Like a River
by
Book Details
About the Book
Michael Denington pays close attention. In straight forward language, each of these poems is a moment closely observed. As in the title poem, the author "seeks home" with a compassionate and generous heart.
--Darnell Arnoult
Author, What Travels with Us, and the novel, Sufficient Grace
With an invitation to a “walk in the park” the author takes the reader on a journey in which he shares episodes of his life. The book provides lovely glimpses such as that of a woman kneeling in her flower garden while at work on her masterpiece. After enjoying many pauses . . . at a variety of places, we are brought to a stop following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. “Empty Boots” vividly recalls the shock and grief of that hideous crime.
On the whole, this book evokes enthusiastic response.
Winifred Hamrick Farrar
Poet Laureate of
Whether Michael Denington is in a familiar setting drinking “the cool, sweet home flavored water” from a gourd, or backpacking high on a mountain where he sits “in awe of near touchable stars and an apple slice of moon,” he is an acute observer, his memorable imagery hooking the reader.
Denington’s voice is straight forward, from his narrative poem about riding a stick horse as a child, through his very adult description of Memphis marinating “in a cold, damp bowl of discomfort.” . . . Most of the poems are autobiographical with sketches of youth and home, travels abroad, war experiences, his wandering “through life’s barriers, ”to finally, now that he is older, “to drift southward . . . seeking home, to join my forebears in the fertile sediment of our familial delta.”
Clovita Rice
Former editor of Voices International and
former director of the Arkansas Writers’ Conference
Cover photograph, White River at Calico Rock, Arkansas
by Terry Thompson, TTERRY@att.net
About the Author
The
Mick’s route to poetry began when outflow from an artesian spring of childhood wordplay mixed with the rhythm of spoken southern English. Similar outflows of music, mathematics, discipline, and scientific curiosity joined in, forming a river of poetry.
Mick’s poetry has won numerous contests and found its way into local, regional, national and international publications. He has conducted numerous poetry workshops, and frequently been asked to judge contests and critique the work of other poets.
In addition to writing, Mick has been active in writers’ organizations, serving as president of The Tennessee Writers’
He and his wife, Marilyn, live in