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About the author
Dale Winslow earned her B.Sc. in Wildlife Management from the
University of Guelph and her B.Ed. from the University of Victoria.
Dale has enjoyed life as an interpretive naturalist, wildlife and
fisheries biologist, teacher, photographer, painter, editor and
writer. She was co-editor of the" Poetry Ring "feature for" ETC: A
Review of General Semantics "from 2008-2011. Her poetry has been
published in "Other Voices, ETC, General Semantics Bulletin, "
several anthologies, various e-zines, and she was co-editor and
contributor to the poetry anthology" Candy." Dale resides in
Victoria on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
Reviews
"Dale Winslow's "Tinderbox "shows a sure, mature touch with words,
and styles. Many of the poems herein blend symbolist style with
contemporary rap: a rap without the theatrical ranting and bling.
And from time to time one can hear or glimpse in the background an
e e cummings, a John Skelton. Entertaining and
thought-provoking."
Eric McLuhan, author of "Electric Language, The Role of Thunder in
Finnegans Wake," and co-author with Marshall McLuhan of "Laws of
Media, " and "Media and Formal Cause."
"Dale Winslow's "Tinderbox" will ignite" you." Her sensuous poems
explode in an orgiastic word feast which communicates a waking
dream convergence between women, nature, and truth. Winslow's words
hook you; you "reel them in real in them until you say "O."" She
conjures many varieties of ""O"" and "Oh" which encircle you within
poetic sheer delight. Really "
Marleen S. Barr, author of "Genre Fission, Lost in Space, Feminist
Fabulation," and the novel, "Oy Pioneer "
"These poems track truth as though it were some constantly morphing
mythical creature leaping from one disguise to another until it is
caught and stilled in its final form-wisdom. They are euphonious,
sensual, full of surprises and highly engaging. They present the
reader with ample opportunities to "commit pleasure crimes against
the dying world.""
Robert Priest, poet, novelist, playwright, songwriter, performer
"A late evening's snifter of words - surprisingly ancient and very
modern at the same time, personal and cosmic, even the typography
dances - that gets to the deepest centers of your brain. Winslow is
a welcome, major talent."
Paul Levinson, author of "The Plot to Save Socrates" and
"Unburning Alexandria"
"No container of flammable miniatures but rather a smoldering
verbal inferno, blazing with the heat & light of Dale Winslow's
unflinching yet passionate gaze on all things great and small,
"Tinderbox" addresses the most profound preoccupations of
consciousness: love & loss, the natural & unnatural worlds
("broken temples of man"), &, most exquisitely perhaps, death
("the endangered void"). It should be no surprise, then, that to
enter the world of "Tinderbox" is to enter the world itself in all
of its felt drama -- illuminated, lamented, & celebrated by the
voice of this "white noise Orpheus," a voice both incendiary &
generative, "curling/coiling/as a snake/on fire.""
Susan Lewis, poet and editor
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Tinderbox (Paperback)
Dale Winslow
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R423
R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
Save R48 (11%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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About the author
Dale Winslow earned her B.Sc. in Wildlife Management from the
University of Guelph and her B.Ed. from the University of Victoria.
Dale has enjoyed life as an interpretive naturalist, wildlife and
fisheries biologist, teacher, photographer, painter, editor and
writer. She was co-editor of the" Poetry Ring "feature for" ETC: A
Review of General Semantics "from 2008-2011. Her poetry has been
published in "Other Voices, ETC, General Semantics Bulletin, "
several anthologies, various e-zines, and she was co-editor and
contributor to the poetry anthology" Candy." Dale resides in
Victoria on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
Reviews
"Dale Winslow's "Tinderbox "shows a sure, mature touch with words,
and styles. Many of the poems herein blend symbolist style with
contemporary rap: a rap without the theatrical ranting and bling.
And from time to time one can hear or glimpse in the background an
e e cummings, a John Skelton. Entertaining and
thought-provoking."
Eric McLuhan, author of "Electric Language, The Role of Thunder in
Finnegans Wake," and co-author with Marshall McLuhan of "Laws of
Media, " and "Media and Formal Cause."
"Dale Winslow's "Tinderbox" will ignite" you." Her sensuous poems
explode in an orgiastic word feast which communicates a waking
dream convergence between women, nature, and truth. Winslow's words
hook you; you "reel them in real in them until you say "O."" She
conjures many varieties of ""O"" and "Oh" which encircle you within
poetic sheer delight. Really "
Marleen S. Barr, author of "Genre Fission, Lost in Space, Feminist
Fabulation," and the novel, "Oy Pioneer "
"These poems track truth as though it were some constantly morphing
mythical creature leaping from one disguise to another until it is
caught and stilled in its final form-wisdom. They are euphonious,
sensual, full of surprises and highly engaging. They present the
reader with ample opportunities to "commit pleasure crimes against
the dying world.""
Robert Priest, poet, novelist, playwright, songwriter, performer
"A late evening's snifter of words - surprisingly ancient and very
modern at the same time, personal and cosmic, even the typography
dances - that gets to the deepest centers of your brain. Winslow is
a welcome, major talent."
Paul Levinson, author of "The Plot to Save Socrates" and
"Unburning Alexandria"
"No container of flammable miniatures but rather a smoldering
verbal inferno, blazing with the heat & light of Dale Winslow's
unflinching yet passionate gaze on all things great and small,
"Tinderbox" addresses the most profound preoccupations of
consciousness: love & loss, the natural & unnatural worlds
("broken temples of man"), &, most exquisitely perhaps, death
("the endangered void"). It should be no surprise, then, that to
enter the world of "Tinderbox" is to enter the world itself in all
of its felt drama -- illuminated, lamented, & celebrated by the
voice of this "white noise Orpheus," a voice both incendiary &
generative, "curling/coiling/as a snake/on fire.""
Susan Lewis, poet and editor
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Candy (Paperback)
Dale Winslow, Eric Badough, Erin Badough; Introduction by Lance Strate
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R400
R331
Discovery Miles 3 310
Save R69 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Candy: A Collection To Satisfy Your Sweetest Cravings," is an
eclectic collection which ranges from the romantic to the taboo and
from the intimate to the voyeuristic. With sensitivity, passion and
at times humor, these poems capture the delights of sex, sexuality,
love, lust and fantasy.
From the Introduction
]the gratification offered by the form of erotic poetry mirrors
the gratification we may gain from its content. And so, we may
admire the craft that went into the making of the poem, perhaps
even dissect the technique, or we may, at the other extreme, find
ourselves in a Pygmalion-like state of arousal, or a Narcissus-like
state of narcosis. But above all, the erotic mirror that these
poets have fashioned allows us to examine ourselves, our needs and
our wants, our experiences and intentions, our minds and our
bodies, in all their beauty, and in their unattractive aspects as
well. In short, the mirror of Eros allows us to know ourselves, in
all of our humanity.
-Lance Strate, author of "Echoes and Reflections"
Reviews
A wonderful celebration of sexual textasy."
-Robert Priest, author of "Reading the Bible Backwards"
"Candy" is better than sweet - it's a sensuous collection of
metaphoric, metaphysical, pulsing, pounding, gentle, gossamer
erotic poetry.
-Paul Levinson, author of 5 novels including "The Plot to Save
Socrates," and "The Pixel Eye"
"Candy" is heated and hardened, sugary foreplay for anybody in
need of some sweetness."
-Jeanette Kantzalis, novelist and musician-songwriter for "A
Brokeheart Pro"
In an age that hypes the erotic potential of new media, "Candy"
is a reminder that language itself remains our principal instrument
of desire.
-Joseph W. Slade, author of "Pornography in America," the three
volume reference work "Pornography and Sexual Representation," and
"Thomas Pynchon" (Writers for the 70's series)
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