I hold my child,and everything in me answers. Her fingers, small as promises,close around my hand;her eyes, wide with marvel,seem to gather the worldand give it back to me. We move together through each dayas through a field of firsts,where even the simplest thingsshine with new life. Her laughter fills the room.Her delight enters meand … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “The Softest Name for Love” – For the Love of My Child, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s (TAE’s) Book Review – The Complete Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino
Italo Calvino’s The Complete Cosmicomics is one of the most playful achievements of modern literature: a book that treats cosmology not as a field of cold explanation but as a theatre of longing, memory, chance, and comic self-invention. The author takes the grand, impersonal language of science and bends it into something intimate and strangely … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s (TAE’s) Book Review – The Complete Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino
Revisionist Poetry – “Held by Wonder” – For the Love of My Child, v.2
My life has known no greater joythan this:my child in my arms,her tiny hand seeking mine,her face lit with astonishment. She teaches me the worldby seeing it first.In her gaze, even the ordinarybecomes radiant—a leaf, a shadow, a laugh,the turning of a day. Her joy is a living thing,bright and unguarded.When she smiles,something in me … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Held by Wonder” – For the Love of My Child, v.2
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Cymbeline by Shakespeare
Cymlbeline is one of Shakespeare’s most fascinating late plays because it refuses to behave like any one thing for very long. It begins in the register of political drama, slides into domestic intrigue, mutates into romance, and finally arrives at a kind of miraculous reconciliation that can feel both deeply moving and slightly unbelievable. That … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Cymbeline by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “The River’s Undead Garden” – Rooted Flotsam, v.3
At the river’s lowered skin,the bank lies exposed like a wound,and the blackened roots reach outas if to remember the bodythat once fed them. Branches claw from ruined trunks,grafting themselves to rot,to splinter, to silence,as though decay were onlyanother name for hunger. Along the mud,seed and thorn and ruingather in shivering patches—a fever of grasses,a … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “The River’s Undead Garden” – Rooted Flotsam, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Timon of Athens by Shakespeare
Timon of Athens is one of this playwright’s most unsettling experiments: a play about generosity that curdles into misanthropy, a tragedy in which money is not merely a practical concern but the force that reorganizes affection, language, and identity itself. It is also a drama of glaring imbalance. The first half glitters with social performance … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Timon of Athens by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Tidebound Renewal” – Rooted Flotsam, v.2
At the river’s low-breathed edge,branches stir again,grafting themselves to the hush of dying trunks,as if the tide, in withdrawing,had left a secret pulse behind. Seeds, once scattered and nearly forgotten,rise as stubborn grassesthat stipple the groundaround these living pillars—small green vowswritten in the mud. The wind moves throughwith its pale freight of sand and pollen,and … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Tidebound Renewal” – Rooted Flotsam, v.2
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Coriolanus by Shakespeare
Shakespeare’s Coriolanus is one of his bleakest political tragedies: a play that strips public life down to appetite, humiliation, and force. Unlike the more expansive moral worlds of Hamlet or King Lear, this drama is severe, almost stark in its anatomy of civic life. It asks a brutal question: what happens when a warrior trained … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Coriolanus by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Rust, Roses, and a Little Static” (Speakeasy vibes) – Floral Gramophone, v.4
Note: Please imagine Tom Waits hunched over a decrepit upright piano; the room is smoky and beer infused; the crowd is long passed drunk and their raucous chatter adds a background sound to the music, like a room full of snores. There’s a flower in the ditch by the rail yard fence,wearin’ a horn for … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Rust, Roses, and a Little Static” (Speakeasy vibes) – Floral Gramophone, v.4
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Troilus and Cressida by Shakespeare
Troilus and Cressida is one of Shakespeare’s most unsettling and intellectually provocative plays: a drama that begins in the high language of heroic love and war, then steadily strips both ideals of their glamour until they seem almost absurd. Set during the Trojan War, the play refuses the emotional consolations we often expect from Shakespeare. … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Troilus and Cressida by Shakespeare
