Rob Hardy’s New Chapbook, SHELTER IN PLACE, Is Available for Pre-Order

Finishing Line Press is planning to release this new gem by Northfield Poet Laureate Rob Hardy in January, and pre-orders are now being taken! Shelter in Place speaks to the collective present moment lucidly and personally, and will be certain to continue to delight upon each re-reading.

To pre-order you own copies, you can click on the link above. Back cover blurbs are listed below!

Shelter in Place by Rob Hardy

$14.99

Powerful work, infused with beauty and grace from one of Minnesota’s talented poets. Rob Hardy is a treasure.

–Cathy WurzerMorning Edition Host, Minnesota Public Radio, and Founder of the End in Mind Project

When the future, especially under the influence of pandemic, “feels like unclaimed baggage,” Rob Hardy shows us “it’s hard to let go of absence.” In this lovely small collection of poems, dread is the catalyst for new life, and absence is metamorphosed into the new small miracles present all around.

–Emilio DeGrazia, author of What Trees Know

Slender in size, Hardy’s new collection is weighty in its felicitous and fearless examination of the present moment. Shelter in Place offers “singing in the wake of the storm/a fugue of chromatic juncos,” which transitions to the beautiful fragility of aftermath, when “winter’s white tune/is taken up by the wild plum.” Hardy uses elegance and restraint to rein in a wild inventiveness of observations, at once sensitive and learned, about human nature and the natural world. Shelter in Place will long delight readers with its lucidity, poignancy, humor, and humanity.

–Leslie Schultz, author of Concertina

Mini Readings on THIRD WEDNESDAY’S New YouTube Channel!

This past summer, Third Wednesday Magazine began posting mini readings by poets affiliated with the magazine on their brand new YouTube Channel. Yesterday, David Jibson, Third Wednesday’s editor, and I taped a segment in which I was able to read several poems from my published collections. The whole recording is about twelve minutes long.

To watch other short readings by TWM poets, go to the magazine’s YouTube Channel. Currently there are readings posted by TWM editor emeritus Lawrence Thomas and by Buff Bradley, Paul Bernstein, and Nancy Jo Allen. More will be added in the future.

A big “Thank You!” to Third Wednesday Magazine for everything they do to support readers of poetry (and fiction!), as well as visual and literary artists like me!

ONE ART Publishes My Poem “The Amaryllis”

I am so pleased the ONE ART: A Journal of Poetry has published my poem, “The Amaryllis.” This poem is based on a very vivid memory of my time in Lake Charles, Louisiana nearly a lifetime ago. This online journal is one I check often, discovering new favorite poems and poets whose work I have not previously known. Take a few minutes to scroll down their archives to make your own particular discoveries of new voices and visions. (Recent favorites of mine include “My Late Husband Speaks to Me in Flute” by Faith Shearin and “In Darkness” by Ted Kooser.)

Note: One Art posts a new poem most days, so you might need to scroll down a bit, to October 17, 2021 to locate the poem. (Scroll slowly so you can read the newest poems by other poets!)

Happy Reading! Leslie

Northfield’s New Poem Steps

View from the base of the Poem Steps, Northfield, Minnesota

To move from the ideal to the material, Rob invited a number of local poets to contribute one line, and seventeen of us responded. Now the text of this new poem has been published–through the medium of paint and the industriousness of our by former and current directors of the Northfield Public Library, Teresa Jensen and Natalie Draper–on the steps leading up to Bridge Square from the Riverwalk in Northfield. The poem is the collaborative work of 17 local poets: Heather Candels, D.E. Green, Steve McCown, Susan Jaret McKinstry, Leslie Schultz, David Walters, Mar Valdecantos, Christine Kallman, Becky Boling, Marie Gery, Tayde Rodríguez, Lucy González Mirón, Diane LeBlanc, Alondra Pérez, Riki Kölbl Nelson, Karen Herseth Wee, and Toni Easterson. The poem was painted onto the Riverwalk steps in late summer this year. Below, you can see images of eleven of these poets near their own contributed line. (See the Northfield Public Library website now to see a photograph of a Poet Laureate Rob Hardy at the podium, and look again at a later date to see images of all the participating poets.)

We all need joyful news and celebrations of community spirit. Last year, our Poet Laureate, Rob Hardy (who is also a classics professor) conceived an idea to create a modern twist on the classic Greek form of the rhapsode, which literally means “to sew songs [together]”–a beautiful concept, one I imagine to be rather like creating a lyrical quilt.

As edited–or rather woven, stitched, and shaped–by Rob Hardy from the raw material of submitted lines, here is the complete poem:

We come to the river starry-eyed,

across bridges reaching out to neighbors

over the river’s rushing waters: nuestro río

está lleno de vida y vida para nuestras familias.

Two deer, silent as shadows, bend & drink. 

Clouds tumble and lift, kiss and part.

Train sounds shape our dreams.

Linger here till the wind shifts,

under sun’s sweet touch and winter’s raw chill,

the funk of damp moss, sweet hints of sap.

In fish and flood, in unmoving stone,

the river remembers, stirring up the waves

of childhood, so melancholic and so eager.

Listen to the words of these speaking waters:

calling my name to the south, to the north calling yours.

Hermosas esas corrientes de agua que llevan

tantos recuerdos tristes y felices pero dan un placer

de verlas correr a través de nuestro lindo pueblo.

Listen. The river tells us where it needs to go.

Susan Jaret McKinstry
Christine Kallman
Heather Candels
Steve McCowan
D.E. Green and Becky Boling
Toni Easterson
Riki Kölbl Nelson
Mar Valdecantos
Karen Herseth Wee
Leslie Schultz

Much more durable than a traditional quilt, this community effort is likely to endure for many years to come.