Showing posts with label Heidi Greco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heidi Greco. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 December 2017

Good, Better, Best

If you're looking for ideas on ethical gifts - here are a few that are more likely to produce gratitude for the coming year.


  1. A membership gift for the future - The Leap Manifesto. A future of responsible policies, government and business leaders who are working beyond the next budget or election.
  2. News outlets that write as though humanity is important - National Observer  
  3. subscription to a Socially responsible think tank - Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
  4. Groups working for and educating the public on the Environment - Suzuki Foundation
  5. Books about living well - The Art of Power by Thich Nhat Hanh
  6. Gifts made by small crafts businesses - Indian Summer Leather Purses
  7. Spa treatments - Hale Aloha Wellness Spa 
  8. Paintings created by artists that are still alive - Mindy Joseph Paintings
  9. Books of poetry by poets who are not dead - Anima Canadensis , Flightpaths, Hush, The Way of Tanka and others.
Buy fair trade goods and treats, food that is nutritious, music that is inspiring, gift certificates for local business, donations for causes that gladden the heart.

By the way - this blog did not receive any payments for the items I listed. Nor did the writer.

Friday, 16 June 2017

Tomorrow at Gabriola Branch of VIRL

Flightpaths

The Lost Journals of Amelia Earhart 

Heidi Greco


June 17, 1:30 - 2:30 PM
Vancouver Island Regional Library, 
Gabriola Branch
575 N Rd #5, Gabriola, BC V0R 1X3
 (250) 247-7878

On the 120th anniversary of Amelia Earhart’s birth and the 80th anniversary of her disappearance, award-winning poet, Heidi Greco revitalizes what we know about the iconic aviator through uplifting and historically mesmerizing verse.

If most people were asked what they know about Amelia Earhart, they’d probably respond with something like “Wasn’t she that pilot who went missing when she tried to fly around the world?”
Although that much is true, Earhart was so much more. She was a feminist at a time when women were just beginning to make inroads towards equality. She was a best-selling author who made appearances and speeches that inspired many. In addition, she was a pacifist, a poet, a punster – the list could go on. She was ahead of her time in so many ways, right down to the no-nonsense clothes she wore (many of them fashioned after her own designs).
To this day, her disappearance is enshrouded in mystery, with many questions remaining. Was she on a secret mission, spying for her country? Was she captured by the Japanese and held in a prison camp? Or did she and her navigator simply crash and die?
The poems in this collection, presented as if written by Earhart herself, consider some of the many theories that attempt to explain her disappearance. Through logbook entries, recollections and letters, the work explores some of the various flightpaths she may have taken.
Flightpaths: The Lost Journals of Amelia Earhart slips easily from windowpane prose to lyric as Heidi Greco delivers the realities, the fantasies, the possibilities of Amelia Earhart’s last flight over the Pacific Ocean with a complex simplicity that gives us both what probably was and what might have been — building a poem/story of a life bigger than history.
Brian Brett, author of Tuco: The Parrot, The Others, and The Scattershot World
“In this unique and intriguing fictional tale, Heidi Greco convinces us that Amelia Earhart’s Lockheed 10 Electra went down near a remote Pacific island. This tragic event, and the disappearance of Amelia’s plane into the ocean, leaves the reader wondering what happened to this brave pilot who accepted the challenge of a world flight in 1937.”
— Ann Holtgren Pellegreno, Pellegreno was the first to fly a Lockheed 10 Electra around the world on the Earhart Trail. On July 2, 1967, she dropped a wreath on Howland Island.

Thursday, 16 June 2016

Infinite Power - a book of poems


Image: Heroic Journey by Paul Grignon
Infinite Power, in Vickers eyes “is not a zero sum game 
but a journey / a stone thrown in a lake / circular ripples
emanating outward” and the danger of our age is that we have
lost contact with that power, made it something to possess 
like a personal bank account. In writing these poems she 
hopes for a reconnection to that sacred universal relationship.

Janet Vickers’s book of poetry, entitled Infinite Power, 
has such an accurate title for this is an important, brave and, 
indeed, powerful gathering of poems. She is on a search, a 
compelling search, that draws the reader along with her as 
she questions accepted concepts, ploughs through mankind’s 
inhumanity and even tears nature apart in her quest for a core
of hope amidst despair. “The distant bird singing,” as she puts
it. This need to give reason for continuance is evidenced in 
Vickers startling fresh and demanding metaphors and her 
piercing questions. Hope comes in the last few words—“love 
everyone, hate no-one, move to the edge.” It takes profound
insight to come to such a seemingly innocent answer.
~ Naomi Beth Wakan, inaugural Poet Laureate of Nanaimo


These poems are at turns thought-provoking, accusatory, or playful in their exploration of topics such as
climate change, extinctions, greed or incidents from her own past. The thread always running throughout
Janet's work is her commitment to honouring all that’s sacred, whether that might be in the world of nature or
in the realm of the human heart.
~ Heidi Greco

This is Janet Vickers’s second trade book of poems. Her first book, Impermanence was published in 2012, also by Ekstasis. Her poems have appeared in anthologies in Canada (Down in the Valley, Ekstasis 2004) and the UK (Refugees Welcome and The Poet’s Quest for God, Eyewear 2016), in literary journals and online magazines. Janet is active in the community on Gabriola Island where she lives with Tony, her husband of 46 years.

To order go to Ekstasis Editions

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