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message 1: by Uvi (last edited Feb 27, 2013 07:26PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Home is a vessel holding poems and prose in tribute of my father. I spent an entire day working on the design of the front cover:



The image may look familiar to you, I have showcased it in My Father's Armchair, and offered closeup details, in association with my poems Muse and This is the Place. However, I needed a higher resolution image for the front cover, which presented a real challenge. It is extremely difficult to photograph this piece, because the layer of gold, which is exposed in places, reflects light in unpredictable ways. So I snapped the picture in one room, then another, with diffused daylight coming from the side, the front, the top, with and without flash, then took it outside and snapped it in sunlight, in the shadow, here, there and everywhere... You get the picture.

At last I found one version that looked fine to me. First I had to fit the image to a prescribed size (according the book size I have in mind.) Then I created the shadows of the lettering. You may notice that the shadow's color is not black, but rather it is the darkest purple of the painting (which can be seen in the lower left corner.) Also, I blurred these shadows, so they do not have hard edges, but fuzzy ones. Then I selected a soft yellow, with which I typed the title, Home; and a less bright version of this yellow, with which I typed my name and my father's. Being brighter, the title 'comes forward' in relationship to the author names.

Normally I would make sure that all text fields are of the same width, or that they are arranged in a way that the one on top has the shortest width, and the one at the bottom has the longest width, which creates a sense of stability. Not so here, because I view my childhood home through the shaky lens of memory...


message 2: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Just when I wasn't looking, surprise! This review was posted for my poetry book, Home:

★★★★ stars A nice dedication, February 28, 2013
By Diane Olmstead - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase

Simple and beautiful, these compiled thoughts and prose are a father's gift to her daughter. Very profound. It speaks to the poet in us all.

Download this highly acclaimed, moving poetry here:
http://www.amazon.com/Home-ebook/dp/B...


message 3: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I had the great opportunity to appear for an interview on the website of a fabulous author and friend, Christine Nolfi, where I was asked this: Why move between genres?

This is a question I often ask myself. My books cannot easily be classified in the narrow confines of a particular genre, because life as we know it–and my art, which mirrors it– constantly change from one genre to the next. One moment is is humorous; the next, it is erotic; then, it might be a tragedy.

To read the interview, in which I also talk about the latest and greatest news--my two audio projects--click here:
http://www.christinenolfi.com/blog/?p...


message 4: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Lovely new review for Home:

★★★★★ stars Absolutely Stunning!, March 14, 2013
By London Fog - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase

This book is mesmerizing. There are vignettes, streams of poetry, and scenes of such exquisite depth and beauty that I found myself taken aback at the skill of the writing and the power it had to touch my heart. There are many very touching tributes to her father, but also one scene in particular that examines a woman's reaction to old home movies played in reverse. It reminded me of the great literature of Kate Chopin's THE AWAKENING or A VOICE AND A VOCATION.

Hard to describe, but if you want a new literary fiction genius, you just found one in Uvi.

The review is posted here: http://www.amazon.com/review/RM6MHODR...


message 5: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments "And then she left him.

He looks at the line. It is written in blue ink, pressed into the sheet of paper—vigorously here, faintly there—with his usual stroke, a stroke that drives through the spikes and valleys in the shapes of the letters at a steady slant. The line reaches the margin, where it is punctuated, unexpectedly, by a red stain.

Blotting it is bound to leave fingerprints, and so Mr. Schriber decides to leave it alone. He lifts the paper by its corner—and a drop bleeds down; he lays it down on the desk—and the stain goes on spreading. Going back to his writing, he applies too much pressure on the pen—and the pointed nib digs into the paper. Taking a deep breath, he tries to compose himself. The pen is his weapon. The simple act of pulling it over the soft, white surface has never failed to calm him down. Letter by letter, mark by mark, it will soon draw him into a different state of mind."

So starts a short story in my book, Home. Mr. Schriber tries to sort out his life, the reason why his wife left him, by going 'into the zone' to write about their relationship. Beside the obvious difficulties he has sorting out his life, this story is great opportunity for me to capture some of my own thoughts about the act of writing, and the art of it.

Looking for an Easter gift?
Get the print edition of my highly praised book, Home
12 Amazon reviews ★★★★★
"The poetry is heart touching, the stories fascinating"


message 6: by Uvi (last edited Mar 29, 2013 07:55PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Am I a leaf about to drift
About to fly away, to chance
The cold, the heat, the drop, the lift
Upon the wing of wind, to dance?
Or else, nestled in this tree
Am I to stay, and thus be free?
Here I am, Apart From Love
Flying Home just like a dove




message 7: by Desiree (new) - added it

Desiree reilly (desitheblonde) | 2 comments i got the book and will try to get them in week i have one more to get done


message 8: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Desiree wrote: "i got the book and will try to get them in week i have one more to get done"

Great Desiree! No rush, no pressure--enjoy the read!
And, happy Easter to you and yours,
Uvi


message 9: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Here are the entries so far! Want to submit yours? Check out the Writing Contest.
http://uviart.blogspot.com/p/entries....


message 10: by Desiree (new) - added it

Desiree reilly (desitheblonde) | 2 comments im reading the apart form love and read one all read and they are great books wow


message 11: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Desiree wrote: "im reading the apart form love and read one all read and they are great books wow"

Aw... So glad you're enjoying them, Desiree! Apart From Love is in the last stages of turning into an audiobook, and the voice actors are simply amazing!


message 12: by Uvi (last edited Apr 05, 2013 08:57PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Late Lover

A diamond short, a decade late
I come to stand outside your gate
Unlock and open, let me in
Forgive me, love; what is my sin?

I fled from you across the land
But now I ask you for your hand
A decade late, a diamond short
I can't imagine why you snort

My limbs are frail, my breath is cold
I must admit I may look old
I fall, I kneel, why—I implore
You are the woman I adore

I feel so weak, I feel so brittle
Don't touch! I may be impotent a little
You loved me once—or so I thought
Stop! Take your fingers off my throat—



I painted Late Lover from the point of view of the girl he had left behind. She and you, the observer, are one. He is yearning to come back home. A blue cape is flung around his shoulders, which allows the eye to stay with him, rather than drift off to the background, seen in the spaces between his flimsy ribs. More importantly, you can see the withered flowers he lays at your feet, and the ring being cast off your finger, straight onto his head. The words 'A diamond short, a decade late' are carved into the door frame, perhaps with your fingernails, scratching letter after letter over the long-drawn-out years of waiting for him...

Having painted him all day, the voice of Late Lover came to me at night. The next morning I wrote his poem down in a single breath, and never made any corrections, never replaced a word or adjusted the rhythm--because it came to me completely ready.

Moved by poetry?
Get the print edition of this profoundly moving poetry book: Home


message 13: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments April 9 is just around the corner! The deadline is 12:00 pm PST... Submit your entry ahead of time!

As part of the launch event The Voice Is Jacob's Voice, I am announcing a Writing Contest for all who join me in the celebration.

http://uviart.blogspot.com/p/contest_...




message 14: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Cast your vote in the poll in the Writing Contest
http://uviart.blogspot.com/p/entries....

Three winners will be announced in my launch event, as well a prize to each participant.
https://www.facebook.com/events/31888...


message 15: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments The lamp swings like a pendulum
Pictures sway on their nails
Then slip down the walls, leaving scratched trails
Amidst the quake, the grief, the confusion and scare
Slowly ascending is my father's armchair

And beyond all these outlines of what I see there
Beyond the sofa, the knickknacks, the old furniture
Light pours in, and it paints something new
It reveals, it unveils at this moment a clue

The clue to a presence only he could once see
A presence he longed for, because only she
Could call him back home, and envelop him so
Touching-not-touching, her hands all aglow

These pages, upon which he'll never scribble a line
Are floating out of shadows, into the shine
Only she can now read the blanks, she and no other
He's ascending into the arms of his muse, his mother.

In tribute for the upcoming Mother's Day, here is a poem from my poetry book, Home


message 16: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Sucked in by a force, I'm flying through a tunnel
The tunnel of memory that leads me back home
The past blurs my present, so my vision is double
Walls of my childhood curve into a dome

From here I can see that home, tilting
And falling from place, all the lamps are aflame
My father's empty chair is slowly ascending
Tipped by the light, outlining its frame



For this oil painting, I prepared the canvas with a layer of textured bronze color, then worked the scene into it. The early sketches for the composition were done on a small note of paper on the first day of the Shiv-aa, the mourning period following my father's death. By the time I came back home the note was lost, so I re-sketched it from memory.

This poem is included in my poetry book, Home.


message 17: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Oh what is there to say
Come Valentine's day?

You bring a dozen blood-red roses
She thinks, Is this how he proposes?

With a bottle of wine
You whisper, Be mine

You offer a big chocolate heart
She thinks, Well, that's a start

She loosens your tie
And gives a deep sigh

The fire is burning, the music is on
But all you can see on her face is a yawn

Then from your pocket you pull out the ring
She shakes her head, No, I want one more thing

What does she want, come Valentine's day?
In cupid's name, what should I say?

She smiles, Bring me Home, Apart From Love
Then I'll be yours, like a hand and a glove

And you say, Give me A Favorite Son
Now let's blow off the candles, one by one

What more is there to say
Come Valentine's day?



Inspiring Stories, Great Performances
A Favorite Son
Now in print, ebook and audiobook!

Apart From Love
Now in print and ebook. Audiobook coming soon!

Home
Now in print and ebook


message 18: by Uvi (last edited May 10, 2013 06:42PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments ★★★★★ review: "For me, traditional poetry is an expression of the subconscious feelings through mundane means of imperfect words. As such, the simpler are the words the poet manages to beat into the confines of a rhyme, the higher is the mastery of this poet..."

Review by Oleg Medvedkov


message 19: by Uvi (last edited May 11, 2013 10:37AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Be still, poet's heart, this moment is rare 
Stop this hammering, why would you dare   
To set up a challenge, to write your own fate
Be still and accept, perhaps it's too late

Unlucky the number, unlucky the day   
Still, welcome the future, come what may
Set yourself free, apart from love
Change whatever was decreed from above

Sing out a ballad of passion and hate
Sing it out as you drown, and ignore that date
Someone may notice, may listen out there
So quicken the pounding, sing out with a flair

The flood is abating, release the dove
Pray to find yourself a part of love




message 20: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Come one, come all! Cast your vote in the writing contest!
Beautiful writings about love. Which one deserves to win?

Vote HERE




message 21: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Author Brian Bigelow, originally from Minnesota, currently lives in Colorado with his wife, a cat and a very protective Chihuahua. I find it so rewarding to find his short and sweet review for my poetry book, Home:

★★★★★ Excellent collection., May 17, 2013
By Brian Bigelow "Brian Bigelow" (Colorado Springs, CO USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase
This review is from: Home (Kindle Edition)

I've had a copy of this book since November and finally was able to get to reading it. This is an exception collection of poetry and prose. Thought it was quite wonderful as I was entranced in the verse. Would recommend it to any poetry lover.


message 22: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Did you notice the new slideshow feature on my blog? Right at the very top?

If you are reading any one of my books--Apart From Love, Home, or A Favorite Son (in either Kindle or print edition) I will gladly feature your image here!

To learn more, click here: Your Image at the Very Top!




message 23: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Lia London, the author of full-length novels in a variety of genres, has invited me for a second mini-interview on her site, Clean Indie Reads. Her questions focused this time on my poetry book Home. She also posted her own review of the book, and a review by Hall of Fame Amazon reviewer, Grady Harp:

"There are vignettes, streams of poetry, and scenes of such exquisite depth and beauty that I found myself taken aback at the skill of the writing and the power it had to touch my heart."
--Lia London, author

"This radiant book is an exploration of the bond between a daughter and father and the book overflows with some of the most eloquent poetic moments in print. Home is an invitation, a very personal one, and should not be passed over."
--Grady Harp, Hall of Fame reviewer for Amazon

Check it out here: Home




message 24: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I am so grateful for the second opportunity to be featured on Brian M. Hayden's blog! He is a dear friend, and the author of home/Road To Transplant (and more books) where he takes you along to witness the final mile on his incredible journey to a heart transplant.

This time, my guest post focused on the opening poems in my book, Home. These poems, and the entire book, is in tribute of my father:

To read more, check it out:  Guest Post by Uvi




message 25: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I plucked a wildflower
A poem by my father, published posthumously

I plucked a wildflower from my resting place
And it was blue, as if it wore my name, my face
But I was startled suddenly by a snake
Who slinked across the path with one tail shake

I plucked a wildflower from my grave, behind
And in silence, my daughter came to mind
Where are you now? The wave swept you away
In a velvety evening, an eve of dew and ray

I was penetrated by a pouring rain
And for a moment, somehow, I felt alive again
Sensing me, the worms began to rave
I plucked a wildflower from my grave.

And a chorus of crickets kicked off a singsong
Climbing up the wall I danced away, so long!
There's no death in life, no need to feel so sad,
I would've come back already if it were all that bad

There were a few I didn't know among the mourners
I asked myself where they came from, what far corners
The crowd was small, such pity! Some were sad
To those who cried, I smiled and waved a tad.

I left countless bills behind me, heavy debts
Come over, I'll pay them back, you bet!
I stare at you across the big divide
With obvious advantage: no interest on this side



★★★★★ bookreview: "HOME is an homage to her father...
poetry that's never been placed before the public until now"

Looking for a great Father's Day gift?
Get the beautiful print edition
Home


message 26: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments When I posted the front cover of my upcoming book, Home, a reader wrote to me saying she was so ready to read it! So I worked as hard as I can, designing the back cover. While the image on the front is based on my oil painting, the one on the back is conjured out of thin air... Here three snapshots I took of the design process:



Using gimp (a program with capabilities similar to Photoshop) I cut and pasted segments from the image for the front cover, creating a 'collage' on screen.



Using virtual 'brushes' of various sizes and bristle signatures, I painted the over the collage, so it became as textured and its lines as curvy as the front cover. I softened the sharp lines, so they do not 'steal' your attention away from the text to be displayed on top. Thus, I made it a 'smoky' atmosphere, that complements the home image on the front cover.



Then I took time off to compose the blurb. Once I was happy with it, I created the text shadows, which are not black but rather the darkest purple in the image. I blurred these shadows, to soften their hard edges. Then I created the text that appears over the shadows. (When text appears over an image that is highly textured, it is important to present any text over a layer of shadow, which helps separate the letters from the image.)

♫ °˚˚ ✿*‿*) ♡♥ ◦°˚˚

Love the music of words?
Treat yourself to a gift! Download Home


message 27: by Uvi (last edited Jun 13, 2013 07:28PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I am truly honored to announce that a prolific performer, Katy Bell Denton, will be reading the poems and prose for the audiobook edition of my poetry book, Home. Since this book is in tribute of my father, the challenge for her is to express my voice in the first half of the book, and his voice in the second.

Kathy is a singer, acting coach, and voice over artist. You can view an impressive list of her film and theatre roles, here: Now Casting.

Her regional credits include work at International City Theatre (StageScene Award), The Old Globe, Kennedy Center, The Gem (Dramalogue Award), Sierra Rep and four seasons with Ensemble Theatre of Santa Barbara. Local credits include Sacred Fools, The Classical Lab, The Odyssey, Theatre West, The Unknown Theatre, Vox Humana, Malibu SummerStage, and West Coast Ensemble. Her TV/Film credits include: My X#@%&$*&! Family, Bitch (Sundance), Hypersapien, Poor Mrs. Sobel, Kadis, I’ll Pick the Flower You Love, Appleville Eats Its all Stars.

To my surprise, I found her voice reading Sonnet 99 of the Bard. In this reading she uses her easy flowing, lovely British accent, which is only one of her many accents. First, here is the sonnet, written by the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, in which he expresses his love towards a young man.

The forward violet thus did I chide:
Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal thy sweet that smells,
If not from my love's breath? Thy purple pride
Which on thy soft cheek for complexion dwells
In my love's veins thou hast too grossly dyed.
The lily I condemned for thy hand,
And buds of marjoram had stol'n thy hair:
The roses fearfully on thorns did stand,
One blushing shame, another white despair;
A third, nor red nor white, had stol'n of both
And to his robbery had annex'd thy breath;
But, for his theft, in pride of all his growth
A vengeful canker eat him up to death.
More flowers I noted, yet I none could see
But sweet or color it had stol'n from thee.

–William Shakespeare

Now listen to her beautiful interpretation, and you will appreciate why I am so delighted to work on this upcoming project with her:

To play her voice, click here



"HOME is an homage to her father...
poetry that's never been placed before the public until now"
Download the highly praised, ★★★★★ poetry book
Download Home

Audiobook coming soon


message 28: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Just discovered a new review for Home: a big thank you to the reviewer, whose pen name SMFD stands for Suzzette Dawes, the Jamaican-raised author of The Collection, Adventures in the Courtyard, and Tortured Souls. This is what she wrote:

★★★★★ a lot of emotion is shared and conveyed, June 17, 2013
By SFMD - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase
This review is from: Home (Kindle Edition)

A book with beautifully written poems and prose. It opens with a daughter writing about her father and some special memories attached to the armchair. I like the rhyme pattern and the flow of the poetry
It reveals, it unveils a clue (from Muse)
Essay - A Sentence Unfinished - is a heavy read. Uvi describes a scene where her father sitting in his armchair remembering his escapes from the Nazi to Spain to Israel. The other chapters follow with her father as a child (I guess she has heard the stories over the years). His family running from invasion during World War 1 abandoning their home town (German invasion).

With father's day just passing, there some honor in her translating her father's poems. Then there is her father's poem "Bent over Memories" reminiscing on his daughter when she was younger while looking at children playing in the park:

No longer will I carry you in my arms, little girl" and
"Now I am alone.
Supported by memories...
Sitting in the park for hours
Watching someone else's children."
Verse conveys strong feelings - daughter far away but the children playing reminds him of time spent when his daughter was younger.

Overall a good read that out pours the emotion and provides some insight on life:
"I Plucked a Wildflower" - Funny but morbid to write about own funeral, the mourners you don't know and the debt you left behind. Humor that no interest on the other side. Take that banks!
If i had to choose a favorite, it would be "We Pass" due to the contrast of fall and spring, how we are now and how we used to be (symbolized by the couple who passed embracing). Fall (when leaves separate from the trees) and fail relationship - the comparison noted.

Sorry for the spoilers but I enjoyed reading Home.


message 29: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments In a dark night with not a friend

In a dark night with not a friend
I walked all alone in the world
A splitting burst of thunder I heard
And sea breakers that hammered and curled.

A thunder rolled over the skies
Wind gusts battered me with a cry
Terror blinded my eyes
I couldn’t tell an enemy from an ally.

In a night with not a friend, all bleary
I could see no shelter around
I walked on, broken and weary
Searching for hope to be found

♫ °˚˚ ✿*‿*) ♡♥ ◦°˚˚

Inspired by the music of words?
Get Home


message 30: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments My week on Mcv Egan's history-related blog comes to a height with a new piece, this time written not by me--but by my father. This is my all-time favorite of his work, which opens with a conversation with his counselor:

You're asking me to put here in writing, once more,
All that I lost, my esteemed counselor?

And just when you might expect that he is making a list of physical properties that were confiscated by the Nazi regime, the poem takes a turn: when he describes his father's gold watch, it is the entire life of his family that is reflected in the glass lids. This is what he demands to get back--not the value of the physical thing.

Check out the post here: Reparations




message 31: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Here is a short and sweet Goodreads review of Home by Brian Biglow:

This is an exception collection of poetry and prose. Thought it was quite wonderful as I was entranced in the verse. Would recommend it to any poetry lover.

Home by Uvi Poznansky


message 32: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments While surfing my facebook groups, I found this new ★★★★★ review of Home, written today by Christoph Fischer, and posted on Amazon and Goodreads. Christoph is a high-ranking reviewer on Goodreads: #46 best reviewers #9 top reviewers. And, he is the author of two historical fiction books, Sebastianand The Luck of the Weissensteiners.

★★★★★ Moving, July 9, 2013
By diebus - See all my reviews

"Home" by Uvi Poznansky and Zeev Kachel is an amazing and moving collection of poems and short stories.
The first half seems written by a girl or a young woman and the images she has of her late father, his place in her life, his habits and his death. The poems are about the family history and the impressions her father has left on her as well as her current life and relationships. Nowhere is it said that the poems are a reflection on Poznansky and her life but the pieces were so moving and real that it certainly felt as if they were.
Underneath this collection however is the more central theme of home,as the title gives away. Home in the geographical, temporal and emotional sense and maybe some more that I missed.
These poems and stories are most personal and moving in their character.
Halfway through we switch to Zeev Kachel, Poznansky's father and his poems which she found after his death and which she translated from Hebrew for us.
They are different in character but have similar themes. It seems as Kachel moves on in age and time his poems become more questioning, philosophical and trying to make sense of the world. As refugee he also focuses a lot of his attention on the issue of home.
The book is deeply moving, well written and contains some amazing thoughts and images and oozes with sentimentality and love.
Very touching.

Home by Uvi Poznansky


message 33: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments The Opening of Home

Sucked in by a force, I'm flying through a tunnel
The tunnel of memory that leads me back home
The past blurs my present, so my vision is double
The walls and the ceiling curve into a dome

From here I can see my home, tilting
And falling from place, all the lamps are aflame
My father's empty chair is slowly ascending
Tipped by the light, outlining its frame

This is the opening poem from my book, Home, and the preparatory sketch for its cover, both originating from the same place, the same vision in my mind. I find it so magical that through a creative collaboration with a wonderful actress, Kathy Bell Denton, the words--and the vision--come alive through her voice.

Take a listen:
Home, narrated by Kathy Bell Denton



Longing for a place never to be found again?
Get the paperback edition
Home

Audiobook coming soon!


message 34: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments On his blog, Servante of Darkness, Anthony Servante has just posted a fascinating article. It quotes the works of several poets--my work included--and then, it offers a review and analysis of each work.

Anthony starts with this premise:

Let’s discuss the premise before looking at the words. It is an axiom in academic writing that poetry must speak for itself. A writer cannot interpret meaning for the reader, giving insight to his own words as if they required his presence to clarify the work’s intents. The poem must stand up to the scrutiny of the reader alone...

From my work, Anthony selected the poem Late lover, with my oil painting to accompany the poem. Check it out here:
Poetry Today: Trends and Traditions




message 35: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Muse

The lamp swings like a pendulum
Pictures sway on their nails
Then slip down the walls, leaving scratched trails
Amidst the quake, the grief, the confusion and scare
Slowly ascending is my father's armchair

And beyond all these outlines of what I see there
Beyond the sofa, the knickknacks, the old furniture
Light pours in, and it paints something new
It reveals, it unveils at this moment a clue

The clue to a presence only he could once see
A presence he longed for, because only she
Could call him back home, and envelop him so
Touching-not-touching, her hands all aglow

These pages, upon which he'll never scribble a line
Are floating out of shadows, into the shine
Only she can now read the blanks, she and no other
He's ascending into the arms of his muse, his mother.

Listen to my narrator, the tallented Kathy Bell Denton, read these lines, Here.



Love the music of words?
Treat yourself to a gift
Get Home

Audiobook coming soon


message 36: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments What a wonderful, eloquent review from Deborah for my poetry book, Home!

★★★★★ Home, August 1, 2013
By Deborah - See all my reviews

The book has poems and prose from a father and daughter with two very different and distinct ways of writing but underlying the difference you see a common thread woven through them all. A thread that is the one thing we all think of differently, home.

For her father it brought a sadness and a deep sense of longing. You can feel his suffering, the pain, the changes that age can bring and nothing is glossed over. This is raw emotions that you feel in your very soul and at times its disturbing. You feel like a voyeur looking through the pages of anothers life and seeing it all unfold in your mind. There is also a sense of wanting it to be over as though life has been lived and the time is now past and the author wants to move on. Not knowing exactly what lies ahead and yet at most times welcoming it with open arms while at others he seems to want to pull back perhaps to make changes. But those moments have passed and they are now a part of his very being which in the end he seems to accept.

Uvi must have been amazed to find poems from her father that had been hidden for years. I cannot imagine what it must have been like going through those notes and pages while still grieving the loss of her father. With her emotions so very tender and raw his words at times must have cut to the very center of her being and also to have given her some joy in knowing that their time together was not over.

Through the newly found works Uvi is with her father as she works on the translation process so they are in a sense sharing those last two decades of his life in a very different way and on a deeper level.

Whereas Zeev writes his poems almost as a diary, a journal of his life, his daughter tends to write and see things differently and paints a picture that you form in your mind of the thoughts, feelings, the way things were in a very descriptive but somehow more detached manner. Focusing on the physical changes around her rather than the changes within. But even with the difference in style all of the emotions are still there to touch and feel. Very real, very alive and powerful.

A wonderful tribute by one amazing poet to another that takes us down two different paths. Through the same struggles, demons, and soul searching which somehow comes together. The paths converging to lead us to that elusive destination, place or state of mind that is home.

I feel that people you meet as well as

books you read change you. You are never the same as part of them will always be with you and I am honoured to carry both these poets and their works in my heart and yes my very soul.


message 37: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments As part of my launch event for the upcoming audiobook edition of TWISTED, I am announcing a ★ Writing Contest ★ Check it out! Then, invite your friends to join. The more the merrier!




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Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments A lovely new ★★★★★ review for Home:

Home, August 6, 2013
By jeannette joyal - See all my reviews
This review is from: Home (Kindle Edition)
I was gift this book by the Author for a honest review. A priceless collection of Poems and memories! How can I put into to words the emotional heartache this Man felt throughout life's journey in a world full of disappointment and harsh reality? I cannot however, His Daughter Uvi, the Author of this book can. She has with great care translated from Hebrew, her Fathers deepest thoughts, that was written in the form of poems over the years and discover after his passing. I can't imagine how Emotional this must have been to discover these! As I read through both her and her Fathers accounts I wondered to myself how many of us could have endure what this Man faced and survived? I for one am not sure if I would have had the strength that this Man possessed. His emotional outpour through out the book reminded me of David the psalmist, when he cried out during his most darkest hours, begging God for strength, only to be faces with silence not knowing if he would be heard. I feel blessed and privileged that Uvi shared this incredible part of her legacy.

Home by Uvi Poznansky


message 39: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I Am so elated! Two great things happened today: first, I got this message:

"Congratulations, Twisted is now on sale at audible.com. And we plan to make it available on iTunes and Amazon within the next few days"

Here the audiobook edition of Twisted, take a listen:



And second, I have just approved the production of Home, so my poetry book will soon be available on Audible and Amazon, too!


message 40: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I was so delighted when Ia Uaro, the author (as well as the cover artist) of the coming of age story Sydney's Song, bought a print edition of Home and gave it as a gift to the teacher of her children. Today I am doubly delighted that she posted this great review, on Amazon and Goodreads:

★★★★★ Poignant and Moving, 14 Aug 2013
By Ia Uaro (Sydney, NSW, Australia)
Amazon Verified Purchase
This review is from: Home (Paperback)
Zeev Kachel, son of a Russian Jewish family, was born in 1912, on the eve of the First World War. When German declared war on August 1, 1914 and its army marched into Russia, his parents bundled him and his sister into the wagon, leaving behind their store and worldly belongings, to escape for the lives.
"Ma, why did you fool me," Zeev was still bleeding as 70 years later his pen dripped "We Were Born in Darkness",
"what was it for,
When you sang me a lullaby, not a song of war?
Oh why did you hide the fateful truth from me
We were born in darkness, our life--not to be?"

Welcome to the poetry world of Zeev, beautifully rendered into English by his daughter Uvi Poznansky. He was a man of passion with the ability to capture it in his work, as Uvi aptly calls it. You can't but be emotionally affected by Zeev's powerful laments of loss. Of a child after his mother has departed,
"I had travelled to a place so alien, so cold
How bitter it had felt, to you I never told.
How you waited to receive a word from me, a letter..."

I feel a very special connection to Zeev. To me his moving words provoke long-forgotten memories, tucked away because they were too painful to remember, or to share. I could just imagine his agony as he wrote,
"You're asking me to record, on paper to pour
All that I lost, my esteemed counselor?"

And bravely he wrote, and wrote and wrote and wrote. Of very beautiful things that are only beautiful while they last, "Lie to me boldly, don't misgive"
Poetry is cruel honesty--and here is Zeev baring his soul, driving us to share his pain of the well-captured memories,
"For that lost moment, how I pine!"
of his confusion,
"Is this really the path I envisioned?
Then why is the night here so black?"

And yet even as he anguished over his loneliness, "In a night with not a friend, all's bleary," his daughter had understood him. His lucky daughter, in whom he has carved: "I am a poem, I inspire"

Five stars.

Home by Uvi Poznansky


message 41: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments King Judah has hosted poetess Bathsheba Dailey and me, live on air!
Join me for a visit in the The Kings Court. It is a 2-hours conversation, so bring a glass of wine or a cup of coffee! The conversation is well worth your time, I promise, as both Bathsheba and I read excerpts from our poetry!

Bathsheba and I in the King's Court


message 42: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments The Writing Contest POLL is up! Cast your vote for your favorite entry!

And please share this, please tweet! Let everyone read these beautiful entries, written by poets and writers from around the world!

Cast your vote!


message 43: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Come Home with me! My ★★★★★ poetry book ♥ Home ♥ is coming out in an amazing audiobook edition! Join the Writing Contest, listen to my narrator's voice, be here for the cover reveal... And whatever you do, don't miss out!

Come HOME and JOIN!




message 44: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments In my oil painting, which I used for the cover of the print edition of Home, I depicted a vision of the interior of where I grew up. The early sketches for the composition were done on a small note of paper on the first day of the Shiv-aa, the mourning period following my father's passing. By the time I came back home the note was lost, so I re-sketched it from memory. I prepared the canvas with a layer of textured bronze color, then worked the scene into it.

It was extremely difficult to photograph this piece, because the layer of gold--which is exposed in places--reflected light in unpredictable ways. So I snapped a photograph of the painting in one room, then another, with diffused daylight coming from the side, the front, the top, with and without flash, then took it outside and snapped it in sunlight, in the shadow, here, there and everywhere... Yes, you get the picture.

At last I found one version that looked fine to me. First I had to fit the image to a prescribed size (according the book size I have in mind.) Then I created the shadows of the lettering. You may notice that the shadow's color is not black, but rather it is the darkest purple of the painting (which can be seen in the lower left corner.) Also, I blurred these shadows, so they do not have hard edges, but fuzzy ones. Then I selected a soft yellow, with which I typed the title, Home; and a less bright version of this yellow, with which I typed my name and my father's. Being brighter, the title 'comes forward' in relationship to the author names.

Normally I would make sure that all text fields are of the same width, or that they are arranged in a way that the one on top has the shortest width, and the one at the bottom has the longest width, which creates a sense of stability. Not so here, because I view my childhood home through the shaky lens of memory...

For the audiobook cover I brightened the font color, so it stands out more over the painting. Also, because of the square dimensions I had to 'extend' the image of the painting to the right and to the left. And in addition to the authors' names, I added the name of the voice actress for the audiobook, Kathy Bell Denton.



Audiobook coming soon
Treat yourself to a gift--ebook FREE today!
Get Home
★ Audiobook ★ Ebook ★ Print ★


message 45: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Wow! So happy! Just got this messsage, about the fourth one of my books to go audio:

Congratulations, Home is now on sale at audible.com. And we plan to make it available on iTunes and Amazon.com within the next few days.

Check out the list of audiobooks, and don't forget to play the voice clip for each one! Take a listen, here:

My author page on Audible




message 46: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments As part of the launch event Home, I am announcing a Writing Contest for all who take part in the celebration. Check out the details here:

Writing Contest




message 47: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I plucked a wildflower
Written by my father, translated by me

I plucked a wildflower from my resting place
And it was blue, as if it wore my name, my face
But I was startled suddenly by a snake
Who slinked across the path with one tail shake...

Listen to the poem (read for the audiobook edition by Kathy Bell Denton) HERE:




message 48: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments Are you a member of Audible? Love biblical fiction? Boy are you in luck! As part of the launch event Home, I am announcing a RAFFLE to win a FREE audiobook download of my audiobook, A Favorite Son!

Here's how:
Win a FREE audiobook in this RAFFLE




message 49: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments If you are reading Home I will feature your image at the top of my blog, in the new slideshow feature at the top right.

Here's how:
Got Home? Your image here




message 50: by Uvi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Uvi Poznansky | 844 comments I'm blessed for the pleasure, blessed for the agony
Blessed for the fear, the pain of it all
In which I was steeped, in this reality
And granted the chance to endure or to fall...

Take a listen to the poem in its entirety (from the audiobook edition of HOME):
I'm Blessed for the Pleasure, Blessed for the Agony




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