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I love Jeanne Bryner's poetry for the way it pulls me our of being lost in relentless abstract thinking and returns me to the real world of nature and people who know how to live and work in it. Jeanne sees and feels the actual world and also meanings and metaphors, and then shares her vision and her feelings in language that for me brings the world "health" to mind and then becomes love, of the most generous kind. Love, strength and beauty radiate from Jeanne's poems as, indeed, they do from herself, personally. -Gurney Norman, author of Kinfolks, and former Poet Laureate of Kentucky

Produktbeschreibung
I love Jeanne Bryner's poetry for the way it pulls me our of being lost in relentless abstract thinking and returns me to the real world of nature and people who know how to live and work in it. Jeanne sees and feels the actual world and also meanings and metaphors, and then shares her vision and her feelings in language that for me brings the world "health" to mind and then becomes love, of the most generous kind. Love, strength and beauty radiate from Jeanne's poems as, indeed, they do from herself, personally. -Gurney Norman, author of Kinfolks, and former Poet Laureate of Kentucky
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Autorenporträt
Jeanne Bryner's family was part of Appalachia's outmigration from Wetzel County, West Virginia and Greene County, Pennsylvania. Following work, her parents moved to Ohio where her father was hired in a mill. Migration and the fracture of family is never easy. "Home is the landscape familiar to one's heart and speech patterns gathering on evening's porch." Due to family illness, she has been a caregiver her entire life. Another layer of migration is the absence of extended family. "The bodies around you are the ones you lean against; they are your life vest, even if they are babies." She grew up in Newton Falls, Ohio. A retired board certified emergency room nurse, she's a graduate of Trumbull Memorial Hospital's School of Nursing and Kent State University's Honors College. She has several books in print and her work has been adapted for the stage nationally and also the 2005 Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland. She has received awards for community service, nursing, and writing fellowships from Bucknell University, the Ohio Arts Council (1997, 2007) and Vermont Studio Center. With Cortney Davis, she co-edited Learning to Heal: Reflections on Nursing School in Poetry and Prose, Kent State University Press, 2018 which received the Tillie Olsen Award for creative writing from the Working Class Studies Association and 2019 American Journal of Nursing Book of the Year Award for creative writing. In 2012 her book, Smoke: Poems, Bottom Dog Press, received an AJN Book of the Year award for creative writing. Her book, No Matter How Many Windows, Wind Publications, received the 2011 WCSA Tillie Olsen Award for creative writing. In 2022 with the support of Sigma's International Nurse Honor Society chapter, Delta Xi, she established a Nurse Honor Guard unit in her community. Jeanne lives near a dairy farm with her husband David, a veteran and industrial worker. Her son works in a machine shop and her daughter is a nurse.