Antonia Clark
Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author
Born
in Hanover, NH, The United States
Member Since
September 2008
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25 years ago, on a hot summer night, Tim Bell drove to a secluded spot with talented young musician Dinah Taylor after their date at the village fair. But Dinah was never seen again, and Bell was sent to prison for her murder. Now out of prison, Bell ...more | |
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Sigrid Nunez Is the recipient of many honors and awards and this particular book, The Friend, won the national book award in 2018. (Nunez does not use a tilde over the second n in her last name, but it’s pronounced as if one is there: NOON-Yez or NOON ...more |
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Antonia
rated a book really liked it
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I thought this was pretty darn good for a first novel. I’d previously read a novella by this author and liked it, so decided to try this full-length one. It’s something a bit different for a thriller. Reviews are mixed on these issues, but I thought ...more | |
Antonia
rated a book liked it
Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone (Ernest Cunningham, #1)
by Benjamin Stevenson (Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author) |
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I was going to DNF this one, but decided to finish it (sort of rationalizing that finishing it would mean I hadn't wasted my time, which now seems like a lousy reason). I'm giving this one points for combining elements of classic crime fiction with d ...more |
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This is number 11 in a series of 48 (!) short cozy mysteries by Matthew Costello and Neil Richards. I always enjoy the characters, ex-NYPD-cop Jack and single-mom Sarah (the amateur sleuths), in these books and love the narration by Neil Dudgeon. I w ...more | |
Antonia
rated a book liked it
Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone (Ernest Cunningham, #1)
by Benjamin Stevenson (Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author) |
|
I was going to DNF this one, but decided to finish it (sort of rationalizing that finishing it would mean I hadn't wasted my time, which now seems like a lousy reason). I'm giving this one points for combining elements of classic crime fiction with d ...more |
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Antonia
and
219 other people
liked
Frank Phillips's review
of
Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone (Ernest Cunningham, #1):
"2.5 stars rounded up. I'm probably just not smart enough to get this one. It had a decent start but then it just slowly lost me. I think this author was trying to do too many things here, and it felt like there were too many things going on, maybe al"
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This is Karen Thompson Walker’s third novel, and I’ve read all three in rapid succession. At first, I thought it was less like a novel than a psychiatrist’s patient notes, almost a documentary. But it is a novel and a wonderfully inventive one with n ...more | |
Antonia
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I started reading (audio) this series of Cherringham cozy mysteries last year and just love them. This one is the 10th in a 48--book series by Matthew Costello and Neil Richards. I especially like the narration by Neil Dudgeon!! The series is set in ...more | |
“A Book I Can Put Down
I’m halfway through
and I’ve gotten used
to the way it wants
to be read. This writer
wants to spoon it up,
wants to watch me
swallow it. This writer
makes a point of good
deeds, clean living,
god and country,
when what I want
is sin and shame,
the rusty metal edge
of cruelty, varieties
of pain, his mother
still crying years later,
just like mine. I want
a writer who’s given up
on the moral of the story,
one who’ll hand me
a knife and sit back
to see what I do with it.
(Published in Anderbo)”
―
I’m halfway through
and I’ve gotten used
to the way it wants
to be read. This writer
wants to spoon it up,
wants to watch me
swallow it. This writer
makes a point of good
deeds, clean living,
god and country,
when what I want
is sin and shame,
the rusty metal edge
of cruelty, varieties
of pain, his mother
still crying years later,
just like mine. I want
a writer who’s given up
on the moral of the story,
one who’ll hand me
a knife and sit back
to see what I do with it.
(Published in Anderbo)”
―
“Amends
Regret lingers, niggles. Yellow lilies
on the table, gone brown in the vase.
The garden we talk about, endlessly,
but never begin, deterred by tough sod.
On the edge of the walk, the wheelbarrow
full of stones waits like an undelivered
apology. Within, the floor needs scrubbing
and only hands and knees will do the job.
I know that forgiveness is a simple meal�
a salad, a boiled potato, a glass of tea.
Easy to prepare, to offer. That the silence
afterward will satisfy, perhaps even nourish.”
― Chameleon Moon: Poems
Regret lingers, niggles. Yellow lilies
on the table, gone brown in the vase.
The garden we talk about, endlessly,
but never begin, deterred by tough sod.
On the edge of the walk, the wheelbarrow
full of stones waits like an undelivered
apology. Within, the floor needs scrubbing
and only hands and knees will do the job.
I know that forgiveness is a simple meal�
a salad, a boiled potato, a glass of tea.
Easy to prepare, to offer. That the silence
afterward will satisfy, perhaps even nourish.”
― Chameleon Moon: Poems
“Faced with the Divine, people took refuge in the banal, as though answering a cosmic multiple-choice question: If you saw a burning bush, would you (a) call 911, (b) get the hot dogs, or (c) recognize God? A vanishingly small number of people would recognize God, Anne had decided years before, and most of them had simply missed a dose of Thorazine.”
― The Sparrow
― The Sparrow
“Quality reading exercises the crucial dialogue with yourself, the dialogue you must undergo to become yourself, to know where on the vista of existence you can place your own identity and awareness.”
―
―
“A Book I Can Put Down
I’m halfway through
and I’ve gotten used
to the way it wants
to be read. This writer
wants to spoon it up,
wants to watch me
swallow it. This writer
makes a point of good
deeds, clean living,
god and country,
when what I want
is sin and shame,
the rusty metal edge
of cruelty, varieties
of pain, his mother
still crying years later,
just like mine. I want
a writer who’s given up
on the moral of the story,
one who’ll hand me
a knife and sit back
to see what I do with it.
(Published in Anderbo)”
―
I’m halfway through
and I’ve gotten used
to the way it wants
to be read. This writer
wants to spoon it up,
wants to watch me
swallow it. This writer
makes a point of good
deeds, clean living,
god and country,
when what I want
is sin and shame,
the rusty metal edge
of cruelty, varieties
of pain, his mother
still crying years later,
just like mine. I want
a writer who’s given up
on the moral of the story,
one who’ll hand me
a knife and sit back
to see what I do with it.
(Published in Anderbo)”
―
“Amends
Regret lingers, niggles. Yellow lilies
on the table, gone brown in the vase.
The garden we talk about, endlessly,
but never begin, deterred by tough sod.
On the edge of the walk, the wheelbarrow
full of stones waits like an undelivered
apology. Within, the floor needs scrubbing
and only hands and knees will do the job.
I know that forgiveness is a simple meal�
a salad, a boiled potato, a glass of tea.
Easy to prepare, to offer. That the silence
afterward will satisfy, perhaps even nourish.”
― Chameleon Moon: Poems
Regret lingers, niggles. Yellow lilies
on the table, gone brown in the vase.
The garden we talk about, endlessly,
but never begin, deterred by tough sod.
On the edge of the walk, the wheelbarrow
full of stones waits like an undelivered
apology. Within, the floor needs scrubbing
and only hands and knees will do the job.
I know that forgiveness is a simple meal�
a salad, a boiled potato, a glass of tea.
Easy to prepare, to offer. That the silence
afterward will satisfy, perhaps even nourish.”
― Chameleon Moon: Poems
“I have no religion, for I have spent too many years eating from the tree of knowledge.”
― Dropping the Mask: non-Academic reflections of a womanist writer
― Dropping the Mask: non-Academic reflections of a womanist writer

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I do know New Pages, and appreciate what they do a lot.
I'll see if I can whip up some surreal links...

Here's a print journal I really like (and I'll keep you in mind if I think of others): Margie. It's an annual, about 400 pages, all poetry. Mostly short pieces, mostly the kind of poetry I like to read.
There aren't any bookstores near me that carry literary journals, though the local Barnes & Noble is now better than it's been for many years. I pick up free issues at conferences and occasionally order a sample issue.
Send me a couple of links to poems you like that would qualify as surreal.

At the moment only subscribe to a couple fledgling journals that I'm supporting (and have also supported me). Like you, I usually do subscribe to different journals. I like to change every year, and pick up stray copies when i make my annual pilgrimage to the states, although i didn't make it to any particularly good bookstores (for periodicals) last time around.
I subscribed to Poetry a few years ago for a couple of years, but was frequently underwhelmed and overtaxed. Of course there usually was something in each issue that made it worthwhile. I do like field and ploughshares, but with the latter you can read the entire issue online once the new issue comes out. Considering how long it take to have subscription copies delivered to germany, i go the cheap way.
i should think again about finding a couple good journals to subscribe to. I particularly like shorter poems and the surreal, so if you have any suggestions, I'm taking them!
