Daniel Smith spoke with Pam Jahnke, host of the Mid-West Farm Report (Madison, WI) about poetry and farming and how they intersect in his book Ancestral. Click here to listen.
Elzinga to read for Sheboygan AAUW, Oct 4
Jeff Elzinga, author of The Distance Between Stars, will meet with the Sheboygan chapter of the American Association of University Women to read and discuss his novel.
Monday, October 4, 6 p.m.
First Congregational Church
3rd and Bluff, Sheboygan, WI
Silver Medalist: The Distance Between Stars by Jeff Elzinga
There are no Midwest literary Olympics, but if there were, Jeff Elzinga would be on the medal stand. His novel, The Distance Between Stars, was a 2021 finalist for literary fiction from Midwest Independent Publishers Association, and now we proudly display his well-earned bling on the cover.
Order your copy with silver award seal today.
The Velocity of Love recognized by Wisconsin Library Association for outstanding achievement
The Wisconsin Library Association (WLA) has selected The Velocity of Love by Kathryn Gahl for Outstanding Achievement for 2021. See the full list of poets and fiction writers selected by WLA for recognition for books published in the past year.
Congratulations Kathryn!
Dan Smith at Arcadia books
Dan Smith will be reading at Arcadia Books, Spring Green, Wisconsin, Sunday August 22, 2021 | 3:00PM – 4:00PM. Prior to the event, James Bohnen of Arcadia spoke with Smith about Ancestral and Smith’s writing process.
You can buy your copy of Ancestral from us prior to the event or in the store on the day.
Daniel Smith’s Ancestral featured in the news
Poetry captures sorrow and fallout of farm crisis
by Barry Adams, Wisconsin State Journal
Daniel Smith is featured in the Sunday, July 18, 2021 edition of the Wisconsin State Journal. Barry Adams interviewed Smith at his home near Arena, Wisconsin. In Ancestral, from Water’s Edge Press, Smith draws on his decades of farming and his experiences as a farm financial counselor in Wisconsin. Many of the poems express the anguish people feel when they realize they can no longer sustain the family farm. Yet Smith’s poetry goes beyond such stories and reveals his deep and enduring connection to the land. From the article: “It bothers me a lot,” Smith said. “The economic,social and cultural impacts of farming are very complex. I think going through all of that and having experienced the emotional turbulence of that really helped me write about it and writing helped me deal with it.” |
Read the article and listen to Dan read “Dry Dirt,” a poem from Ancestral. [Permalink] |
Ed Werstein on The Blue Collar Gospel Hour podcast
Ed Werstein is a guest on Dan Denton’s podcast “The Blue Collar Gospel Hour.” Take a listen. You can order Ed’s book, Communique: Poems From The Headlines, in our shop.
Welcome Ed Block
We’re pleased to welcome poet Ed Block to Water’s Edge Press. We’ll be publishing his book Shell Dreams this fall. The book is a collection of poems evoking the flora and fauna of Florida.
Ed is a resident of Greendale, Wisconsin since 1990, and Emeritus Professor of English at Marquette University since 2012. He has been writing poetry seriously since the 1990s.
The Velocity of Love reviewed on Zin Daily
“The Velocity of Love leaves one with a sense of wonder over how personal tragedy can yield a universalizing love,” writes Sylvia Cavanaugh in a new review of Kathryn Gahl’s The Velocity of Love, published at ZVONA i NARI*, on Zin Daily, an online literary magazine in Croatia.
Cavanaugh is a contributing editor for Verse-Virtual: An Online Community of Poets and is English Language Editor for Poetry Hall: A Chinese and English Bilingual Journal. We published her collection of poems, Icarus: Anthropology of Addiction in 2019.
*According to its website, “the idea behind ZVONA i NARI Library & Literary Retreat is to provide a space for writers, artists and other professionals who work with the book as a medium, to bring them all in direct contact with each other and involve them with the local community.”
Ressmeyer guest on “Pink Chair Sessions”
Georgia Ressmeyer, author of the forthcoming book of poetry, Leading A Life, was a guest on Mental Health America’s Pink Chair Sessions, a place for community conversations in Sheboygan, Wisconsin.
Many of the poems in Ressmeyer’s book come from her experience as a public defender, where she often represented people with mental illness.
The following review of Leading a Life comes from Julie L. Preder~Executive Director, Mental Health America Sheboygan County
“Georgia Ressmeyer takes us on a journey from the courtroom to a woman reflecting through the looking glass. Each poem provides historical memories with profound emotion. Her lyrics set the stage for owning our story and bringing forth inner peace. Ressmeyer demonstrates through words that compassion, empathy, and transparency can set us free.”
Watch the video:
Leading a Life is now available for pre-order. Publication date: September 2021.