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Inspirational Spa: From the Womb of the Morning

A successful collection of positive ideas and poems.

In this debut collection of poems and inspirational exercises, Millard offers readers a chance to connect with positive ideas for growth and self-reflection.

This encouraging collection is organized into four themes—“faith and resilience,” motivation, “admiration and celebration of various milestones in life,” and self-reflection—designated as “Inspirational Spa Treatments.” Like a spa treatment, poetry, the author explains, can relax, stimulate and inspire. Vivid phrases—“dreams that dried” and an eternity that “opened its ear”—bring the pages to life. Poems in the second section, which deals in “Energizing words of positive action,” seem less fresh in moments where the poet relies on clichéd phrases—e.g., “tears of pain”—and end rhymes: “While we pledge allegiance / to the red, white and blue / without Almighty God we cannot make it through.” These moments steal power from a book that begins so authentically, with a unique introduction that asks the reader to view each morning as an opportunity: “[D]ay is merely night draped with light.” Those imagistic moments are what color the collection and leave lines and stanzas lingering in the reader’s mind. At the end of each segment of poems, the author asks readers to self-reflect and provides work sheets in which they can begin deconstructing goals and desires, challenges to overcome, and best qualities. While some readers might find these work sheets out of place in a quiet collection of poetry, others may find it fruitful to pause after reading each section to reflect and apply those concepts. The collection ends with a 31-day calendar of inspirational quotes, which brings the book full circle, back to the main idea of the introduction: to treat each morning like a rebirth and a new opportunity to grow.

A successful collection of positive ideas and poems.

Pub Date: Aug. 22, 2014

ISBN: 978-1500360979

Page Count: 152

Publisher: CreateSpace

Review Posted Online: Nov. 4, 2014

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Immortal Medusa

An entrancing book of poetry.

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Ungar’s (English/Coll. of Saint Rose; The Origin of the Milky Way, 2007, etc.) new collection may not make her immortal, but it surely establishes her as a contemporary poet of the first rank.

This poetry collection is like a bowl of fruit and cream: it’s so delicious, and it all goes down so easily, that you forget how much nutrition is there. She’s also the rare talent who can take nearly anything and make it into poetry. Everything is ore for her refinery, and she pulls inspiration from numerous and sundry sources, from the natural world to mystical Judaism to an exercise class for the elderly to a student’s essay. (The author is a writing professor.) This last source fuels “On a Student Paper Comparing Emily Dickinson to Lady Gaga,” a poem that no one should ever have tried to write—and that Ungar turns to gold. This clever piece demonstrates the author’s slow turn from skeptical distance to full acceptance of her young author’s thesis; it concludes, “Should I google Lady Gaga? / Or just give the girl an A.” This collection is full of such unlikely experiments—all of which the author pulls off with easy grace. Two poems with “Medusa” in their titles show her admirable dexterity with symbols. The first, “Call Me Medusa,” takes the snake-haired sorceress as a metaphor for the author herself: “I was a brain, eyes and hair. / If not a beauty, are you then a monster? / Some say I was beautiful, raped, punished / for it, then beheaded in a rear-view mirror. / Even cut off, my head could still turn men / to stone.” The second, a poem that gives the collection its title, compares tiny jellyfish to the same mythic figure: “Tentacles resorb, / umbrella reverts, / medusa reattaches / to the ocean floor / and grows a new / colony of polyps / that bud into / identical medusae, / bypassing death.” Thus, Medusa is human and other, dead and deathless, beautiful and terrible and strange.

An entrancing book of poetry.

Pub Date: April 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-915380-93-0

Page Count: 98

Publisher: The Word Works

Review Posted Online: Aug. 24, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2015

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Defining Atlas

Sturdy, exuberant verse.

Like the demigod from which it takes its name, Defining Atlas is a durable, uplifting volume.

A strong current of self-affirmation, self-love, and self-confidence runs through this work, and readers will come away feeling their spirits improved. We feel some of this current in the clever “Limited”; Michaels takes the titular subject and turns it on its head: “I’m new, but I’m old / Not limited beyond my means and methods / But limited because I’m special / Special beyond the heavens and everything that surrounds me / That I’m among…limited.” Elsewhere in “From the ashes…I am,” he sings a hard-won song of renewal and rebirth: “I am victory in its rawest form / I am hope that never conform / I am the will, the drive, and the truth / I am like everyone, like you.” But Michaels does not hoard specialness or victory for himself; he wants it for his reader too, and in “Wake Up!” he urges us on toward a bright future: “There’s something good here for you / Your purpose can never be defined by just one blue / Your destiny awaits you.” Underpinning Michaels’ stirring message is a strong faith in God, whose presence infuses many of the poems here: “But I always thank God for the latter / For the strength and will it takes / Shines so bright / Shines so right.” Michaels often adopts a loose scheme of rhyming couplets, and this decision leads to one of the book’s few weaknesses. Too often, the poet picks awkward or odd pairings; e.g., “And if I could become a perfect saint / I would make believers out of the ones who say they ain’t” and the “you/blue” couplet mentioned above. But such missteps are infrequent, and they don’t dim the warm light that emanates from Michaels’ fine volume.

Sturdy, exuberant verse.

Pub Date: March 15, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-5035-4785-8

Page Count: 106

Publisher: Xlibris

Review Posted Online: Aug. 21, 2015

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