Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Poets and Poems: Linda Nemec Foster and the Extraordinary Ordinary




A few weeks ago, I looked by Bone Country, the recent poetry collection by Linda Nemec Foster. It was like a travel guide to Europe, but not what you expected from a travel book. She explore through both real and imagined stories, and you came away with a strong sense of what the people and places are really about. 

Since then, I’ve looked at two of Foster’s previous collections, Talking Diamonds, first published in 2009 and reissued in 2023, and Bue Divide, published in 2021 and republished in 2023. In both cases, the first publisher had closed its doors and the collections were reissued by Cornerstone Press of the University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point. It’s not difficult to see why. Both Talking Diamonds and Blue Divide are excellent, with sharp imagery, moving stories, and an original voice. 


To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.


Some Tuesday Readings

 

Fire in the Earth – poem by David Whyte.

 

Poetry Prompt: Meet Your Muse Erato – L.L. Barkat at Tweetspeak Poetry.

 

An Answer Without a Question – poem by Robert Cording at Rabbit Room Poetry.

 

Verses on the Prospects of Planting Arts and Learning in America, poem by George Berkeley – Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.

Monday, February 9, 2026

"Shooting Season" by David Gatward


If you had told him three months before, DCI Harry Grimm would have laughed. He’s on loan (or “secondment”) to the police in Yorkshire, and he first couldn’t wait to return to his base in Bristol. But now, the landscape and the people are growing on him; he’s even tried the local preference for cake with cheese and discovered it’s not too bad. 

Grimm and his team are called into to handle a missing person report. A bestselling London author, in York to promote his newest book, has driven off into the dark. They soon discover the people attached to the author – his agent, his editor, his personal assistant, his accountant, and two “friends” – may have al had axes to grind. But where is the author?

 

David Gatward

He soon turns up, or his body does. It appears to be suicide by shotgun, except both triggers were pulled in succession. Suicide it wasn’t, and the list of suspects grows to include a woman who made a scene at a local bookstore author event, accusing the man of stealing someone else’s words. And if a murder investigation isn’t enough, Grimm’s criminal father shows up with two thugs, attempting to bring his son “into line.”

 

Shooting Season is the fourth novel in the DCI Harry Grimm series by British author David Gatward. Rather than a slow development toward the conclusion, this one finds Grimm and his team stymied at every turn, chasing leads that go nowhere – and that lasts for most of the book. What that means is that the story is less about the mystery and more about Grimm’s own development – and setting the stage for his possible permanent assignment to York.

 

In addition to the DCI Harry Grimm series, Gatward has published children’s and teen fiction, taught creative writing sessions, worked as an editor, started a small publishing firm, and returned to writing when the COVID pandemic arrived. He grew up in the Cotswold’s and Yorkshire in England (including the town for the setting of Grimm Up North), and he’s also lived in Lincolnshire and the Lake District.

 

Related: 

Grimm Up North by David Gatward.

 Best Served Cold by David Gatward

Corpse Road by David Gatward.

 

Some Monday Readings

 

Köln Revisited: Or why our art needs this non-ideal world – Andrew Roycroft at New Grub Street.

 

The American Revolution and the Fate of the World by Richard Bell – review by Phill Greenwalt at Emerging Revolutionary War Era.

 

From the Stacks: A Place on Earth – Jeffrey Bilbro at Orange Blossom Ordinary.

 

River Reversed: The New Madrid Earthquake of 1812 – Jason Clark at This Is the Day.

 

Art competitions a forgotten part of Olympic history – Anne Handley-Fierce at St. Louis Art Museum.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

The wicked thrive


After Psalm 73
 

We see the wealth,

the success, the position,

the status, the renown,

the power that accrues

to the wicked, the wealthy,

the unbeliever, the powerful.

We see the oppression,

the injustice, the innocent

betrayed, the godly

persecuted. Our hearts 

turn hard, turn black;

we ask how he allows

the disparity so grotesque.

Does he not know?

Does he know and ignore?

In his sanctuary I find

the answers, I see

their ends, I understand

the anxiety of losing all

in a moment with nothing

to fall back on. I see

my own end, my own

wickedness, my own

failings and sin. 

I look all over,

I search all over,

I see what the world

values and prizes,

glittering like gold.

My dreams end,

my heart awakens

to the reality of what

matters in this world. 

And I know I am

blessed, my heart knows

I am blessed. I find rest,

I find safety, only in

nail-scarred hands.

 

Photograph by Vitaly Shevchenko via Unsplash. Used with permission.


Some Sunday Readings

 

Wild, Unorganized, and Totally Worth It – Jacob Crouch.

 

The Songs I Once Found Dreary – Karen Dedert at Think Twice.




Saturday, February 7, 2026

Saturday Good Reads – Feb. 7, 2026


The image that come to mind when I think of the American Revolution are the Boston Tea Party, Lexington and Concord, crossing the Delaware, Bunker Hill, the winter at Valley Forge, Paul Revere’s ride, the Declaration of Independence signed at Philadelphia, and Yorktown. Do you see what’s odd about that list? Except for Yorktown, the story in my head centers in the northeastern colonies. Alan Pell Crawford, writing for The Coolidge Review, talks about  another war – the Revolutionary War that history forgot, one that just as important as what happened in the North.  

I like the writing of William Faulkner. My wife does not. “Didn’t the guy ever hear of punctuation marks?” she says. Well, yes, there is that. Joel Miller at Miller’s Book Review asks a very pertinent question for writers: how long should a sentence be? To be fair to my wife’s criticism, Miller points out that Faulkner has one sentence in Absalom, Absalom that is almost 1,300 words long. But Faulkner is a piker compared to last year’s Nobel Prize winner, Hungarian Laszlo Krasznahorkai, who has a novella of 17,800 words – all in one sentence. The mind boggles.

 

J.P. Moreland, professor of philosophy at the Talbott School of Theology (Biola University), has a relatively short article adapted from a longer paper. It’s about how three worldviews – Christianity, postmodernism, and scientific naturalism – view government. It will be no surprise that two of the three almost by definition favor big government. If you’re interested in the longer paper, you can download it here.

 

More Good Reads

 

America 250

 

Ten of the Most Exciting Ways to Commemorate America’s 250th This Year – Laura Kiniry at Smithsonian Magazine.

 

The New Dominion: The Land Lotteries – Gabriel Neville at the Journal of the American Revolution.

 

When Revolutionary War Heroes Became Enemies of the State – Jason Clark at This Is the Day.

 

The First War for Hearts and Minds – Jonathan Horn at The Free Press.

 

The Monmouth County Jail and the Jailbreak of February 1781 – Michael Adelberg at Journal of the American Revolution.

 

Victory or Death: Trenton, December 1776 – Charlton Allen at American Thinker.

 

Writing and Literature

 

Charles Dickens and the Upside-Down Kingdom – Kari Cope at Story Warren.

 

Why Literature Needs a Punk Rock Mindset – Lincoln Michel at Counter Craft.

 

Faith

 

Lincoln on Reviving Truth in Public Discourse – John Pletcher at the Institute for Faith, Work, & Economics.

 

Tiptoeing to the Edge of Cliffs – Tim Challies. 

 

The Need for Father-Scholars – Ian Harber at Mere Orthodoxy.

 

Softly, Softly, Break a Bone – Kristin at The Palest Ink.

 

Life and Culture

 

Don’t Call It a Comeback – Elizabeth Stice at Front Porch Republic.

 

Poetry

 

“Ode” by Arthur O’Shaughnessy – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

“Madam Would Speak with Me,” poem by George Meredith – Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.


What is Lyric Poetry? - L.L. Barkat at Tweetspeak Poetry.

 

American Stuff

 

After Trump comes reform – Simon Jenkins at The Spectator.

 

Psalm 116 (I Love You Lord) – Mission House with Andrew & Skye Peterson



Painting: St. Francis of Assisi in Prayer, oil on copper by Cigoli (Ludivico Cardi) (1559-1613), Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest.

Friday, February 6, 2026

Love or justice?


After 2 Samuel 18
 

Is the focus to be

love, or is the focus

to be justice? Is

this life about grace,

or is this life about

righteousness? It

seems a cop-out

to say, well, both 

matter. They do,

but we want one or 

the other to rule.

Instead, we discover

a tension, a tautness,

and exhaustion to hold

both together,

at the same time,

as if they were one

entity, not two. The mind

boggles, the heart

struggles more. We do

not expect to be called

to this divine tension.

 

Photograph by Jon Tyson via Unsplash. Used with permission.


Some Friday Readings

 

“An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatly,” poem by Jupiter Hammon – D.S. Martin at Kingdom Poets.

 

Life is a Vapour. Enjoy It – Seth Lewis.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Poet Liz Ahl Beats the Bounds


It wasn’t something I read in history class, but rather from actual “being there” experience. I first read about an ancient practice called “beating the bounds” from a blogger based in London that I follow. It’s a longstanding tradition in which people walk the boundaries of their church parish or community every seven years. The idea is to maintain boundary lines and resist encroachment.  

The practice carried over when the English colonized America. The surprise is that some states still require “beating the bounds” as a statutory requirement. It’s officially called “perambulation,” and it still exists on the law books in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. It’s applied to towns, and it’s often not enforced, but it still is something of a regular practice in New Hampshire. 

 

A 2017 poetry collection by Liz Ahl is entitled Beating the Bounds. Ahl lives in New Hampshire. The wonderful title poem is about perambulation. Not only does it frame the rest of the poems to follow in the volume, it also stuck in my head as I read two other collections by Ahl, a chapbook entitled A Stanza is a Place to Stand (2023) and A Case for Solace (2022). “You must walk the path you think you know again, / to see how, again, you don’t fully know it,” she writes.


To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.


Some Thursday Readings

 

“The Fish,” poem by Marianne Moore – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

Poems from the Coffee Shop: Pine Needle Tea – L.L. Barkat at Every Day Poems.

 

An installation – poem by Sonja Benskin Mesher.

 

“The Cupbearer or the Baker?” and “Decisions” – poems by Paul Millan at Society of Classical Poets.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Some Reviews of "Brookhaven"


Reviewers have had kind things to say about my novel
 Brookhaven. Here are a few of them. 

Outstanding novel about the Civil War

 

Though this is a novel, the author has included a lot of historical information about the Civil War times that amplifies the horror and destruction of this brutal war and its aftermath. The reader will find inspiration in the determination of the main characters. The book offers something for almost every reader-- historical insights, a bit of romance, family dynamics but, most of all, the book highlights the indomitable human spirit to survive the tragedy and almost unimaginable hardship brought on by the Civil War.

 

Beautifully written. Impossible to put down.

 

“This wonder of a Civil War novel captivated me from the first page. Set ostensibly in 1915 when the only female reporter for the NEW YORK WORLD is sent south to learn details about a mysterious Confederate spy, author Glynn Young spins a family saga that details the heartache and loss not only of the war specifically but the broken relationships and twisted lives that came out of those devastating years.

“What begins as a mystery to solve quickly evolves into an elderly man’s own story of the nation’s worst war. Set primarily in the town of Brookhaven, Mississippi, and the homes of a family still caught in the grasp of the war's aftermath, the story moves back and forth between 1915 and the 1860s, taking readers on a personal tour of troop movement in the eastern border states, battles of Gettysburg and Wilderness, General Lee’s surrender, and ultimately, a very satisfying finale.

“As I read, the book and its characters felt very real. Not my ancestors, certainly, but people I learned to cheer for and care about as the ways of war and the world had their effect. That turned out to be not too surprising, as the author wrote an end-of-the-book note that BROOKHAVEN was inspired by tales he heard from his own family as he was growing up.

Finally, marvel of marvels for people like me who always “want to know more” after I’ve finished a historical novel, author Young provides readers with a comprehensive bibliography at the end of the book that ranges from general Civil War books, to books about the war in Mississippi, to letters and memoirs that offer personal insights into those years.

 

Beautifully told, fascinating in historical detail

 

Glynn Young has crafted a beautiful, engrossing story that shines with historical details. I've always loved historical fiction and Brookhaven does not disappoint. The many twists and turns in the story made this one a page-turner for me. The author's note at the end of the book relates how the book was inspired by an old family story, which I found to be so interesting. I could tell by the way the author handled the characters with such integrity that this story holds a special place in his heart. This book kept me company over the holidays and through a winter snowstorm. It was a very good companion.