17,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
9 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Critical Mass is a debut poetry book by Roy J. Adams, Professor Emeritus at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario CANADA. Roy's poetry is real, and yet there are touches of surrealism to be found: love and emotion thriving in a concrete mindscape alive with creative energy that appeals across a paradigm of literary tastes. Adams takes us along the pathways of a life well lived from childhood, through army days to true love and his academic career. It is a nostalgic walk down memory lane with the good, the bad and the ugly littering a far-flung landscape of fulfilled and broken dreams.It…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Critical Mass is a debut poetry book by Roy J. Adams, Professor Emeritus at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario CANADA. Roy's poetry is real, and yet there are touches of surrealism to be found: love and emotion thriving in a concrete mindscape alive with creative energy that appeals across a paradigm of literary tastes. Adams takes us along the pathways of a life well lived from childhood, through army days to true love and his academic career. It is a nostalgic walk down memory lane with the good, the bad and the ugly littering a far-flung landscape of fulfilled and broken dreams.It serves as both poetry and poetic memoir. This book and this man are 'the real thing'. ~ Candice James, Poet Laureate Emerita, New Westminster, BC CANADA
Autorenporträt
Roy J. Adams is a semi-retired McMaster University professor of Industrial Relations who has been writing and publishing poetry seriously since about 2015. In that time he has had work published in literary magazines in Canada (The Fiddlehead, Vallum Contemporary Poetry, Feathertale, (Hamilton Arts and Letters), USA (Rat's Ass Review, Typishly.com), UK (ninemus-espoetry), Australia (Ariel Chart) and in Singapore (Eunoia Review). He is a member of the League of Canadian Poets. He's also been a columnist for The Hamilton Spectator and Rabble and has published articles in the Globe and Mail, The Star and magazines such as Our Times and The Monitor.