Dancing with Fear, Rejection, Doubt, and Hope.

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AuthorHouse, Jun 12, 2003 - Poetry - 150 pages
Poetry, like most anything worth paying attention to in life, is the product of hard work, dedication and consideration. Any poet worth his or her salt knows that the hardest part is not finding the topic, or developing a style or voice, but rather digging out the truth about oneself and one's experiences, then looking at it straight on. Here, Peter, has shown what can happen if one opens up the doors to one's life and allows oneself to see the truth, the good, bad or ugly. The poems of course will speak for themselves. They will show you the joy, sadness, frustration and irony of this man's life as he worked to make sense or sometimes show the nonsense of some of his experiences with everything from romantic love, family relations, human ignorance to Halloween and silly childhood memories. Herein is fun, imagination, depth and folly, ingredients that are hard enough for many of us to cultivate and keep alive in our hearts and minds. For this 41-year-old individual, who has to live with cerebral palsy and epilepsy, and people's reactions to his speech impediments and bent body, the triumph of will, courage and understanding displayed within is, well, mindboggling. This work, his first folio, the result of 26 years of studying and writing poetry, shows a breadth of style, although certainly similarities and relationships between the poems are there for the more discerning student of poetry to "dig out." I think you will enjoy this work as much as I did helping with its construction. You can pick out one poem at a time, or read several, an aspect of any collection I particularly appreciate.

Debra Stevens,
English Instructor,
Diablo Valley College

About the author (2003)

Peter Karplus was born in California and for the last 26 years of his life has been studying psychology and writing poetry. Itis this wide breadth of knowledge and understanding that allows him tobe able to show fun, imagination, depth and folly in his poetry evenand especially when it comes to laughing at himself. Asone who has lived with Cerebral Palsy and Epilepsy, he has found poetryto be a most helpful tool in expressing his thoughts, feelings,emotions, and his intelligence. An intelligence that goes practically unnoticed by strangers because of their perceptions of his bent "book cover." His trademark statement is, "I may have a Slow Hand, but I have a Quick Mind."(tm) Peter is also the author of A Potpourri of Poems also available at Authorhous e.

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