Author’s Notes
Learn the circumstances and inspirations for and published credits for this month’s featured writing.
Kathleen Roxby is a prize-winning poet whose work has been published in anthologies, poetry magazines and three self-published chapbooks, Chameleon Woman, Tangent/Allusion, and Paper Doll. She has been a poetry judge, facilitator for two poetry groups, a sometime editor of both a poetry magazine, chapbooks for her mother and two anthologies, one for her father. She has also worked in prose with work published on a website dedicated to writing. Her favorite poets are Poe, Issa and Li Po Chu’i, with a special place for Benet’s John Brown’s Body.
Kathleen had several jobs: library catalog clerk at CSULB, junior high school teacher in LBUSD, a brief stint as a lab secretary for a private hospital, engineering secretary and computer system administrator with related work in developing and managing documentation for two manufacturing companies. Kathleen’s other interests include theater, dancing, painting and reading. She is a native of Long Beach, California but currently resides in Santa Barbara with her dog Opal.
Learn the circumstances and inspirations for and published credits for this month’s featured writing.
Readers who write in response to one of the prompts listed each month in “Splintered Glass”, may see their work presented here. Will your writing appear here?
This month’s prompts focus on National Poetry Month.
Tonight, as my dreams escape the fragile net of words my soul’s song is unheard….
WEBSITE EXCERPT
The honored word for this month comes to English from Greek…and, like another Greek origin word—politics, immediately separates people into three pools of opinion: For, Against and those who wobble about in vagueness as Undecided.
Learn the circumstances and inspirations for and published credits for this month’s featured writing.
Readers who write in response to one of the prompts listed each month in “Splintered Glass”, may see their work presented here. Will your writing appear here?
This month’s prompts focus on National Poetry Month.
Irresistibly…you fall into the welcome of home–
Boon, something beneficial or a favor, and docks, the structure to which you can secure your ship in port or device to link your PC with peripherals in the office. The problem is obvious. What do these two definitions have to do with each other?