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The poems in Choosing a Stone, Richard Hedderman's first full-length poetry collection, masterfully explore the intersection of physical landscape and human consciousness. In sharply imagistic and muscular language, these visceral poems revel in the sensory delights that reinforce our shared humanity: praising hot black coffee, savoring a rustic Basque dinner, lazing in a hammock, or watching "the sky-map of cloud drift over the trees." He is archeologist and alchemist, quarrying an historical mythos to shape his powerful, deeply-realized vision. Hedderman's work intrepidly-and wryly-excavates…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The poems in Choosing a Stone, Richard Hedderman's first full-length poetry collection, masterfully explore the intersection of physical landscape and human consciousness. In sharply imagistic and muscular language, these visceral poems revel in the sensory delights that reinforce our shared humanity: praising hot black coffee, savoring a rustic Basque dinner, lazing in a hammock, or watching "the sky-map of cloud drift over the trees." He is archeologist and alchemist, quarrying an historical mythos to shape his powerful, deeply-realized vision. Hedderman's work intrepidly-and wryly-excavates and shapes an authentic understanding of our place in this world, and the one we've come from.
Autorenporträt
Born in Albany, NY, Richard Hedderman has worked as a housepainter, freelance writer, actor, voice-over artist, stage combat choreographer, and museum educator. A Pushcart-nominated (2017, 2019) poet and author, he taught English at Collège St. François-Xavier in Vannes, France, and earned degrees in English Literature and Theater at the University of San Francisco, and a MA in English/Creative Writing from the University of New Hampshire. He is the author of a chapbook, The Discovery of Heaven (Parallel Press), and his writing has appeared in dozens of literary publications both in the U.S. and abroad. Several of his poems and essays have been featured on public radio, and he appeared as a guest poet at the Library of Congress with the Poetry at Noon program. He serves on the Education staff at the Milwaukee Public Museum where he coordinates creative writing programming. He lives in Milwaukee with his wife, theatre professor and playwright Robin Mello.