Each of the poems in this work has something of a story to it. ``The Passing of the Time of Man'' has more than just a story -- it was a large part of my literary/poetic life for five to ten years. It was written before the iron curtain came (predictably enough) crashing down, and reflects the overwhelming cynicism that affected the whole generation of kids (like me) who were brought up in the shadow of the thermonuclear fusion bomb. Every day of my life from the day that I was born until very, very recently, there was a finite (and not particularly small) chance that some accident of fate or some insane act of malice would create a holocaust that would level civilization.

It used to bother me that if the nuclear winter, nuclear summer, or fallout everywhere theories were actually correct, that nobody would be able to write about what was undoubtedly the most significant event to occur in mankind's short history. If the Trojan War was worth an epic poem, so was this. The only trouble was, it had to be written before the event. So I did.

For what it's worth, the picture on the cover of the book is of the "Apple" nuclear test set off in the Nevada desert on March 29, 1955, a day that just happens to be my birthday. My life began, as you can see, with quite a blast. Hopefully it won't go out that way.

Many of the poems derive from philosophy or physics. Some of my favorites in the former category include "In Defense of a Natural Religion" and the Koans at the end. Relativity theory, in particular, has a beautiful and poetic interpretation in which the world as we know it is like a tapestry of interwoven world lines, solid and stationary in four dimensions, woven by the hand of God on looms unknown. This idea appears in several poems, e.g. -- "The Gods", "Sadness", "Deja Vu".

Some of the poems are very much political. In particular, "The Quiet Killing" was inspired by a National Public Radio news show in which they interviewed a reporter who had personally investigated the Kurdish massacre orchestrated by the Iraqi government. The poem is an essentially accurate description of the events he reported, including the eyewitness testimony of a young boy who escaped by crawling into a nearby ditch.

If I had to pick my own favorite poems, the list would include (in no particular order) "Old Age", "Resurrection", "The Hill" (which I read at my Father's funeral), "Prayer for Mankind", "When Halley's Comet Came Too Soon", "Wisdom" (written for my first son Patrick soon after his birth), "Image" and the two Koans at the end. I also like (of course) much of "The Passing of the Time of Man". However, I "like" something about all of the poems herein, or I would not have included them. It is my hope that some of them may sing to you as they sung to me when I wrote them. If you find yourself, one day in the future, with a tiny snatch of one of these poems flitting through your thoughts like an errant hummingbird, annoying you because you cannot remember where you read it but you really liked it, then I will be most pleased.

Many of these poems have been published, formally or informally, before outside of this website. They were featured on the cruxweb webring and on the site of Samantha A. Wallachy, the (then) cruxweb webmistress, and will be featured on her new site, The Artistic Apex as soon as I have a chance to send her some selections. Others have been republished, with lovely illustrations created by Elizabeth Armstrong, all the way Down Under in Australia.

The lulu printing above is the first time that they have all been available in a nicely bound, printed form, however, and as starving poets need to eat, I certainly hope that you'll consider buying a hard copy if you did in fact like the poems enough to want to share them or read them again.

Feel free to let me know what you think of these poems. You can send me email or mail at the address given in the Contact links on this page. If you like them, and find yourself returning to read them from time to time, feel free to drop a dollar in the metaphorical banjo case in the intro...