Ken Craft
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The Indifferent World
3 editions
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published
2016
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Reincarnation & Other Stimulants: Life, Death, & In-Between Poems
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Lost Sherpa of Happiness
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
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Brittany wrote: "Can't wait to dive into this one. Have you read Frank: Sonnets? I had so much fun with that whole collection."
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Ilse
is on page 71 of 272 of The House in Paris: It's a wary business, walking about a strange house you know you are to know well. These new unsmiling lights, reflections and objects are to become your memories, riveted to you closer than friends or lovers, going with you, even, into the grave: worse, they may become dear and fasten like so many leeches on your heart.
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Excellent news. (And I didn't know Alan had broken free of the manacles, too.)
Magic Mtn. is on my Big Book Someday list. I actually like BUDDENBROOKS ...more " |
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Measure for Measure: An Anthology of Poetic Meters (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets Series)
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Ha! Which reminds me of one of my favorite throwaway lines from Act I of Romeo & Juliet, Lord Capulet upbraiding Tybalt who wants to skewer the masked
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Many of the poems in the first half of this book focus on the political. Most in the second dwell on the personal. You might like one or the other or both. For a sample poem, along with one from a book I read at the same time, American Sonnets for My ...more |
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“You see them in the mercury
light of water, the expanding
orbs of silver where trout
breathe. You hear
them in the sleepy kiss
of rainfall on pine
needles, smell them
as if they were snow
to the west.”
― The Indifferent World
light of water, the expanding
orbs of silver where trout
breathe. You hear
them in the sleepy kiss
of rainfall on pine
needles, smell them
as if they were snow
to the west.”
― The Indifferent World
“To a Depressed Friend
Sometimes, to make sure
You're still here,
Look up for cloud sustenance.
Be sure they are
Different from yesterday,
From an hour ago,
From when you were 15
And sky didn't matter
Because only pretty girls did.
Note how cumulus
Will be looking down
And naming what
Kind of human you're
Shaped like: mailman,
Archaeologist, student of rain.
On clear nights, rely on starlight.
Pentacles. Pulses.
Further proof of existence.”
― Reincarnation & Other Stimulants: Life, Death, & In-Between Poems
Sometimes, to make sure
You're still here,
Look up for cloud sustenance.
Be sure they are
Different from yesterday,
From an hour ago,
From when you were 15
And sky didn't matter
Because only pretty girls did.
Note how cumulus
Will be looking down
And naming what
Kind of human you're
Shaped like: mailman,
Archaeologist, student of rain.
On clear nights, rely on starlight.
Pentacles. Pulses.
Further proof of existence.”
― Reincarnation & Other Stimulants: Life, Death, & In-Between Poems
“THOREAU KNOWS
(The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.)
Making sense of things,
Trying to track
Nine pebbles of sadness
To their source.
Sly crows
Stole them a mile back,
But Thoreau knows
I should walk anyway
Under sun-coined trees
Thick with wood-thrush song
Till I reach undergrowth
Dense and itchy with the past
Till the air cools and I am near
Enough to con crow talk
Mouth fulls, stories dark.”
― Reincarnation & Other Stimulants: Life, Death, & In-Between Poems
(The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.)
Making sense of things,
Trying to track
Nine pebbles of sadness
To their source.
Sly crows
Stole them a mile back,
But Thoreau knows
I should walk anyway
Under sun-coined trees
Thick with wood-thrush song
Till I reach undergrowth
Dense and itchy with the past
Till the air cools and I am near
Enough to con crow talk
Mouth fulls, stories dark.”
― Reincarnation & Other Stimulants: Life, Death, & In-Between Poems
“The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation. From the desperate city you go into the desperate country, and have to console yourself with the bravery of minks and muskrats. A stereotyped but unconscious despair is concealed even under what are called the games and amusements of mankind. There is no play in them, for this comes after work. But it is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate things..”
― Civil Disobedience and Other Essays
― Civil Disobedience and Other Essays
Language & Grammar
— 2150 members
— last activity Jun 28, 2024 08:20AM
This group is for word lovers and has topics both serious (grammatical questions and concerns) and not so serious (word play and word games of all sor ...more
This group is for word lovers and has topics both serious (grammatical questions and concerns) and not so serious (word play and word games of all sor ...more
The Obscure Reading Group
— 190 members
— last activity Aug 25, 2024 12:12PM
July 2024 update: This group is going on hiatus due to low participation in recent discussions. Like a phoenix, however, it reserves the right to fly ...more
July 2024 update: This group is going on hiatus due to low participation in recent discussions. Like a phoenix, however, it reserves the right to fly ...more
Constant Reader
— 5877 members
— last activity 4 minutes ago
A forum for friendly discussion of classics, literary fiction, nonfiction, poetry and short stories. We also love movies and art. Don't ask to join th ...more
A forum for friendly discussion of classics, literary fiction, nonfiction, poetry and short stories. We also love movies and art. Don't ask to join th ...more
Poetry Readers Challenge
— 814 members
— last activity Sep 02, 2024 05:36AM
Let's talk about poetry books. This group's members read poetry collections, with the goal of reviewing twenty in a year. C'mon. Do it. It's good for ...more
Let's talk about poetry books. This group's members read poetry collections, with the goal of reviewing twenty in a year. C'mon. Do it. It's good for ...more
Michel de Montaigne's Essays
— 47 members
— last activity Aug 24, 2024 03:49PM
We will be reading the Complete Essays by Montaigne, using both the original text (albeit in a modern French version) and the Penguin Classics edition ...more
More of Ken’s groups…
We will be reading the Complete Essays by Montaigne, using both the original text (albeit in a modern French version) and the Penguin Classics edition ...more
Comments (showing 1-46)
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Thank you for the invite, Ken. Delighted to be your friend here and looking forward to more bookish interactions.
Butt in all you want, Poppy. Always good to hear your voice. I think I bought The Power of One for my son many moons ago. It sits now in my classroom library for 8th graders....
S. wrote: "Hi NE -
Maybe you could recommend some books for me to push on my 12-year old son. He's a semi-reluctant reader, i.e. it's hard labor getting him to pick something up, but if the story is good, onc..."
Butting in here to recommend THE POWER of ONE. I constantly give my non-reading grandsons books they probably never open - but someday, they might!!! So I have queried all my still-living relatives about their favorite books and passed along their opinions to my boys. AND, I have given them a little book by Einstein in hopes the size of the book will intrigue them!!!
Maybe you could recommend some books for me to push on my 12-year old son. He's a semi-reluctant reader, i.e. it's hard labor getting him to pick something up, but if the story is good, onc..."
Butting in here to recommend THE POWER of ONE. I constantly give my non-reading grandsons books they probably never open - but someday, they might!!! So I have queried all my still-living relatives about their favorite books and passed along their opinions to my boys. AND, I have given them a little book by Einstein in hopes the size of the book will intrigue them!!!
Knausgaard junkies. I like that. And I think I'd enjoy having a beer with good ole Karl Ove, too....
Thanks for the friend request, Ken! Uh oh, it appears we are both Knausgaard junkies. I like the other books we have in common as well. Look forward to your reviews. I'm a bit spotty in my attendance here but try to read and comment on at least some of each friend's reviews.
Lisa wrote: "Thanks for the friend request, Ken. I'm looking forward to sharing thoughts on The Odyssey and will look at your bookshelves and read some of your other reviews. I've kept my friends list small, so..."
Understand completely. Social networks (Twitter, FB, Instagram, et al) are like Sirens that suck you in. It's why I don't bother with a cellphone (the Queen Siren). This is it. GR. And, as you say, it, too, can become a time suck because it's all about my favorite addiction, books!
See you on the boards....
Understand completely. Social networks (Twitter, FB, Instagram, et al) are like Sirens that suck you in. It's why I don't bother with a cellphone (the Queen Siren). This is it. GR. And, as you say, it, too, can become a time suck because it's all about my favorite addiction, books!
See you on the boards....
Thanks for the friend request, Ken. I'm looking forward to sharing thoughts on The Odyssey and will look at your bookshelves and read some of your other reviews. I've kept my friends list small, so I can engage with people here. At the current moment, it's tempting to escape into Goodreads whenever I leave my own fictional world . . .
Majenta wrote: "Hello, Ken! Thank you for contacting me. Congratulations on your books! Happy reading, writing, and everything else. Have a great weekend! Blessings!
Best wishes from Majenta"
Thank you, Majenta, for all the well wishes and blessings. I like 'em! My books like 'em! I look forward to reading your reviews...
Erwin wrote: "Hi Ken, thank you for the invite and you recommendation.I haven't read Huck Finn yet but it is on my wish list (and is already present in my book case :) )"
What? I found someone who hasn't read Huck Finn? Annus mirabilis, as they used to say. Glad it's on your shelf, though. Good luck with the dialect. When the day comes, I mean.
Best wishes from Majenta"
Thank you, Majenta, for all the well wishes and blessings. I like 'em! My books like 'em! I look forward to reading your reviews...
Erwin wrote: "Hi Ken, thank you for the invite and you recommendation.I haven't read Huck Finn yet but it is on my wish list (and is already present in my book case :) )"
What? I found someone who hasn't read Huck Finn? Annus mirabilis, as they used to say. Glad it's on your shelf, though. Good luck with the dialect. When the day comes, I mean.
Hello, Ken! Thank you for contacting me. Congratulations on your books! Happy reading, writing, and everything else. Have a great weekend! Blessings!
Best wishes from Majenta
Best wishes from Majenta
Hi Ken, thank you for the invite and you recommendation.I haven't read Huck Finn yet but it is on my wish list (and is already present in my book case :) )
Agnieszka wrote: "Greetings from Poland , Ken ! Thanks for the friend invite and here's to future bookish interactions !"
Dzien dobry, Agnieszka! I am 1/4 Polish so know just enough to earn an eye roll from my Polish friends. I look forward to your reviews, comments, etc.
Dzien dobry, Agnieszka! I am 1/4 Polish so know just enough to earn an eye roll from my Polish friends. I look forward to your reviews, comments, etc.
Greetings from Poland , Ken ! Thanks for the friend invite and here's to future bookish interactions !
Thank you, Cindy. I wrote a lot in the summer, of course. And suffering insomnia has a silver lining, too. For writing, I mean. (Certainly not for teaching!)
Ken/NewEngland, I just wanted to congratulate you. To have written something worthy of publication is estimable; to have done so while teaching is a laudable accomplishment, indeed! I felicitate you, and I look forward to reading it.
Miriam wrote: "Any friend of Roger Zelazny.... ;)
Congrats on the publication!"
Thanks, Miriam. I actually tracked down the whole set of Zelazny's Amber series for my classroom library. Alas, the students who tried it weren't as impressed. Kids these days!
Congrats on the publication!"
Thanks, Miriam. I actually tracked down the whole set of Zelazny's Amber series for my classroom library. Alas, the students who tried it weren't as impressed. Kids these days!
Newengland wrote: "At 17, he can start enjoying some plot-rich books for adults, too. Anyway, some possibilities for browsing:
Winger
Boy Nobody
Runner
[book:Soldier Bo..."
Thank you! Somehow I missed this when you posted it. I will check those all out.
Winger
Boy Nobody
Runner
[book:Soldier Bo..."
Thank you! Somehow I missed this when you posted it. I will check those all out.
At 17, he can start enjoying some plot-rich books for adults, too. Anyway, some possibilities for browsing:
Winger
Boy Nobody
Runner
Soldier Boys
Soldier X
Boy21
Peak
Little Brother
The Recruit
The Son
Unbroken (The Young Adult Adaptation): An Olympian's Journey from Airman to Castaway to Captive
Shelter
The 5th Wave
Happy shopping (and reading) to He'll-Be-a-Reader-Yet!
Winger
Boy Nobody
Runner
Soldier Boys
Soldier X
Boy21
Peak
Little Brother
The Recruit
The Son
Unbroken (The Young Adult Adaptation): An Olympian's Journey from Airman to Castaway to Captive
Shelter
The 5th Wave
Happy shopping (and reading) to He'll-Be-a-Reader-Yet!
Hi - I'm shopping again for YA recommendations for my reluctant just-turned-17 year old son! He's promised to read this summer but isn't interested in my enthusiastic offerings. He loved that Labyrinth series a couple or 3 years ago. In general I need something not brand-new, since it won't have been translated into German yet. Thanks! Hope you're enjoying a reading summer yourself.
S. wrote: "You may enjoy this clutter spoof: http://the-toast.net/2015/02/24/get-r..."
Now there's a woman who gets it. (Hold on, my coffee mug is speaking to me, only I'm not sure I understand its language....)
Now there's a woman who gets it. (Hold on, my coffee mug is speaking to me, only I'm not sure I understand its language....)
Gabi wrote: "I forgot the most important reason for asking you to be friends: I like you.
You make me laugh! You have a dry humor that I appreciate and I suspect your pupils do, too!
Gabi"
Well shucks thanks, Gabs. You're pretty funny yourself at times! And one hella artist!
You make me laugh! You have a dry humor that I appreciate and I suspect your pupils do, too!
Gabi"
Well shucks thanks, Gabs. You're pretty funny yourself at times! And one hella artist!
I forgot the most important reason for asking you to be friends: I like you.
You make me laugh! You have a dry humor that I appreciate and I suspect your pupils do, too!
Gabi
You make me laugh! You have a dry humor that I appreciate and I suspect your pupils do, too!
Gabi
Hi Newengland.
Thanks for the friends request. I confess that because I follow you, I had forgotten that we weren't already friends. :)
Thanks for the friends request. I confess that because I follow you, I had forgotten that we weren't already friends. :)
Hee hee. :)
I took many naps on Saturday, and as a result mucked up my sleep schedule. We'll see if I can get back on track.
And my reading progress took a real nosedive last week. I didn't even try to read much - just hung on for the ride. :)
I took many naps on Saturday, and as a result mucked up my sleep schedule. We'll see if I can get back on track.
And my reading progress took a real nosedive last week. I didn't even try to read much - just hung on for the ride. :)
Whoa, another reader is born! Only now I'm dying to know which four.
Also, there are more (recs) where those came from. Just shout when you need them.
Also, there are more (recs) where those came from. Just shout when you need them.
Hey NE,
I wanted to thank you for the book recommendations for my son. He read FOUR of them in April.
I wanted to thank you for the book recommendations for my son. He read FOUR of them in April.
Ha! Your hatred only gets to play for 12 days. Then you can go back to being smug about mid-May releases vs. late June ones (sigh)....
I might have gloated when we were done in mid-May, but we're pretty much back at work now. I hate you :).
Hi NE -
Maybe you could recommend some books for me to push on my 12-year old son. He's a semi-reluctant reader, i.e. it's hard labor getting him to pick something up, but if the story is good, once he's into it, he's very happy.
He liked Harry Potter, and just finished the Rick Riordan books with Percy Jackson. It would have to be something fairly popular, since it'll have to have been translated into German.
I'd be grateful for any suggestions.
thanks, sarah
Maybe you could recommend some books for me to push on my 12-year old son. He's a semi-reluctant reader, i.e. it's hard labor getting him to pick something up, but if the story is good, once he's into it, he's very happy.
He liked Harry Potter, and just finished the Rick Riordan books with Percy Jackson. It would have to be something fairly popular, since it'll have to have been translated into German.
I'd be grateful for any suggestions.
thanks, sarah
Hi NE,
On the Merwin front, try these:
Rain in the Trees
The Second Four Books of Poems: The Moving Target / The Lice / The Carrier of Ladders / Writings to an Unfinished Accompaniment
enjoy.
On the Merwin front, try these:
Rain in the Trees
The Second Four Books of Poems: The Moving Target / The Lice / The Carrier of Ladders / Writings to an Unfinished Accompaniment
enjoy.
Thanks for the add Newengland! I've never been to your neck of the woods - hope to get there one day..:)
Beat me to the punch--I planned to send you a request when I got back on. So--thanks! It'll be cool to trade thoughts and recs and all that. cheers!
Selective? Curmudgeonly is more like it. I'm still in "remedial friending" class.
-- Fellow Hamsun fan
-- Fellow Hamsun fan
Ben... glad you "laked" the Lago Maggiore scene in AFTA. Sorry, just saw your 7/26 comment today (8/4).
Alex-- Nope. Never heard tell of the Carmody books. Looks like a British publisher. Only a 3.49 rating from 95 reviewers, too. Must be some of the kiddies disagree! (Are the kiddies members of GR, one wonders?)
Alex-- Nope. Never heard tell of the Carmody books. Looks like a British publisher. Only a 3.49 rating from 95 reviewers, too. Must be some of the kiddies disagree! (Are the kiddies members of GR, one wonders?)