, I’d say she just looks tired.
Worn down, worn out, worn thin.

But I do know better, and what I see transforms:
Strength at last able to let go, wisdom earned in pain,
the hard-lined, stark beauty of righteousness.

I know that I will never know her.

I know history, what others say of her,
What little she said of herself,
the accumulation of facts.

I know what I see, how she seems,
an agglomeration of my assumptions,
who I need her to be.

To me, her eyes speak of trials witnessed and lived,
hard held principles tested and enduring.
Survival.

She is a potent symbol of hope.
She was a person who lived.

I will never know what’s missing.

Book Review: City of All Seasons by Oliver K. Langmead and Aliya Whiteley

Cover of the book City of All Seasons by Oliver K. Langmead and Aliya Whiteley
City of All Seasons
by Oliver K. Langmead and Aliya Whiteley
Titan, 2025

This review was first published by Booklist on April 1, 2025.

**STARRED REVIEW** This dark fantasia of magical realism is set in a city split in two, one version stuck in perpetual winter, one in unremitting summer, both cut off from the rest of the world. The mystery of how it happened is inextricably knotted up with the conflicts in the town’s most powerful family. Two cousins separated by the split must unravel the mystery, defy authority, and find their way back to each other. This is one of those novels that’s impossible to describe without reducing its magic. It’s strange and eerie, familiar and alien, compelling and off-putting, deeply rendered and mysterious, meditative and unexpectedly comforting. It feels more like a modern fable than contemporary fantasy. It’s an examination of family, conflict, and love, and how people and places imprint on each other, a kaleidoscope of time and atmosphere. The world and characters are equally complex and believable, and both are essential to the story. Readers must be willing to suspend disbelief for the premise and accept that there really isn’t a full explanation for what happens. But if they allow themselves to immerse in it, the experience is quite wonderful. Recommended for fans of Seanan McGuire and Stephen King’s fantasy work.

NaPoWriMo 2025: Untitled 1

“If you could tell your younger self anything, what would it be?” she asks.

I ponder the passionate ignorance of my youth, and I know my answer:

“Nothing,” I tell her.

The most important lessons can’t be taught by the telling.
Experience must be lived, born witness to your own failures and successes.

Besides, younger me wouldn’t listen anyway, not even to myself.

“Old man! You surrendered your dreams too easily! I know I can do better than you!”

Book Review: Cosmic Bullsh*t: A Guide to the Galaxy’s Worst Life Hacks by Chris Ferrie

Cover of the book Cosmic Bullsh*t: A Guide to the Galaxy’s Worst Life Hacks by Chris Ferrie
Cosmic Bullsh*t: A Guide to the Galaxy’s Worst Life Hacks
by Chris Ferrie
Sourcebooks, 2025

This review was first published by Booklist on March 11. 2025.

Ferrie’s latest “Bullsh*t” title (after Quantum Bullsh*t, 2023) takes on some of the most pernicious anti-science conspiracy theories with his trademark snark, put-downs, and pop culture references. He confronts stories about the origin of life, astrology, aliens, time travel, and the end of the world, taking readers through various non-scientific beliefs and summarizing the best current understanding science gives us. It has all the ingredients his fans have come to expect. He’s mostly preaching to the choir, as it’s hard to image this will appeal to anyone who doesn’t already agree with him, and he doesn’t really offer any new information on any of these topics. Nevertheless, it’s a solid overview of the real science behind the conspiracies. Perhaps most interesting, and what gives his work real depth, is the nuance with which he treats both science and non-scientific beliefs: despite the damage conspiracy theories can do, they tap into the essential human need for storytelling, and science can too easily become another form of dogma. Both are at their best when we embrace empathy, fascination, and inherent complexity.