Poetry with Pepper: Verses for the Pallet Contributor(s): Lewis Esq, Len J. (Author) |
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ISBN: 1505613434 ISBN-13: 9781505613438 Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform OUR PRICE: $14.86 Product Type: Paperback Published: May 2015 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Poetry | Caribbean & Latin American |
Physical Information: 0.56" H x 5.51" W x 8.5" (0.69 lbs) 268 pages |
Themes: - Cultural Region - Latin America |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: FOREWORD There is something in here for everyone. The theme "Poetry with Pepper" was chosen because the appetites of millennium children seem to yearn for everything spicy. At the heart of so many of these poems there's commentary addressing one kind of challenge or another; rumour, terror, parenthood, politics, weakness, peer pressure, legacy, and last but by no means least - sacrifice. Along with the commentary comes entertainment. There's rhyme for you whose ears enjoy the resonance, there's metre to petition the rhythm of the soul, beat for movement of the feet and the pounding of the heart. In this work one can find, also, a variety of forms of the art of poetry represented. These include mixed verse, haiku, sonnets, rictameter, odes, lyrics composed for music and melodic verses tastefully embroidered with love. It is to the benefit of us all that poetry as a form of art has withstood the harrowing tests of time and taste. The works of the great ones from Chaucer, through Shakespeare, Milton, Keats, Byron, Moliere, Voltaire, Kipling have been drilled into anyone who was fortunate enough to have had a complete grammar school education. Poetry's unique licence should be preserved and treasured for it is perhaps the fuel that powers the thrust into and out of those invisibly trodden pathways to the soul. "What really", you ask, "is poetry?" Poetry really has no one set definition. Shadow Poetry.com defines poetry as the art of writing thoughts, ideas, and dreams into imaginative language which can contain verse, pause, meter, repetition, and rhyme. It has been said that "To write a poem is to show your heart and soul to the world." - fallenchild. People of Trinidad and Tobago, the country of my birth and my current home, refer to themselves, more often than not, as "Trini". Every dialect has a cadence or inflection of its own; but ours, I've been told, is particularly rhythmical especially when we speak extemporaneously. Sometimes I am tempted to believe that we speak in poetry. By virtue of our dialectic lilt and our humour-driven candour, every Trini is a budding poet. The International Library of Poetry, thankfully, has been a beacon for more than seven million poets around the world; and on repeated occasions during the first decade of the twenty-first century this poet has readily accepted the invitation to contribute to their publication "The International Who's Who in Poetry". |