Download First in Series of Ongoing Interviews with Christian Poets AudioBook Free
This first part of a series of packages of interviews with Anglican and Christian poets starts with Pamela Cranston. Notice this quote pursuing is from the beginning of the interview/article itself. A number of other interviews with poets follow: "Hopefully, the reader will agree that Pamela Cranston can be an interesting and interesting woman, who as a poet has grown so much in these earlier years - so one well-known European United States poet told me." Her sense of the Almighty, tastes in Biblical writing as literature and her applying for grants religious ideal, plus some of her views of the 21st Century Church are touched on in this interview given by her over the telephone in June 2011 from San Francisco's East Bay to the writer's home north of San Francisco. We spoke for an hour, when the Chaplain for the Episcopal Chapel USA had to leave to attend to someone. Jeanne Walker, Poet, speaks to us of her work. This excerpt is from the beginning of that article/interview with her: Another in the group of ongoing interviews with North american poets. This interview with University or college of Delaware Professor Jeanne Walker is part of the special subset in this series called North american Anglican poets. This copy writer talked by mobile phone in June 2011 with Jeanne from his office at home north of San Francisco to Jeanne, who was simply in that day time at her home in the Philadelphia, PA area. We spoke for an hour, and the poet was forthcoming about her work as a poet, and since an experienced University or college Professor of English (35 years). About being a educator she says, "I'm fortunate never to live only with my peer group; I get to know folks who are twenty-one and twenty-two. I go to style on Tuesday day and it's the only real Tuesday afternoon we've. It's our true to life, and I talk with them about what they think about the text. The written text is a gathering place for all of us to talk about what's important." From an interview with Christian poet Luci Shaw, another of those interviewed in this ongoing series. This is part of an answer she provided to a question: "I find in Mary, the mother of Jesus, and her eager participation in the theatre of Incarnation, an almost infinite world of probability for reflection and poetry. My collection, Accompanied by Angels, includes many poems about this ordinary, amazing young woman. She can be looked at from a wide variety of angles. I have always seen her as a model, to both women and men, of active involvement in the task of God no subject how complicated or risky it appears to be. She said Yes to carrying a child with God by the Holy Ghost, well knowing what that might do to her reputation as an unwed mother. She considered the decision of God on her behalf to be paramount."