“Spirit is always at work in dreams,” writes Lori Joan Swick, PhD, and human history is filled with dreamers who have encountered the sacred with results that have shaped our world. Both the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Gospels... Read More
Raven Grimassi first came into contact with the Rose and Thorn Path of Witchery—an expression of the Greenwood Realm—through conversations with Old World Witches. Later, direct contact with the spirits of plants and the deep places... Read More
“There is another reality in addition to the ordinary reality of space, time, matter, and energy,” writes Claude Poncelet, author of "The Shaman Within", who has spent nearly thirty years engaged in shamanic practice and twenty-five... Read More
Certain poets harness inhuman powers of observation, as if they were closer kin to hawks, dogs, and heavenly angels in the ability to see, hear, and intuit their surroundings. Rarely such poets complement these observation skills with... Read More
The Lord is my muse, I shall not want. Green pastures, still waters, paths of righteousness, walks through the valley of the shadow of death—Thou anointest my head with poetry; my pen runneth over. The biblical Psalms, in all their... Read More
Ellen Bass’s poems might best be described as transcendental incidentalism. In "Like a Beggar", her prose moseys along, skillfully detailing tightly framed shots, one right after another, and then “a boy on a bicycle rides by.”... Read More
Some poets can’t contain their morosity, some, their cynicism, and others make mirth at the damndest times. Sasha Steensen, step forward, si vous plaît, cha-cha-chagrin included. Wickedly sharp, Steensen will relentlessly poke a stick... Read More
Laureates disdain the limerick, poetic device of many a hick. But not always. Case in point, Paul Ingram, renowned wit and bookseller at Prairie Lights Bookstore in Iowa City, who weathered the limeridicule and released this... Read More