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A wonderfully perceptive review for my poetry book, Home:★★★★★ Read "Home" and be the better for it., August 10, 2014
By Amazon Customer "lokhos" (USA) - See all my reviews
Verified Purchase
Uvi Poznansky had a father, like most of us; a family, as most of us do for a time. But this father was a gifted writer, as his daughter is gifted. This book is partly written by Uvi's father, Zeev Kachel, and partly by her own deep heart. This is no book for the faint of heart, nor a book to read casually. This book is full of love and pathos and grief. So take a deep gulp of the human condition, and read Home -- a book, a compilation, a struggle of the self.
This book is about emotion and the strength that sadness can evoke in the best of us. Uvi understands at a gut level the purpose of art and here she writes a frame around her father's journey, which has inspired her own.
Poznansky gives us a glimpse of lives most different, of her father's journey, of her own. If you've disdained the search for a higher octave of writing on Kindle, recant: "Home" proves you wrong. In this book, the author shows us the world through an unblinking eye. And what we see, we may not like: humanity torn open, a father lost, life among the ruins of a single soul.
Be warned: this book is dark; it must be to take us where it wants to go, to guide us through a storm of feeling. Zeev Kachel's numerous poems in "Home" share his loneliness, his talent -- and hers as she writes, evoking a spirit from beyond life's end.
I have well reviewed Uvi Poznansky before, but this book is special, even for a writer as gifted as she. Of her father, I knew nothing. Now I know more. And I am certain that talent is inheritable: we must thank the father for the daughter, and the daughter for writing a book this brave. The poems and stories here take us through war and displacement and despair, and back again. Its visions (not so much about horror directly, but about what horrors and inhumanity do to us all, soul by soul) have a message for us, about what humanity can be, for better and for worse. Why do we care? Because, if we're not vigilant, these things will happen again to more fathers, to more daughters. And again. And it is the single voices which cry out in misery (those who have lost their faith as well as those who regain it), whose words we need to hear. This book takes us on a personal journey, not a political one, into the heart of our kind.
The triumph of "Home" is that it was ever written at all.
Read "Home" and be the better for it.
Get ★★★★★ HOME
♥ Ebook ♥ http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
♥ Print ♥ http://bookShow.me/0984993231
♥ Audio ♥ http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
Just because... Here is a little poem:She:
I dabbed a drop of perfume right under my ear
As soon as I laid eyes on you, here
You dance with such rhythm, such elegant flair
I adore your bald spot and your dwindling hair
He:
I think of myself as a dashing young man
No surprise you came over when the music began
You smell so good, I feel such a bliss
Leaning over to you, can I hope for a kiss?
She:
I wore my best dress, with the arms left bare,
Painted my lips, put a rose in my hair
I love dancing with such a tall gentleman
My heart is yours, hold me tight if you can
He:
Let me lift you up high into the air
Come fly with me, if only you dare
To hang on my arm and trust every step
Let us tango together, now your weight I must shlep

I love sculpting dancing figures, because not only is the dance dynamic--
but it expresses the relationship between the dancers.
I made this piece of clay, burnt it in the kiln and painted it.
I just downloaded it on KU! I didn't look to see if it has narration but no matter, I will read it if it doesn't have it. Good luck!!
Duh. It's on the Audio thread. But the link to the audio version you listed doesn't seem to work, it goes to a " 404" error code. I just wanted you to know. It's not a big deal, but I thought you might want to know. ❤️ Anne
Anne wrote: "I just downloaded it on KU! I didn't look to see if it has narration but no matter, I will read it if it doesn't have it. Good luck!!"<3 Oh thank you for letting me know, Anne. Try this link for the audio:
http://www.audible.com/pd/Drama-Poetr...
Don’t open your eyesTry not to see
Things are no longer
Where things ought to be
That voice—is it her?
Behind a closed door
She calls you a stranger
Your mother no more
Breathe through the moment
Turn, turn your eyes
The past you imagined
Was all lies, lies, lies
Things are no longer
Where things ought to be
Who is this stranger
Is it still me?
(included in Home)
Thomas Baker is an author of romance, historical fiction, autobiographical, sports history/biography, and English Language Teaching. He is also a top Amazon reviewer, who ranks top 1000. I am thrilled to find his review of my book, Home:★★★★★ "Home" is Exquisite, Extraordinary, Unique, & Superb, August 30, 2014
By Thomas Baker "Thomas is the Past-President of TESOL Chile (2010-2011). He is the Head of the English Department at Colegio Internacional SEK in Santiago."
Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Home (Kindle Edition)
This is an extraordinary book. I had read other books from Uvi Poznansky before so I knew I was in for an enjoyable read. What makes this book extraordinary is the fact that it represents the efforts of Uvi to render a fitting tribute to her father, Zeev Kachel. It is a collection of poems and prose, half written by her, and half by her father. This combination is unique, and made even more so by its posthumous nature.
This brings to mind Natalie Cole singing a duet with her late father, Nat King Cole. My favorite is listening to both of them singing, "Unforgettable". Here's how she describes it: ""I think it's always a little bit bittersweet when I do it," Cole said of recording duets with her late father, who passed at age 45 from lung cancer, "but I do love to do it because I feel so connected to him. ... It's still emotional, but it still feels good, so you always still want to hold on to that feeling." (Source: ET interview)
Here's how Uvi describes "Home": "Home. A simple word; a loaded one. You can say it in a whisper; you can say it in a cry. Expressed in the voices of father and daughter you can hear a visceral longing for an ideal place, a place never to be found again." (end of quote)
As a teacher, the poem written by Zeev Kachel that caught my attention the most is called, "My Teachers". It is profoundly insightful, personifying "chill", "time" and "dream", essentially elevating these three concepts to the status of teacher. Coming to the poem, I am expecting the story of "real" teachers who impacted his life in a memorable way, and instead, I am greeted with a metaphorical trinity who are uniquely worthy of the status accorded them by the poet. For me, this is a very powerful, evocative poem that I am able to relate to.
In sum, allow me only one word: extraordinary. I have seen no other book like this. It is superb, exquisite, a literary duo that rivals the musical duo of Natalie and Nat King Cole in every way. Highly recommended.
Get ★★★★★ HOME
♥ Ebook ♥ http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
♥ Print ♥ http://bookShow.me/0984993231
♥ Audio ♥ http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
Home
"Deep, thought-proving, achingly beautiful story"Overall ★★★★★
Performance ★★★★★
Story ★★★★★
Would you listen to Home again? Why?
I'll want to listen to Home many times because not only is Home is filled with wisdom and pathos, but it is beautifully written and narrated. Any son or daughter will want to listen to Home: it's about relationships and lessons as old as time.
What was one of the most memorable moments of Home?
The moment when the daughter finds the silent movie projector in a cabinet, dusty and nearly forgotten. She knows this find will change her life forever, and so do we.
Have you listened to any of Kathy Bell Denton’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
This is the first of Denton's narrations I have heard, and it impressed me enough that I will look for others.
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
This book shakes the soul. Yes, there is laughter, but the giddy laughter of coming to terms with tragedy, with life, with death.
Any additional comments?
Home is a book that opens the soul. Reading it is mesmerizing. The story it tells is a story everyone should hear. I listened in one sitting the first time, and am looking forward to sharing it with my husband. For anyone who has lost a parent, or knows that loss comes soon, this book is a must. I recommend both this edition and the Kindle for those whose souls are aching, and those coming to terms with what life and death really mean.
Get ★★★★★ HOME
♥ Audio ♥ http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
♥ Ebook ♥ http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
♥ Print ♥ http://bookShow.me/0984993231
"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..."
To read more click here:
The line reaches the margin, where it is punctuated by a red stain
Somewhere at night a string sings outAll's dark, silent, filled with doubt
I'm alone, and you?
Out there, in the cold, a string sings out
To read more, click here:
After You're Gone
We were born in darkness, crying a fitLike grains of sand, countless stars came up, lit,
We wanted to turn back to the warm womb
Instead we were wrapped by chill and by gloom
Born in darkness, we labored so hard
To find our way in this universe
We were greeted by its hug, the cruelty of its curse
Its predators' jaws... We were forced to traverse.
Ma, why did you fool me, what was it for,
When you sang me a lullaby, not a song of war?
Oh why did you hide the ugly truth from me
We were born in darkness, our life--not to be?
Written by My father,
Translated from Hebrew by me
Get ★★★★★ HOME
Ebook http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
Print http://bookShow.me/0984993231
Audio http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
#AudioBooks #poetry
Friday night we have a dateCome right here to celebrate
This is when and where and what
You may win prizes! Don’t miss out:
Join the king and me in the Royal gardens
I'm blessed for the pleasure, blessed for the agonyBlessed 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--
To read more, and listen to the lovely narration from HOME, click here:
Thanksgiving: I'm Blessed for the pleasure, blessed for the agony
I live here with no joy, no regret And scribble little rhymes just for me
I live... No longer preach at the gate,
Nor squash any ants carelessly.
In their hiding place they seem to await
And observe me, in all probability--
Take a listen to one of my fathers' profoundly great poems:
I live here on paint and on toxoid
The lamp swings like a pendulumPictures 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--
To read more, and listen to the beautiful narration, click here:
He's ascending into the arms of his muse, his mother
When my father passed away, I went back home for the traditional Shiva-a, the seven days period of mourning. Perhaps the grief did something to change the way I viewed things, or else it was sitting in that space--my childhood home--in a spot I rarely sat before--To read more click here:
Seeing my home through a fish eye
At this moment, a man is lying in his armchair, propped up on a large pillow. He has lived, or rather, has confined himself within these walls for decades, for a reason unknown. In this stagnant place all sounds are muffled, all images erased – but for one thing: his youth. There is a vibrant longing in him for the adventures of his early days--To read more click here:
Was it not just yesterday when he left his home in Poland, never to see his parents again?
I'm dying to sleep, but ohShe's eager to get going
All because of a little window
And tempers that are blowing
To read more, and listen to the beautiful narration, click here:
She longs for chocolate and I--for chocolate
Now I will try on a little red dressLick chocolate-dipped strawberries, and let you caress
All of me... Oh let me kiss you, my sweet valentine
With lips that are glistening with rosy red wine—
To read more click here
Now I will try on a little red dress
Here is an excerpt from a Feb. 9 review of The Tainted Trust, Vol. 2 of The King Trilogy:"You definitely should read the 1st book in this series The Bridge to Caracas before reading this one. A lot takes place that you won't quite get unless you do. I have already purchased the 3rd in this series. Stephen Douglass really knows how to captivate his readers. The political intrigue intertwined with the Wall Street collapse is vividly portrayed--as are the greedy commodity traders. I can't recommend this series enough!!!!
The deeper I got into the book and the characters, the more I was hooked.
The Tainted TrustWhat started out in The Bridge to Caracas is played out masterfully in The Tainted Trust”
THE TAINTED TRUST
getBook.at/978-1-62660-018-8
Now an #audiobook
http://ow.ly/AfUqs
Double, double misfortune, trouble Burning coal and blackening rubble
Let the blood in my caldron boil
Feed the flames... Oh, such a toil!—
To read more click here:
Let the blood in my caldron boil
Every day I tear a leaf From my calendar, blanched by the sun
Here's spring... It is so brief
Leaves now falling, one by one...
Once more it's spring, the fragrance's sweet
And blossom spreads again, again
With graying hair, there in the street
I sit: a lonely, crestfallen man
Do you remember: a student’s room
With a single narrow iron bed
That eve, of golden summer bloom
We fried potatoes, words unsaid
The plates we set down on the floor
And filled our glass with cheap, warm wine
Between our kisses, love we swore...
For that lost moment, how I pine!
A star came on, peeking in
Out of the depth of a strange, dark night
The entire world was here within
A serenade of love, delight
(Poem by my father, included in my book, Home)
Get ★★★★★ HOME #free:
kindle
nook
iTunes
Smashwords
Kobo
Audio
A sad story about a happy man, a man whoLoved poems, women, and a calm core
A sad story that crashed against the cliff, crashed onto
A cold, indifferent shore—
To read more click here:
Without compass
I'm so elated to discover a wonderful review, written by a Top 500 Amazon Reviewer, for my poetry book, Home:★★★★★ ~~Intense/Personal/Emotional/Incredible~~
By Chief, USN Ret...VT Town TOP 500 REVIEWERo
This is an incredible book of poems and prose written by Ms. Poznansky and her father, Zeek Kachel. Uvi found the latest writings of her father when she went 'home' for Shiva - a and never knew that they existed. She spent one year carefully translating them from Hebrew into English ensuring the translation was as correct as possible.
It is extremely rare that a book creates such an emotional read as this one did for me. I had to stop several times to completely digest the words written on the pages. Due to the personal nature of both Uvi's and her Father's poems, I felt like I was trespassing into their private worlds. Yes, I was invited into their worlds but the prose and the poetry contained therein are both deep and meaningful. I could feel the pain of the Father when lamenting about his wife's absence. I could feel the pain of Uvi when lamenting about being lonely in 'Even One Mark'. And, I am still pondering 'Blade' which was written in 2004. These are raw emotions that are somehow eloquently expressed with grace.
The entire gamut of human emotions is covered in this book - heartbreak, loneliness, questions of 'why', death and living, life and loving and even war and the instinct to survive. 'Somehow it feels lighter in the dark' is one quote that sums the book up well.
Most highly recommended.
Get ★★★★★ HOME:
#kindle http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
#nook http://tinyurl.com/nook-home
#iTunes http://tinyurl.com/appl-home
#Smashwords http://tinyurl.com/smsh-home
#Kobo http://tinyurl.com/kobo-home
#print http://bookShow.me/0984993231
#Audiobook http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
Home
A short and sweet review for my poetry book, Home:★★★★★ Amazing read!!
By Mrs. Violetteon, Verified Purchase
I got goosebumps throughout this book. The manner in which the words are written are the most bone chillingly, expressive I've ever read. Very talented writer, great work. Looking forward to reading more from the author.
Get ★★★★★ HOME:
#kindle http://bookShow.me/B00960TE3Y
#nook http://tinyurl.com/nook-home
#iTunes http://tinyurl.com/appl-home
#Smashwords http://tinyurl.com/smsh-home
#Kobo http://tinyurl.com/kobo-home
#print http://bookShow.me/0984993231
#Audiobook http://tinyurl.com/Home-audible
Every day I tear a leaf From my calendar, blanched by the sun
Here's spring... It is so brief
Leaves now falling, one by one...
To read more, click here:
Every day I tear a leaf
It felt like evening, noon, morning, and suddenly night again; winter, fall, summer, and suddenly spring again. Edna touched her body. It seemed more agile, more slender. A change was upon her; she could sense it despite her drowsiness. She turned over. By some strange twist, she fancied that she was suddenly flat chested. Curiously, the sleepier she became—the more her body awakened. It ached with desire. She must have boxed up this feeling and now, it could no longer be denied—
To read more click here:
Winter, fall, summer, and suddenly spring again
See there, a couple just passed in embrace.We used to walk this way, do you still remember?
You looked forward to my coming.
In the midst of spring blossom, here's the sorrow of fall.
And the recognition that it's all over--
To read more click here:
In the midst of spring blossom
Straight ahead is the door with a big handle high above. He can easily reach it, standing on the tips of his toes and pushing, pushing forward. It opens! Here is the room, which he shares with his sister, Batia. He is three yours old; she is five. And somehow he knows: she will come in later, much later. He can climb into bed now. Sleep is coming; he can feel it. Sleep is almost here--To read more click here:
His first home
I'm not sorry for the hours that I wastedSuspended in my dreams and idle thought
I'm not sorry for the days I ruined
The only thing I care about is the luster I did blot
I care that that’s the way our lives are going
In power games, for which we'll pay the price,
I ache, because of our misunderstanding
Because that which is between us turned hard as ice
To read more, click here:
https://uviart.blogspot.fr/2018/01/im...
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--
To read more click here:
Be Still, A Poet’s Heart
Don’t open your eyesTry not to see
Things are no longer
Where things ought to be
To read more, click here:
Don't open your eyes
Books mentioned in this topic
Home (other topics)Home (other topics)
Home (other topics)
The Tainted Trust (other topics)
Home (other topics)
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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 soonHome