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Sometimes what we miss is tangible: a trinket, a pet, a loved one. Sometimes we long for something less defined: a feeling, a moment, a sense of youth and wonderment. Shouting at an Empty House is an exploration of what little we have, how it goes unappreciated, and the losses we dwell upon. The speaker in these poems speaks of things that are taken from us, the knowledge that we can't get them back, and the reluctant acceptance that follows.

Produktbeschreibung
Sometimes what we miss is tangible: a trinket, a pet, a loved one. Sometimes we long for something less defined: a feeling, a moment, a sense of youth and wonderment. Shouting at an Empty House is an exploration of what little we have, how it goes unappreciated, and the losses we dwell upon. The speaker in these poems speaks of things that are taken from us, the knowledge that we can't get them back, and the reluctant acceptance that follows.
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Autorenporträt
David B. Prather's first collection, We Were Birds, was published by Main Street Rag Publishing in 2019. He has another full-length poetry collection, Bending Light with Bare Hands, forthcoming from Fernwood Press. He is a past president of West Virginia Writers, Inc., a statewide non-profit organization. He taught English Composition, American Literature, and Creative Writing at West Virginia University at Parkersburg and English Comp at Marietta College in Marietta, Ohio. He also served as poetry editor for Confluence Literary Journal and for Tantra Press, and he hosted the Blennerhassett Reading Series. He currently serves as a reader for Suburbia Journal. His poetry, essays, and reviews have appeared in many journals, including Colorado Review, Seneca Review, Prairie Schooner, The American Journal of Poetry, The Literary Review, Poet Lore, and others. His work has also appeared in many anthologies, including Voices From the Fierce Intangible World (from South Florida Poetry Journal) and Endlessly Rocking: Poems in Honor of Walt Whitman's 200th Birthday (Unbound Content, Englewood, NJ). He studied acting at the National Shakespeare Conservatory in New York, and he appeared in a couple of local (West Virginia/Ohio) independent movies. He received his MFA from Warren Wilson College in North Carolina. And he lives in the town where he was born (Parkersburg, West Virginia), where he was recently inducted into the West Virginia Literary Hall of Recognition.