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Garden Tools: Poems

David W. Berner’s Garden Tools is a tender, unfiltered look at life’s quietest, most intimate moments through a collection of personal poems. These verses unfold like a walk through a familiar neighborhood—each turn uncovering memories, losses, questions, and the simple grace of being alive. Whether Berner is remembering his father’s workshop, holding a sick dog in the middle of the night, or watching clouds hover like smoke, he invites readers into his world with open arms and a poet’s soul. The book is divided thematically—“Landscape,” “Love,” and “Longing”—and each section gently pulls at different emotional threads, yet they all speak to the same universal truths: impermanence, connection, and the raw, fleeting beauty of daily life.

I found myself genuinely moved, not just by the content, but by Berner’s voice. It’s plainspoken and warm, never showy. He doesn’t try to impress; he just tells the truth. That humility gives his poetry its strength. Take “Dog Dreams” or “At the Window”—they’re simple but heartbreaking. He sees life like a worn photograph: faded, yes, but still holding onto light. His reflections on aging and memory hit especially hard. There’s a lived-in honesty here, like he’s writing from a shed in the backyard with a dog at his feet and time running out. And the humor slips in at just the right moments—dreaming of Scarlett Johansson or pondering a half-moon with quiet affection. It doesn’t try too hard. It just works.

The tone is relentlessly nostalgic. Some might find the sentimentality a bit thick in places. But to me, it never felt forced. There’s something brave about writing plainly, without armor. And it’s not all wistful. There’s wisdom tucked between the lines—about fatherhood, forgiveness, even the weight of an old omelet pan. His poems act like mirrors. You read one and suddenly remember the smell of your dad’s garage or the way your grandmother’s cane thudded on the floor. That kind of recognition is rare, and it stayed with me.

Garden Tools is for readers who want to slow down and feel something real. It’s for anyone who’s ever stared out a window and wondered about the past, or watched the sky and hoped for some kind of sign. I’d recommend it to lovers of Mary Oliver, Billy Collins, or even Thomas Merton, whose spirit quietly haunts a few pages here.

Pages: 61

Garden Tools: Poems

David W. Berner’s Garden Tools is a poignant collection of poems that gently draws readers into a world where nature, memory, and mortality weave together. The book is split into thematic sections—Landscape, Love, and Longing—each capturing slices of life, both subtle and grand. Berner finds meaning in the smallest details: a dog’s gaze, a neighbor’s new presence, the quiet pause before a storm. He treats ordinary moments with reverence, like a gardener turning the soil of memory and reflection. With language both plainspoken and lyrical, Berner celebrates life’s impermanence, urging us to notice, to feel, and to remember.

What struck me most was the honesty of Berner’s voice. These poems are not dressed up or hiding behind metaphor. Instead, they walk beside you, like an old friend, whispering memories you forgot you had. The poem “Thinking of My Death,” where the speaker drives around with his sister’s ashes in the backseat, wrecked me in the best way. It’s morbid and funny and tender all at once. And that’s the magic here—Berner balances grief and joy like they’re siblings. Nothing feels forced. His images—like cleaning dirt-caked garden tools or watching squirrels tease a dog—are simple but loaded.

A few poems felt light, like sketches not fully painted. Maybe that was the point—to leave space for the reader—but there were moments when I wanted a little more grit or tension. Still, those quieter pieces often served as breathers between more emotionally heavy poems. And by the end, I found myself grateful for that rhythm. The understated ones gave the more powerful verses room to bloom. And when Berner is at his best—as in “If a Father Cries” or “The Last Tulip”—he delivers emotional punches that feel both personal and universal.

Garden Tools is for anyone who’s ever looked out a window and felt a little ache in their chest. It’s for people who remember childhood smells and the way a parent’s voice could rise or fall like a season. I’d recommend this book to lovers of thoughtful poetry. This collection won’t shout for your attention, but if you listen, it will sing something tender and lasting.

Pages: 61

Age is Just a Number

David W. Berner Author Interview

Daylight Saving Time: The Power of Growing Older is beautifully written and addresses a subject that is rarely discussed. Why did you want to write about subjects such as growing older?

Honestly, I was in the throes of it, this aging thing. And we all are. Plus, I think in America, at least, we shun the subject a great deal. Instead of embracing it, we work to find ways to avoid it, to battle the aging process. It seemed a subject worthy of exploration. Plus, it interested me personally. There must be others who feel the same. Plus, aging is not just for the old. We are aging from the moment we are born.

What were some goals you set for yourself as a writer in this book?

I wanted the prose to feel “of the moment.” And did not want it to be a self-help or an instruction book. I’m not qualified to write such a book. That was never my intention. I wanted this book to be personal, real, authentic, and honest. I think I did that. Hopefully, the reader thinks so, too. I think the reader will see much of himself/herself in this story.

You discuss a lot of topics that conjure up strong emotions for people. What was one of the hardest parts of this book for you to write?

There was nothing “hard” to write, but if you are asking what was the most “emotional,” well, that would be the letter I wrote to my sons which is documented in the book. I thought long and hard about that. I wrote the book some time ago, and I recently re-read that letter. I wouldn’t change a thing. But it took a great deal of my emotional strength to write that letter exactly the way I wanted to.

What is one thing that you hope readers take away from Daylight Saving Time?

That life is a gift. Seems a cliche, but one to remember. And that growing older is a process to savor. To find new loves, new experiences, to remind ourselves that age is just a number, as they say. And that aging is not just for the old. We are all aging, all the time. As one Buddhist saying suggests, “Our aging at every stage is the greatest kindness we can offer to ourselves and those we love.”

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When we are young, we think little about growing old. But time soon catches up with us: the first gray hair, a buckling knee, the purchase of reading glasses, or when a heart attack at the age of 56 rattles your world and reminds you that none of us gets out of here alive. In this meditative and intimate personal narrative on the act of aging, David W. Berner discovers how to accept and revel in the present, when the days that remain are fewer than those that have passed, and offers a path for celebrating life’s final chapters. Through the lessons of seasonal change, the natural world, literature, and spirituality, Berner gives us a kind of instruction book on the art of growing older, challenging us to accept aging’s transformative powers. As a keen observer of the world, he forms a guiding philosophy on how to discover joy in the time we have left and nourishment in life’s remaining seasons.