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Showing 1 - 23 of
23 matches in All Departments
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The Cloud (Paperback)
Michael Hofmeister; Michael Hofmeister
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R349
Discovery Miles 3 490
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Candle (Paperback)
Michael Hofmeister; Michael Hofmeister
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R236
Discovery Miles 2 360
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Cactus (Paperback)
Michael Hofmeister; Michael Hofmeister
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R345
Discovery Miles 3 450
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Emmett (Paperback)
Michael Hofmeister
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R231
Discovery Miles 2 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Then Now Later is a short volume of poetry that explores the idea
that the past present and future are always presents in our lives.
Using simple language, and a free-flowing mixture of rhymed and
unrhymed verse, the author visits each title theme (then now later)
individually, but appears to emphasize the importance of living 'in
the now' while still trying absorb the nutrients of the past so
that the recipe for the future is created with care. The book opens
with a famous lullaby - a lullaby with which we are all familiar
'row row row your boat gently down the stream' and which serves to
be a perfect opener for the piece. It fits well because after a
series of shorter poems, the book becomes and concludes with a
lengthy stream of consciousness narrative written 'in the now'.
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Linking (Paperback)
Joseph Eugene Davis, Michael Hofmeister
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R249
Discovery Miles 2 490
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Little Man follows the adventures of Emmett Hofmeister in his first
year of life as he explores the world around him with his Mom, Dad
and two little pups, Maya and Jake. The story begins with the news
that a baby is on the way, and then follows little Emmett from his
first photograph inside the womb until his first birthday. Full of
captured moments and advice for the new little man in his life,
Michael Hofmeister highlights his son's big and little milestones
using a form of journal poetry. A perfect gift for any expecting
parents or for parents that'd like to reminisce about the little
miracles that have lit up their lives in ways only they can.
Addition is a short volume of poetry which was, by the author's own
admission, an experiment to see how long he could write without
stopping. The book opens with the axiom, 'if you're not adding,
you're subtracting.' "I opened with that line and I just kept
going," Michael said, "as quickly as possible, and with as little
regard for punctuation, grammar, etc. as possible. The point was to
remove the filter I normally use when I write - to remove the
filter so that I could let my insides out without trying to stop or
shape them at all - to let them be exactly as they are.
Unfortunately, I did edit a little bit after completing it. But, I
stopped myself from further editing when I realized it would defeat
the purpose of the experiment and would also ruin the uniqueness of
the imperfections that happened along the way. I truly believe
everything happens for a reason, and so, I decided to leave it as
is - to except the imperfections as a part of the piece -
imperfections that somehow end up flavoring the piece in a way that
fixing them wouldn't."
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U (Paperback)
Michael Hofmeister
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R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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U is an exploration of the idea that trusting your first instinct
when writing can lead to very interesting and unexpected places. It
was written using an expanded form of poetry taught in grade
school. The author chose seven letters, which by themselves are
words, as the starting points for each line, and used every
possible combination of those seven letters in succession to
establish the final structure of the piece. "Writing it was like an
inkblot exercise of sorts," Michael Hofmeister has stated. "By
forcing myself to use predetermined letters to begin each line, I
chose words I normally wouldn't use, which ended up being a unique
way to trick my subconscious into revealing what was really on my
mind at that time." Also, at some point, he started to realize the
poems were unintentionally yielding distinct physical images do to
the somewhat controlled but also random placement of the words. He
began to play with these images until they fit the page and the
project took on a whole new life as a form of word art or shape
poetry. Pull the page away from your face and let your eyes drift
for a moment and see if any images stick out from the white
landscape behind the words. Written over the course of a two week
period, U is comparable to a musical theme album in that it's best
when read straight through in one sitting.
The Island City is a short volume of poetry which highlights the
simple joys of a summer weekend on a lake at a cabin in western
Wisconsin. Michael Hofmeister stated this regarding the impromptu
nature of the creation of the book: "I hadn't intended on writing a
book at all - it just happened. The first night at the cabin, after
everyone had gone to bed, it was absolutely perfect outside, so I
went to the screen porch, sat down, turned on a small lamp and
listened to the night. I started jotting down a few short lyrics
about what was happening in the moment as quickly as it was
happening - a loon singing, a chorus of frogs, the waves on the
lake, the sound of the wind, a june bug trying to reach the light I
was was writing by - and so on. I tried to keep it simple and
straight to the point - nothing fancy. I continued that pattern the
next day and into the next night and before I knew it, I was
sitting on quite a few complete or nearly complete poems. It was a
fun family weekend on a beautiful lake and I felt very lucky to be
able to capture it in this way as well as I could." Set in
Cumberland, Wisconsin (which is also known as The Island City) at
Camp Brigadoon on Beaver Dam Lake, this book is perfect for anyone
who has been fortunate enough to spend any amount of time on a lake
in Minnesota or Wisconsin at any point in their lives. Written in a
clear and simple language, the poems although short in length are
full of character and have an honesty about them that can only be
compared to the feeling a day next to the water can evoke.
Our Earthly Rhythms is a volume of poetry that explores the four
seasons of nature and life both physically, emotionally and
metaphorically. Like U before it, Our Earthly Rhythms is comparable
to a musical theme album in that it is meant to be read straight
through in one sitting. The story begins in the fall with "A
Civilization of Fire," a shape poem which sounds like the fire it's
describing when read aloud, and ends in the summer with "Our
Earthly Rhythms" a short-but-sweet conclusion that may leave the
reader with the impression that the story is ever and ongoing.
Written over the course of an eleven year period, each poem has
it's own unique voice, style, rhythm and subject matter. It's main
theme appears to be an acknowledgement of an infinite passage of
time which courses through the book as though it were as
commonplace to talk about as the weather. In "Emergence," the
author states that "The repeating four seasons of life take root in
a short spring of becoming and are succeeded by an emergence into a
world of contrasting qualities of dark and light" and concludes
that "The sun is close but will move away again the season's will
repeat again and again everything will change and return and change
and return again and again..."
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