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James Thomas Fletcher

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James Thomas Fletcher’s Followers (10)

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E
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511 books | 625 friends

Amber
5,360 books | 68 friends

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564 books | 8 friends

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327 books | 82 friends

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James Thomas Fletcher

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United States
Website

Genre

Influences

Member Since
January 2016


James Thomas Fletcher is native to Oklahoma. After a brief stint in college, he left the state to see if the rest of the world existed. Along the way, he picked cotton, made fiberglass and, in hazmat suit, cleaned filters inside a nuclear laundry. He was an M-60 machine gunner in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, company clerk at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, (NATO\SHAPE) in Belgium, bartender in South Carolina, bricklayer in Oklahoma, oil field chainhand in Louisiana, roustabout in the Gulf of Mexico, English instructor in North Carolina, and Director of Computer-Aided Instruction at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Academically, he holds Master’s of Arts in English degrees in Creative Writing and Composition & Rhetoric,
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Popular Answered Questions

James Thomas Fletcher Poets considered to be at the peak of their profession *should* be held to a higher level of accountability. Their poetry is expected to be excellent …morePoets considered to be at the peak of their profession *should* be held to a higher level of accountability. Their poetry is expected to be excellent or, at the least, quite good. In some respects, they are rated against their reputation. Plus, their books are pitched by publishing houses and reviewed in influential newspapers. The work of getting their words to the public is done for them.

Local and unknown poets, however, are lucky to be written about anywhere. For the most part, the only person in their corner pitching their work is the poet. Sales, if any, are in single digits. (Mine, too) Their work known to few outside their circle of friendship. Supporting your local poet is the same as supporting any local business. Do what you can to help them out.

That's why my ratings and reviews are softer, easier, on the little guy/gal. Local and unknown poets need sales and exposure. And if my rating is a tossup between stars, I always round up, giving that tiny edge to those Davids slinging alone in the desert against Goliaths armed with publicists, publishing houses, national book reviews, notable awards, and shelf space at Barnes & Noble.

And believe me, poetic nonentities are worth it. Numerous times, I have read books by unknowns that surpass those of Pulitzer Prize winners. Lend an ear to these voices crying in the wilderness. They have much to say!(less)
James Thomas Fletcher Reading is the best inspiration and writing is a close second. I get much of my inspiration for poems while sitting outside reading (primarily poetry)…moreReading is the best inspiration and writing is a close second. I get much of my inspiration for poems while sitting outside reading (primarily poetry) and watching the natural world slowly change around me. A phrase may launch a memory, a misread word may be even more of a prompt for an idea. Writing itself is a boon. My letters have become lengthier and more descriptive and pieces of them often end up in my poems. Nature itself is an excellent stimulus for poetry. (less)
Average rating: 4.92 · 76 ratings · 43 reviews · 26 distinct works
Cairn

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 6 ratings3 editions
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Nature

4.50 avg rating — 6 ratings5 editions
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The Speed of Sweat

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 5 ratings3 editions
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Bibliophile

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2022 — 4 editions
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Borrowed Stardust: Poetry

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 5 ratings5 editions
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Poems from Terra

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2016 — 3 editions
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Émigré: Poems from Another ...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings3 editions
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War

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings2 editions
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RVN: Poems and Photographs ...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings3 editions
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Wild Seeds

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2021 — 3 editions
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More books by James Thomas Fletcher…

James’s Recent Updates

James rated a book it was amazing
Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Díaz
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Unusual. Powerful. Fascinating!
James rated a book liked it
The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton
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I knew from the title how this would end. But I'm astonished at the journey to get there. Along the way is intriguing, mystifying, zany, adventurous, and even kind of stupid. It's a crazy read, and I wish that I had done just that, but this was an au ...more
The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton
"Arthur Conan Doyle meeting Monty Python at a carnival. For 1908 this book is nuts! Like swinging a sack of zesty ferrets around. Too many ideas - slapstick farce, detective mystery, gothic thriller, espionage/totalitarian/philosophical/religious alle" Read more of this review »
James rated a book it was amazing
Flatline Horizon by Don Stinson
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Poetry books generally begin with their strongest poems, and end the same. For me, in that regard, "Flatline Horizon" is upside down. I was mostly unengaged for almost the first quarter of this book.

Then something surprising happened. As I continued
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James rated a book liked it
Midwest Hymns by Dale Cottingham
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I didn't connect with much in this volume, but I did find three or four pretty good poems, and one amazing image. ...more
James rated a book really liked it
Shroud of the Gnome by James Tate
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Certainly not for every taste. The book is filled with beautiful and/or fascinating lines, and the poetic work is evident. And it 'almost' makes sense! As a reader you try to create connections, form a logical narrative. But it's just not there. To s ...more
James rated a book it was amazing
Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest by B.H. Fairchild
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The first half of this book is exceptional. Poems of growing up working class in the 1950s Liberal, Kansas, and the Panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas. His poems have an honesty about them and a background intensity. We follow the boy becoming a man, b ...more
James has read
My Not-So-Innocent Childhood by Dorthy LaVern Spencer McCarthy
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I'll start off by saying that I am close friends with the author.

This is quite a memoir of a girl from about 3 until 18. It is filled with hilarious, hair-raising, and often jaw-dropping anecdotes. What a life. I have such little recollection of my c
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James rated a book it was ok
You & Yours by Naomi Shihab Nye
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While I loved the Red Suitcase and other of Nye's books, this one did not capture me. Since it left me rather flat, I really do not have much to say about it. One reason, perhaps, is that the book has lots of prose poems, and I am not a particular fa ...more
James rated a book it was ok
Ballistics by Billy Collins
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I enjoy Collins but "Ballistics" falls flat compared to some of his other books. Too lackadaisical. Poems that violate what he writes in 'Baby Listening', that poetry is a place "where meaning only one thing at a time spells malfunction." Many of the ...more
More of James's books…
“Harold Hill: You pile up enough tomorrows, and you'll find you are left with nothing but a lot of empty yesterdays. I don't know about you, but I'd like to make today worth remembering.”
Meredith Willson, The Music Man

Groucho Marx
“I'm not crazy about reality, but it's still the only place to get a decent meal.”
Groucho Marx

“I see her on TV, screaming into a microphone.
Her head is shaved and she is beautiful
and seventeen, and her high school was just shot up,
she's had to walk by friends lying in their own blood,
her teacher bleeding out,
and she's my daughter, the one I never had,
and she's your daughter and everyone's daughter
and she's her own woman, in the fullness of her young fire,
calling bullshit on politicians who take money from the gun-makers.
Tears rain down her face but she doesn't stop shouting
she doesn't apologize she keeps calling them out,
all of them all of us
who didn't do enough to stop this thing.
And you can see the gray faces of those who have always held power
contort, utterly baffled
to face this new breed of young woman,
not silky, not compliant,
not caring if they call her a ten or a troll.
And she cries but she doesn't stop
yelling truth into the microphone,
though her voice is raw and shaking
and the Florida sun is molten brass.
I'm three thousand miles away, thinking how
Neruda said The blood of the children
ran through the streets
without fuss, like children's blood.
Only now she is, they are
raising a fuss, shouting down the walls of Jericho,
and it's not that we road-weary elders
have been given the all-clear exactly,
but our shoulders do let down a little,
we breathe from a deeper place,
we say to each other,
Well, it looks like the baton
may be passing
to these next runners and they are
fleet as thought,
fiery as stars,
and we take another breath
and say to each other, The baton
has been passed, and we set off then
running hard behind them.”
Alison Luterman

“Strawberries were too delicate to be picked by machine. The perfectly ripe ones bruised at even too heavy a human touch. It hit her then that every strawberry she had ever eaten—every piece of fruit—had been picked by calloused human hands. Every piece of toast with jelly represented someone's knees, someone's aching back and hips, someone with a bandanna on her wrist to wipe away the sweat. Why had no one told her about this before?”
Alison Luterman

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