For
the next two or three weeks, I thought I’d try something a little different
with Saturday Good Reads, and that is to highlight some of the blogs (and
bloggers) that I regularly cite in these posts, as well as a few of the newer
ones.
The
process starts with my RSS reader (in this case, Google Reader). I check it two
or three times a day. The number of subscriptions is on the large side,
primarily because I check some of the sites that are part of The High Calling
Network. The reader shows any new additions to the blogs that I follow.
From
that point, it’s what I find interesting, moving, intriguing – in short,
whatever appeals and what I think people will find engaging. I read a lot of
blog posts, and I can’t include everything I’d like to, so there’s a lot of
good stuff that doesn’t get included.
I
invariably include a post by Billy Coffey, who blogs at What I Learned Today. Billy blogs
twice a week, and his ability to tell a story never disappoints. The author of
two novels, he has a new coming out next year from Thomas Nelson.
Maureen
Doallas, blogging at Writing
Without Paper, is a poet, businesswoman, researcher extraordinaire, lover
of art, and one fine writer. She’s published Neruda’s
Memoirs: Poems, which I’ve read three times and still like to go back
and read selections from.
Susan
Etole takes some absolutely wonderful photographs, and then combines them with
a Scripture verse, a quote, a saying – and creates a new combined magic. She
blogs at Just…A Moment.
Nancy
Rosback writes poetry, takes photographs – and I usually can’t tell which one
is poetry and which one is a photo. They’re all good. She blogs at A Little Somethin’.
Michael
Perkins in a pastor in Nachitoches, Louisiana, and has one of the more unusual
blogs I’ve seen – all handwritten notes. He blogs at (where else?) The Handwritten.
Tim
Good is another photographer whose photos I enjoy. Tim wanders out into parks
and prairies and finds some incredibly beautiful things with his camera. He
blogs at Good Photography (or
Photography by Tiwago).
And
then there is my friend J of India, who blogs at Neither Use Nor Ornament.
He travels a fair bit – all over India, the Himalayas, Asia, New Zealand – and he
takes wonderful photographs, especially ones that rock with color. If it is
possible to have a best friend you’ve never met and who lives on the other side
of the world, then for me it is J.
Some
poetry bloggers (poems and articles) that I follow include D.S. Martin at Kingdom Poets, who posts weekly on
Christian poets from the past; Jerry Barrett at Gerald the Writer, who does poems,
essays and whatever might strike his imagination; Karen Eck at Karenee Art, who does poetry and art in
about equal measure; Brian Miller at WayStationOne,
whom I first met via One Stop Poetry; and B.K. McKenzie at Signed…BKM, who doesn’t post poems
near as often as I would like.
When
It comes to videos, I lean in the direction of music, and I’ll feature just
about anything from The Piano Guys.
Next
week, I’ll have some of the newer people I’ve been following (newer in terms of
me finding them).
Photograph: Big Ben by Anna Langova via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
thank you kind sir...i am among great company...know quite a few poets....and its been great knowing you the last couple years as well...have a wonderful saturday!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your list, I'll be checking them out!
ReplyDeleteI like this new direction.
ReplyDeleteThe litttle bits about the people/blog pulls me in to relationocity.
A very good turn of inventiveness.
Thanks for being a friend.
n.
:-)
To be in such great company is a huge compliment. Thank you, Glynn.
ReplyDeleteYes ... a true privilege. Thank you, Glynn.
ReplyDelete