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Hidden Meanings

Dyson Russell Author Interview

Fists in the Eye that Blinks on a Pin is a collection of poetry that feels both raw and surreal, and moves between moments of tenderness and moments of violence, exploring themes of memory, loss, and fractured identity. What inspired you to write this particular collection of poems?

This collection of poems was actually inspired by a very specific event. I was gearing up to see Billy Corgan perform at the Good Things festival when there was a sudden announcement that he would be performing an intimate acoustic set at a small venue called The Gem. The Gem is a tiny bar in a suburb called Collingwood in Melbourne, Australia. I managed to secure tickets and was huddled in this room of maybe 100 people, watching the legend Billy Corgan perform this unbelievable, stripped-back acoustic set. Truly a dream come true.

He opened up the floor to questions, and I asked how he manages to separate the emotional connection to his songs from the need to view them objectively for release to the world. His answer mesmerised me, as he talked about themes of going back to the freedom of creativity you have in childhood… reminiscing on how we have this creative flare that lets us do anything, we draw rabbits that are red with blue feet, we colour outside the lines; and it’s only once people start telling us that we’re wrong and that our drawing is terrible, that we focus on how we perceive things should be… he advocated for returning to the freedom of creativity before someone told us it was wrong. And so that’s what I tried to do with this book – just write with freedom and creativity, without concern for anything else.

How did you decide on the themes that run throughout your poetry book?

Following on from question one, there really were no preconceived themes or concepts. I didn’t set out to write the book with a particular arc or angle; nor did I know where it was going to go. Everything that was written was just written organically with a kind of spur-of-the-moment enthusiasm for creating something with freedom and enjoyment.

How do you strike a balance between clarity and ambiguity in your poetry?

It’s a good question, but probably not one I can answer. I think each reader would have a different perception of the balance between clarity and ambiguity in the book. For me, I like the idea of poetry that is more on the ambiguous side; that demands a bit of curiosity and a willingness to look for hidden meanings. But I don’t think the wider audiences like to unpack poetry anymore; people don’t want to sit down and read something that doesn’t make sense, and that they have to unravel like a code… but to me that’s what poetry is supposed to be – it’s supposed to be ambiguous, decoded…it’s supposed to challenge the reader to look deeper than merely reading the words. So who knows?

How has this poetry book changed you as a writer, or what did you learn about yourself through writing it?

I enjoyed the freedom of writing for myself first. I think my other poetry works have all been written with somewhat of a plan, a structure, a sense of narrative, and thematic linking points; I had fun writing as a homage to an experience, for the mere outcome of creating something. That was fun.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

Where the weird meets the wonderful, and the lyrics find their songs… where dreams cascade – remembered, and laugh with bygones. This is an ordinary poetry book, let us be clear about that fact… where rejection looks like a cosy winter storm, and a fairy tale in babies eyes; curiosity will cure most – but most won’t try.

This is a rabbit painted red, with colour outside the lines; a blue foot, an orange ear – creative bliss and a child’s mind

Toward a Theory of Everything

When I opened this book, I didn’t expect it to be such a sweeping mix of science, spirituality, and poetry, yet that’s exactly what I found. Harper begins with his lifelong quest to make sense of existence. He sketches a vision of two interwoven realms, the physical and the spiritual, and then spends the first part of the book expanding on what that means for everything from the birth of the universe to the mystery of human consciousness. After that, he shifts into poetry, both intimate and universal, before closing with collected quotations that highlight the themes he has lived and breathed. The book is less a tight academic theory and more a tapestry of reflections, stories, and insights born from decades of learning and personal searching.

I found myself caught off guard by the way Harper writes. At times, his prose felt deeply personal, like he was letting me peek into the inner conversations he’s been having his whole life. He weaves science with faith, mixing astrophysics and ancestral spirits in the same breath, and though the connections are unconventional, they carry a kind of honesty that’s hard to dismiss. I didn’t always agree with his conclusions, but I respected the curiosity that drove him there. His ideas about memory, reincarnation, and the merging of science with spirituality made me pause more than once and reread passages.

What struck me most emotionally was the poetry. It wasn’t just filler after the theory section; it was the heart of the book. The poems softened the heaviness of the philosophical ideas and grounded them in human experience, like grief, joy, friendship, faith, and love. Reading them felt like sitting across from Harper and hearing his voice shift from lecture to prayer to conversation. There’s a warmth in his writing, even when the subject matter is heavy. I felt his sincerity and his longing for people to live with more awareness and compassion.

I’d recommend Toward a Theory of Everything to readers who aren’t looking for airtight arguments but who enjoy being nudged into reflection. It’s for people who don’t mind wandering between science and spirituality, who enjoy a mix of heady ideas and heartfelt poetry. If you’re open to curiosity, to a voice that blends scholarship with faith, this book will give you plenty to chew on and maybe even leave you feeling a little more connected to the mysteries of life.

Pages: 264 | ASIN : B07KZPY5YP

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The Empathy of Rain

The Empathy of Rain is a lyrical collection of poems that uses rain, in all its moods and forms, as a mirror for human feeling. Each section whether “Morning Dew,” “Virga,” “Scotch Mist,” or “Thunderstorms” offers a shift in tone and imagery. The poems explore longing, memory, love, and loss through recurring symbols of weather and light. The author leans into musical cadence, often weaving music, mythology, and natural imagery into lines that blur the boundary between personal memory and universal meditation. The effect is a tapestry of emotions carried by the rhythm of rainfall.

I often felt swept up in the sheer intensity of the writing. Some poems feel like whispers, others like sudden storms, and that variation kept me hooked. I admired how the poet wasn’t afraid to be vulnerable. The words carry a kind of raw ache, especially when love is spoken of as something both eternal and fleeting. The writing is lush, often overflowing, and that abundance created an atmosphere that felt alive.

The metaphors tumble one after another. That torrent of language mirrors the theme: rain rarely falls gently for long. It arrives in waves, it drenches, and then it vanishes. The book captures that sensation perfectly, even when it risks drowning the reader in its intensity.

I would recommend The Empathy of Rain to readers who love poetry that is unfiltered and emotional. It is best suited for those who don’t mind getting lost in layers of imagery and who want to feel as much as they want to think. If you enjoy writing that leans into passion, music, and the mystical bond between nature and the human heart, this poetry book will give you plenty to return to each time you open it.

Pages: 180 | ASIN : B0FC5M62CN

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Reflections: Earth, Heart, Light, Dark

Reflections: Earth, Heart, Light, Dark is a mother-daughter collaboration that explores the intertwined themes of Earth, Heart, Light, and Dark through poetry. The book flows like a seasonal cycle, beginning with poems rooted in nature, moving through love and memory, then toward hope and illumination, and finally into grief, loss, and shadows. Each section feels distinct, yet they all circle back to a shared sense of searching for meaning in both beauty and pain.

Poems like Transition pulled me in with their intimacy, especially the image of a mother’s hands rebuilding a new world after a storm. It felt deeply personal but also universal, the kind of moment that made me stop and think about my own family. I’ll admit, Grandmama caught me off guard with its questions, “What thoughts did you have? Did you think them deserving?” and left me feeling both unsettled and comforted at the same time. That’s what I liked most, the poems didn’t tie everything up neatly. They lingered.

From Ash to Light carried a strong sense of resilience, and I couldn’t help but feel buoyed by its journey from despair to joy. It had this rhythm of stumbling and rising that felt human and raw. On the other hand, Dawn of Forty-Nine leaned more toward classic imagery, almost old-fashioned in its rhymes, which at first jarred me but eventually worked because it added texture to the collection. I found myself rereading those lines about waterfalls and winds, almost like I was letting the words wash over me instead of trying to decode them.

Then there’s the “Dark” section. This is where the book hit hardest for me. You Left Me was plainspoken, almost brutally so, and that stripped-down honesty made it sting. The Waves had this hypnotic pull with its repetition, “Rising above, wave after wave,” that felt like drowning in grief and memory. I could feel the authors letting themselves go to heavier places, and I appreciated that they didn’t shy away. It made the hopeful poems earlier in the book feel more earned, less naïve.

Reflections: Earth, Heart, Light, Dark is for readers who like their poetry to sit somewhere between personal diary and universal myth. It’s not heavy with academic wordplay, but it’s not fluff either. If you enjoy quiet evenings with a book that makes you pause, maybe even tear up, this one is a must-read. Personally, I closed it feeling like I had sat down with two voices who weren’t afraid to be vulnerable, and that’s something I’ll always admire in poetry.

Pages: 38 | ASIN : B0FFNGQ15P

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Fists in the Eye that Blinks on a Pin

Dyson Russell’s Fists in the Eye that Blinks on a Pin is a collection of poetry that feels both raw and surreal, like wandering through a dream where images refuse to sit still. The book moves between moments of tenderness and moments of violence, never giving the reader a chance to feel completely safe. Themes of memory, loss, and fractured identity recur throughout, tied together by vivid and sometimes startling metaphors. It’s the kind of collection where one poem can feel like a quiet confession and the next like a scream across a darkened room.

I found myself both unsettled and deeply moved. Russell writes with a kind of reckless honesty that doesn’t apologize for being strange or uncomfortable. Sometimes the words tripped me up, and I had to pause and reread, but I didn’t mind. The language has teeth, and that’s part of its pull. What I admired most was the way the poems manage to be experimental without drifting into nonsense. Even in their most chaotic moments, they circle back to something recognizable and relatable, like grief that feels both personal and universal.

The repetition of despair, loss, and fractured imagery can weigh heavily after a while. Still, I can’t deny that the intensity is part of what makes this book what it is. Russell doesn’t water anything down, and that kind of boldness is rare. It felt like stepping into someone else’s storm and just staying there until the clouds passed.

I would recommend this book to readers who crave poetry that doesn’t play it safe. If you like writing that feels visceral, experimental, and emotionally unfiltered, this collection will stay with you long after you put it down. It’s not for someone looking for light verse or easy comfort, but if you want to wrestle with language and feel something real, Fists in the Eye that Blinks on a Pin is worth your time.

Pages: 110 | ISBN : 1763820602

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The Meteor Symphony: Stories and Poems

The Meteor Symphony is a colorful mix of short stories, poems, and microfiction, stitched together with music, humor, grief, and hope. It moves from tales of jazz musicians and stolen saxophones to intimate portraits of aging, love, heartbreak, and resilience. Some pieces lean into whimsy, others lean into sorrow, and many hover in the strange, honest space in between. The title story ties it all together with an imaginative search for a lost symphony, but the book itself feels like a symphony of voices, moods, and rhythms.

I enjoyed the range in this book. One page had me laughing at the absurdity of a sax heist, and the next had me sitting with the weight of a widow’s quiet grief. Burke writes with sharp clarity, yet there’s also a looseness in her storytelling that feels natural, like listening to a friend talk late into the night. I loved that she didn’t try to polish away the odd details. People misstep, conversations derail, feelings clash, and it all feels real. At times, the jumps between stories and poems felt a little jarring, but in a way, that’s what made it lively. The collection refuses to settle into one mood.

I also found myself connecting with her fascination with ordinary people. She doesn’t write grand heroes or villains, but flawed, funny, messy people. That resonated with me. Her style is direct but not cold, and she doesn’t shy away from emotions. Some of the poems hit me harder than the stories, brief as they were, because they carried that distilled punch of truth.

I’d say this book is best for readers who like variety, who don’t mind skipping from lighthearted banter to heavier reflections, and who enjoy the intimacy of short-form writing. If you’re open to being surprised, amused, and sometimes gutted all in one sitting, Burke’s collection is worth your time. I’d recommend it to anyone who loves music, who has wrestled with family, or who has ever paused at sunset and felt the ache of beauty and loss in the same breath.

Pages: 114 | ASIN : B0DTJ37FVK

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Life’s Transience

Stephen Pollock Author Interview

Exits is a collection of poems that moves in and out of nature, memory, and mortality with a sharp eye and an unflinching voice. What inspired you to write this particular collection of poems?

Nearly all of the poems in Exits were written between 2003 and 2021, before the idea of authoring a book ever came to mind. Three years ago, I decided to incorporate what I considered to be my best work into a book entitled Line Drawings. However, during the process of selecting poems, I noticed that a substantial number were related to various aspects of mortality. This led me to curate a more concise, themed collection, and Exits was born.

How did you decide on the themes that run throughout your poetry book?

I think my focus on life’s transience — the finite nature of our biological selves — derives from three sources. First, I was raised without any religious training, so from a very young age, I was left on my own to ponder the enormity of the universe, time and eternity, and the meaning of existence. I remember being cognizant of death as early as age five. Second, as a physician and neuro-ophthalmologist, I’ve cared for numerous patients with serious and/or life-threatening diseases. And third, since 1999, I’ve had to deal with the spinal cord variant of multiple sclerosis and the ramifications of that disease.

Did you write these poems with a specific audience in mind, or was it a more personal endeavor?

During the writing process, the intended audience was always me, or, to be more precise, the facsimile of me that constantly looks over my shoulder and critiques every word I draft. The word ecstasy comes to mind. It captures the elation I feel when a line finally comes together, but it derives from the Greek ek stasis ― to stand outside of oneself.

There’s certainly nothing wrong with writing for a defined audience, or respecting the conventions of a particular genre, or exploring themes and issues that are currently in the public eye. My approach happens to be different. What matters most to me are the words on the page, how they sound in air, and meeting the standards I set for myself.

What did you learn about yourself through writing this book?

The lessons I learned while writing the poems and designing the book (which are outlined below) may be of benefit to other debut authors and/or emerging writers:

  1. Write poems that reflect your unique aesthetic sensibilities. Try not to be overly influenced by prevailing trends or by contemporary poetic styles.
  2. Edit mercilessly over an extended period. Satisfying first drafts often begin to show their flaws only after sufficient time has elapsed to afford an objective assessment.
  3. Begin your foray into publication by submitting poems to literary journals. This will help you determine which of your poems resonates with experienced reviewers. Before each submission, make sure that your poem is a good fit for the journal.
  4. Be patient. Practically every aspect of the publication process moves more slowly than expected.
  5. Be persistent. Exits went through twenty-two revisions over the course of a year before I felt it was ready for publication.

Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon

What if every ending held the seed of a beginning?

We live our lives counting moments, those we hope will last forever, and those we fear. In Exits, award-winning poet Stephen C. Pollock transforms these moments into sublime and magical music. With language both intimate and powerful, he explores the fragility of life, the cyclical truths of nature, and the mysteries of renewal that arise from even the darkest places.

Each poem is paired with evocative artwork, creating an immersive reading experience that lingers long after the final page. From myth to mourning, from dreams to decline, and from flora and fauna to the warming of our world, Exits reminds us that beauty is never far from loss, and that every departure leaves a door ajar.

Winner of the 2024 North Street Book Prize for Poetry, the 2023 Readers’ Favorite Gold Medal, and seventeen other literary honors, Exits is a masterful collection for those who believe that poems should move you, stay with you, and change the way you look at life.

Step into these pages. Lose yourself in poetry that’s both technically exquisite and emotionally arresting. And discover why every exit is, in its own way, an entrance.

Literary Titan Book Award: Poetry

The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes poets who demonstrate exceptional artistry and proficiency and push the boundaries of language and expression. The recipients are poets who excel in their technical skills and evoke deep emotional responses, challenge thoughts, and illuminate new perspectives through their work. The award honors those who contribute to the literary landscape with their unique voices and powerful words.

Award Recipients

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.