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Showing posts from October, 2018

Love, Rhyme & Reason by Joyce White

Welcome to my Writer's & Reader's Web. I am a poet, author, and winged for promoting articles that inspire & authors I admire.  Joyce Review:  Joyce White has wonderful insight into the essential core of the human spirit. In her latest work, Love, Rhyme & Reason, starting from her summation, “It is the lack of love and self-love that causes so much ruckus in the world”, she moves on to explore the true nature of friendship, quoting from such doyennes of the human character. It is all too often that we tend to counter aggression with aggression—we are determined that nobody is going to get the better of us, but White’s way is all the tenderer in contrast. She encourages us to foster an inner sense of peace and harmony that radiates gently out towards others. Her good intentions resonate throughout Love, Rhyme & Reason, encouraging us to be mindful of our own inner sense of self-awareness, so that we can reach out in tenderness and compassion to those a

Justin Bieber singing for President Obama "Someday at Christmas" (FULL)

This is one of my favorite Christmas Songs, Happy Holidays All!

Sculpting the Heart's Poetry Reviews/Buy

Buy at Amazon.com Free Ebooks : Review by L. C. Henderson on September 5, 2010 Format: Paperback This collection of poetry is filled with poems that reveal Joyce White's secret, innermost feelings.  She finds that writing poetry is an outstanding way of focusing on visual art of the masters. White  states that "[e]kphrastic poetry...makes an excellent conversation between two pieces of art." In her  foreword to the collection, White thanks Picasso, Chagall, and all the other artists whose work she  tries to match with her own paintings and poetry. Referring to the writing of poetry as a means by  which to confront past circumstances as a form of poem therapy, White makes the reader aware of the close connection that there is between different art forms. What is `ekphrastic' poetry? Not a term with which I was familiar at first glance, I must admit, but, according to Word4Word poets ([...]), meaning "a poet'