Just Published Online! My Poem, “Persian to Me Was Just a Kind of Cat,” appears PASSAGES NORTH!

Friday the 13th has always been a day of good luck for me. This year is no exception, because today I have had the honor of a poem published by a journal I admire.

Passages North, founded in 1979, now resides at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, Michign. I was introduced to the journal by a friend, Laura Soldner, who was on the faculty for many years–thank you, Laura! Passages North offers both an annual print issue each spring, and regular “bonus” content online. To learn more about this excellent journal, click HERE.

To find the most recent bonus supplement–my own poem!–click HERE.

The stunning first image in this post is by my sister, Karla, who shared it with us this year as a Valentine’s Day card. The rest are ones that I have taken over the years in our neighborhood.

Wishing you a day of happy connections,

LESLIE

The Creativity and Power of Non-Violent Resistance: Celebrating the Individual Responses to Injustice That Create Community

Since Alex Pretti’s murder in Minneapolis, on January 24, 2026, Tim and I have been inspired by the vigils held by others to keep our own watch each evening on our front porch. We go out at 7:00 p.m. with a lit candle (one handmade by Tim from the wax of Rice County bees) and a silver bell. As the nearby bells of the Carleton College Chapel chime the hour, we add our tiny bit of light and sound, offering our witness and our wishes for peace and freedom for all. It helps to be ringing a bell instead of silently wringing my hands. Doing this keeps our hearts open on our regular basis, and it helps us, if no one else.

In this time of distress and disbelief and dismay, we have been consistently inspired by the many responses of other Minnesotans and others all over the world. We have been struck over and over by the many moving and creative responses, individual and collective, that make up non-violent resistance to oppression. Each voice, each gesture, is added to every other and creates a true symphony of community.

Today, I would like to share some of the recent expressions of solidarity that have others have shared with me, that move and inspire me, and give me hope.

If you just have two minutes, please listen to the way that Minnsotans are joining in song, creating a new chapter in the venerable tradition of the protest song.

https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/27/us/video/mn-group-singing-resistance-ice-vrt-digvid

 As you probably know, none other than Bruce Springsteen has added his voice–and a new song, “The Streets of Minneapolis,”–to this chapter. Earlier chapters are helping me, too. Leonard Cohen’s “Anthem” and John and Yoko’s “Give Peace a Chance” and Minnesotan Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” (which I first heard, with shivers, in Sunday school. Dylan deserved his Nobel!)

Recently, a friend who lives far away sent me this article on recent non-violent resistance to the horrors perpetrated by ICE in my state. It is an opinion piece in Religion News Service titled “The ‘theology of showing up’ is making Minneapolis a holy place” by Sunita Viswanath. I found it very uplifting, and I wanted to share it with you.

Another friend, who also lives in another state, shared this image of Minneapolis street art with me. Truly an image can be worth a thousand words. If you don’t believe this, seek out the coverage of hundreds of Minnesotans gathering on the frozen surface of Lake Bde Maka Ska (White Earth Lake–formerly known as Lake Calhoun) to spell out

S O S.

Facts are important. We need them to create durable, shared truth. But, imagination is even more important. (So said Albert Einstein, someone who added to our understanding of facts.) Our creative visions together–our energy and imagination–can build upon facts to improve our shared reality, to secure and safeguard our hardwon, shared liberty.

Another friend, artist Lea Goode-Harris, responded to something I passed on. I am including her email and images here (with her permission) because I am so taken with the quiet and eloquent brillance of her meditative gesture.

Dear Leslie, I am sitting in a quiet coffee shop in the center of my quiet city… where my not so quiet heart beats in response to Minnesota and the rest of the country and world where the unbelievable is unfolding in very real and horrifying ways. This was an incredible article and very uplifting and appreciated. I will be passing it along to others who are bearing witness to what you are all experiencing.

Every night… I place a cube of ice in a dish on my altar. I set it there to melt in the dark of the night and in the morning light, I offer the water to the Earth.

Metaphorical Spring will come. It is the law of nature. But this Winter of our humanity often defies this hope. This prayer. And so we bravely follow the beat of our hearts. Together. 

Thank you. 

Sending all my love. 

Lea Goode-Harris, artist in Santa Rosa, CA. (www.creativelabyrinths.com)

Thank you, Lea. Thank you, All, for showing up for peace and justice, each in your own way.

LESLIE

Art and Community: 2026 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest Now Open!

Passing on the good news from Heidi Bryant at Sonnet Central!

2026 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest

Call for Entries

Entries are now being accepted for the 2026 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest. The entry process is a one-step system. Sonnet(s) must be submitted with the Entry Form. Complete instructions for entering are available on our website.

The Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest is an annual event that welcomes entries from around the world. Cash prizes, totaling over $3,000, will be awarded in several categories, including:Top Four SonnetsRegional (Four Winners – Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa)Best Youth (Four Winners – High School and Younger)Laureate’s Choice (Sixteen Winners)There is a $5 FEE for up to three sonnets per entry. There is NO FEE for entrants in the Youth category (high school and younger) or for undergraduate college students.

For complete contest information, visit:sonnetcontest.org

The deadline for entries is June 1, 2026. Submissions must be made through our on-line process, with payment option by PayPal or check. If the entry fee presents a hardship, please send us an email. entries@sonnetcontest.org

About the Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest

The Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest is an annual event that welcomes entries from around the world to Winona. The contest honors the memory of Maria W. Faust: a Winona State University graduate in Communications; a twenty-year resident of Winona; an avid supporter of varied local arts; and a lover of poetry. Ted Haaland, who passed away in 2024, endowed the contest to live on with the goal of keeping Maria’s love of poetry alive in our community and beyond.The contest judges are Winona’s Poets Laureate James Armstrong, Ken McCullough, and Emilio DeGrazia, and Leslie Schultz of Northfield, MN. Heidi Bryant is the managing director of the contest. Johanna Rupprecht and Ned Bryant assisted with the closing event. Great River Shakespeare Festival is a partner and River Arts Alliance acts as the fiscal sponsor.

To learn more about the Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest, please visit sonnetcontest.org or email entries@sonnetcontest.org.

Congratulations to the Winners of the 2025 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest


The winners of the 2025 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest were announced at a hybrid in person / Zoom event held at the Winona County History Center on July 26, 2025. Many of the winners read their sonnets live over Zoom with the remaining sonnets being read by the Great River Shakespeare Festival’s Doug Scholz-Carlson and Melissa Maxwell. The video of the celebration can be viewed at sonnetcontest.org/events.

The record breaking 2025 contest received entries from 18 countries and 41 states. Over 730 sonnets were submitted by 281 individuals, including 92 in the youth category. Prizes totaling $3,200 were awarded in the following categories: Top Four, Regional (4), Youth (4), and Laureates’ Choice (16). The winning sonnets are published on the website at sonnetcontest.org/2025-winners.

TOP FOUR: Radnóti’s Notebook — Enriqueta Carrington (Highland Park, NJ); Love Song — Andrea L. Hackbarth (Palmer, AK); The Leveret — Cindy Hill (Middlebury, VT); and At the Oceanfront Hotel — Jean L. Kreiling (Plymouth, MA)

.REGIONAL: Love’s Defense — Jeffry Glover (Stoughton, WI); Goat Song — D. E. Green (Northfield, MN); Fireworks — B. Haugen (Eden Prairie, MN), and Butterflies — Claude Clayton Smith (Madison, WI).

YOUTH [entrants high school and under]: Unboxed Identity — Samantha Bernard (West Covina, CA); Failure Sonnet — Florian Shah (Philadelphia, PA); My Paper Kite — Parth Singla (Gurgaon, Haryana, India); Ars Poetica — Yan Zhang (Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China).

LAUREATES’ CHOICE: A Watchman — Shamik Banerjee (Guwahati, Assam, India); Mrs. Darcy’s Duck — Susan Jarvis Bryant (Port Lavaca, TX); Coming Home — Monika Cooper (Weare, NH); Spring of Stone — Sijun Cui (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia); Purgatory — Michael Fleming (Brattleboro, VT); Wrong, Again — Philip Goldfarb Styrt (Davenport, IA); Cold Season — Michael Harty (Prairie Village, KS); Housework — Francesca Howard (New York, NY); In realms of memory, where shadows play — Kayliana Jackson (Columbus, MS); On Letting the Mystery Be — Carl Kinsky (Ste. Genevieve, MO); Interpersonal — Jason Ranek (Våle, Norway); Barriers for Light — Erica Reid (Fort Collins, CO); The Works, The Complete Works — Jason Sommer (St. Louis, MO); Merlin to Wounded Arthur — David Southward (Milwaukee, WI); Caeneus Syndrome — Rogelio Vargas (Winona, MN), and Autism Sonnet — Theresa Werba (Spring City, PA).

As always, you can learn more about the Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest by visiting: sonnetcontest.org. Or send your questions to entries@sonnetcontest.org.Copyright © 2026 Maria W. Faust Sonnet Contest, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Maria W. Faust Sonnet ContestPO Box 992c/o River Arts AllianceWinona, Mn 55987Add us to your address book


Words to Meet the Moment Event Yesterday

As many of you know, yesterday a local effort took place in our city. Poets and others joined together to reject the invasion of the federal government into peaceful local processes. The event, called Words to Meet the Moment: A Poetry Event Against Fascism, was organized by our local independent Content Bookstore; hosted by our primary gathering space, the historic Grand Event Center; emceed by our former poet laureate, Rob Hardy; was broadcast over the radio by our local independent station, KYMN-FM Radio; and served to raise funds for a new organization called Northfield Helping Neighbors, managed by our highly effective Community Action Center.

Twenty-nine poets shared a mix of original and previously published work over a space of about two hours. An estimated 115 people attended, and many also listened in real time via KYMN-FM’s live stream. (My own contribution is a sonnet variation called “Dirge for Renee Good: A Call to {Open} Arms”. My presention starts at about the 42-minute mark.)

The energy in the room was high. The voices expressed a full spectrum of concerns, emotions, poetic forms, life experiences, and languages — beautiful passages not just in English but in Spanish. My own poem, a nonce-form sonnet variation, employs the imagery of seeing through ICE and lighting a candle in a dark time.

The images I share here are of myself and architectural details only. All concerned agreed to protect each other’s privacy. The image above is of a candle made in this house, by my husband, from local beeswax, resting on a Norwegian silver dish given to us years ago by kind neighbors, the Heibergs. Neighbors — that sums it up.

It helped me to stand with others for a few moments, to take a small but important step to preserve our precious First Amendment rights.

I learned today that a chapbook containing much of the original work is being planned for publication in February. Donations from the event yesterday raised more than $1,500 to help vulnerable people here. When it is available, I will let you know.

Thank you for your caring enough to read to the end and for all the other things you are doing as a concerned citizen. As a neighbor. Even to those you haven’t yet met.

LESLIE