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Nefesh: Poems

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Nefesh is soul, soul breath in the language of Hebrew, the language of our ancients. It is a word pointing towards that which is hard to name, yet felt and lived. We sing, pray, rest, celebrate this nefesh. There has always been a human longing to name the un-nameable, to enter into the realm of words to touch the experience of our souls. You can feel this longing in these poems Bill has created, though all the while the poet knows that the bigger Whole is just out of reach of our words. There is delight in his reaching, a delight that is alive in these poems.
Nefesh is also the name of our spiritual community. Bill and his wife Leslie have been an integral part of this community, helping it grow and become. The poems in the first section of his collection were penned by Bill in important moments of growth and transition for individuals within Nefesh and for our community as a whole. On our High Holy Days in the fall each year, Bill offers a poem connecting our ancient tradition to the calls of our contemporary moment and again and again to our deeper soul longings. The poems in the second section to his children evoke the deep love of a father and the never ending profound journey of parenting.
The poems in this collection invite each of us to enter into the realm of the infinite, the continuous movement with self and other and all that it opens us to.
Bill, may you continue to walk your days with a poet's heart and may you continue to share your nefesh with all of us.
Rabbi Susan Goldberg

It is important to note that section 1 of Nefesh, "Poems of Worship and Celebration," are poems in the style of Walt Whitman, i.e. poems meant to be read aloud. While ambitious in nature, they mean to be immediately accessible. The poems in part 2, "Patterns," are much more ambitious and The first poem, "Reading," is a long, compassionate exploration of every Jewish parent's fear for their children considering the history of religious persecution in the 20th and 21st centuries. The second poem, "writing," explores the intellectual and spiritual balance that is necessary for meaningful exploration of the heights and depths of life. Part 3 explores domestic and neighborly atmospheres in Los Angeles, and seeks out emotional and spiritual meaning in every detail of life. Part 4 is a brief record of the spiritual interface between Judaism and Zen Buddhism, an overlap that has engaged so many Jewish spirits since World War II. Notable is the great variety of poetic forms, from epic to haiku, explored in Nefesh.

102 pages, Paperback

Published September 14, 2020

About the author

William Wallis

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Profile Image for Daniel Grunfeld.
6 reviews2 followers
January 15, 2023
Elegantly weaving a melodic thread between a range of subjects, from child victims and murderers in the Shoah to suburban California and the Buddhist recollections of the Dhamma, in Ehipassiko, William Wallis’s newest volume of poetry is an unrepentant celebration of the human spirit. His verse sings and dances across the celestial landscape of this collection.
The work is, at times, a solitary, lyrical, elegiac contemplation. In other poems, we discover the intimacy of family life, planting roses, children sleeping, a loved one observed. In others, he will seamlessly turn his skill to jubilant evocations of the power of science as much as ancient mysticism.
His deployment of imagery and musicality masterfully infuses meaningful influences as diverse as Vedic, Hindu, Kabbalistic Hebrew and his own American and indigenous roots, confirming his position as a leading voice in modern literature.
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