Friday
05Dec
Song of the Universe
Friday, December 5, 2008 at 11:42AM 
Anne Rowthorn, the editor of Song of the Universe, believes that poets, prose writers, and philosophers offer us a multitude of ways to see the earth. They open earth’s door and invite us to step into the garden of the universe. Language can move us to action; and her agenda in editing this stimulating collection of writings about nature from around the world is to challenge us to protect the natural world from ourselves.
“This lovely volume is useful as a reference--but even more as a source of inspiration. It will keep you going in the work of building a workable planet.”—Bill McKibben
Friday
05Dec
Excerpt from Song of the Universe
Friday, December 5, 2008 at 10:45AM Sunday morning had the appearance of a day just waiting for something to happen. It was a postcard-perfect day in the Adirondacks.It was morning and the mist on the moist forest floor was rising under a cloudless sky. The temperature on the late July day was just right, not too hot, not too cool, and all around was the rich fragrance of a thousand balsam trees towering above us. As we slowly rounded the corner of the dirt road we were traveling, a deer suddenly appeared in front of the car and there she stayed. The light from the sun’s rays revealed her contours—her sleek, slender legs, her long neck and triangular face with ears that seemed over-sized, her flawless tan matt coat, and especially her round black eyes that seemed to look right at us and through us. She was so close we could almost see her eye lashes, but she didn’t blink. She just stared. Time froze; then just as suddenly as she appeared, she tilted slightly backwards, raised her front legs, and with a leap bounded up the bank, into the woods, and away. For a moment the three of us in the car were silent. Then the philosopher among us asked the simple question: Is the deer inherently beautiful, or is beauty solely in the eye of the beholder?
Friday
05Dec
Anne Rowthorn
Friday, December 5, 2008 at 10:42AM Anne Rowthorn is a passionate environmentalist and a freelance writer who has traveled widely, writing on such subjects as children living on the streets of Bucharest and victims of war in El Salvador.
She has written seven books, edited two others and has chapters in various collections. Some of her books include The Liberation of the Laity, Caring for Creation, and Earth and All the Stars. Your Daily Life Is Your Temple was designated as one of the best spiritual books of 2006 by Spirituality&Practice.
Tuesday
25Nov
Greg Mandel
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 at 12:00PM
Click here to order High Hat from Amazon.comGreg Mandel is the brains behind The Oregonian's column, "The Edge." He grew up a Roman Catholic in Sitka, Alaska, where he was an All-Conference Altar Boy. He has lived in San Francisco, Massachusetts, New York, and Flagstaff, Arizona; he has traveled to Vatican City several times, where he saw The Pope, and to Paris and London, where he did not see the Queen in her undies.
He is also the author of The Seventh Elvis, a Dime Novel, and has recently completed a comic mystery about a gentleman adventurer in New York City. He lives in Portland, Oregon, with his dog, Cosmo.
Tuesday
25Nov
High Hat
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 at 11:55AM
Click on image to order from Amazon.comThe first time I laid eyes on Angel Yolkmussel she was being kidnapped by the Amish mafia outside the club called The High Hat. In the Vatican, it's all about hats. I should know. I'm The Pope, and I wear the biggest hat in town.
I was wearing it that night, over on the Via Crescenzio, on the wrong side of the Holy City, just after midnight, taking my constitutional on the incognito like I do every night, just to make sure that there's no evil afoot. See, there's only so much an honest Joe can do in an official capacity, even if you happen to be the big pontiff. So I drop the holy muumuu, take off my phony specs, put on a cheap suit and a dark wig, slip out of my fishing shoes and into a pair of wingtips and presto! I'm A. Pope, Private Eye, and even in the high hat, nobody's the wiser. They see me with the mitre on and they think it's a gag. Sure it is. Only the joke's on them, 'cause I'm The Pope.
Protecting the weak and the innocent, that's my game, and I don't care how I do it, either, with a wafer or a heater, it's all the same to me. So it's trouble I'm looking for and trouble I get. Angel Yolkmussel made me plenty of it. But after all, that's my line of work.
An Excerpt from High Hat, By Greg Mandel
Tuesday
25Nov
The Palin Prophecies
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 at 11:42AM
Click image order Amazon.com Kindle EditionPublishing is a surprising business, one part inspiration and many parts just good luck. Imagine our surprise at KenArnoldBooks—a small startup publishing company located at an undisclosed location in downtown Portland, Oregon—when the notorious Brent Mooseburger showed up on our doorstep one morning with a stunning proposal. God Our Heavenly Father had selected him, he announced as we stood there in our robes and clutching our coffee cups, as the man to channel Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s messages to the American people, since neither she nor The God and Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ trusted the elite “Gotcha” liberal media.
Mooseburger said, “He has asked—no, commanded—me to write a daily blog decoding the Divine Sarah’s prophecies for a nucular age. It was also revealed to me that you—KenArnoldBooks—have been chosen to publish the blog and a book before the election day so that Americans will have the truth before them when they enter the polling booths. Can I come in, please? And how about a cup of the delicious smelling coffee?”
Thursday
02Oct
Circle of the Way: About the Author
Thursday, October 2, 2008 at 03:07PM Ken Arnold started out to be a poet when he graduated from The Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars in 1967. During the 1970s, he wrote and published poetry in little magazines, and founded his own poetry journal, "Portfolio." He was also the Social Sciences Editor for The Johns Hopkins University Press for six years before moving to Temple University Press as Editor in Chief in 1974. He began writing for the theater; his first play, House of Bedlam, about the poet Ezra Pound, was produced by the New Playwrights Theater of Washington, DC, in 1978. Invited to be a Eugene O'Neill Fellow at the National Playwrights Conference in 1979, he developed his play, She Also Dances, which was premiered by South Coast Repertory Company in Costa Mesa, California, in 1983. The play was cited in Best Plays of 1983 (in American regional theaters).
Appointed Director of Rutgers University Press in 1982, Ken focused on his publishing career (and raising two children, Nick and Ruth) for the next fifteen years. He left Rutgers in 1994, after expanding the program and growing annual revenues from $300,000 to $3,000,000, to form the PubComm Group. The new company worked with nonprofits to develop strategies for web-based information systems. Ken left the company in 1998 to become editor of CrossCurrents, an influential interreligious journal founded in 1959.
Ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church in 1998, Ken worked was affiliated with St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Manhattanville, and then with St. Clement's Episcopal Church, on the West Side of Manhattan. He married Connie Kirk in 2001 and both moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where Ken became Director of Communications for the Diocese of Massachusetts. Two years later, he and Connie returned to New York City when Ken was invited to become the Publisher for Church Publishing, Inc., an official publisher of the Episcopal Church. While with Church Publishing, he acquired the Morehouse Publishing imprint and the Living the Good News curriculum program from Continuum, expanding the Church Publishing program by over three-hundred percent in annual revenues.
In 1999, Ken returned to writing for the theater with Enlightenment, a play about the monk Thomas Merton, which received a staged reading at St. Clement's Theater in New York City in 2000.
Following surgery and treatment for prostate cancer, Ken decided to retire as clergy in 2007 and step down as Publisher for the Episcopal Church. He and Connie moved to Portland, Oregon, where he began writing stories, resumed writing poems, and returned to writing for the theater. He also began work on a new non-fiction book, The Christian Atheist: Trusting the Wisdom Within.
Ken is the author of two previous books in spirituality: On the Way: Vocation, Awareness, and Flyfishing (Church Publishing Inc.), and Night Fishing In Galilee: The Journey Toward Spiritual Wisdom (Cowley Publications/Rowman & Littlefield).
He and Connie decided to found KenArnoldBooks, LLC, after they moved to Portland in the summer of 2007.
Wednesday
01Oct
Consumed
Wednesday, October 1, 2008 at 10:53AM
David Hill offers quirky perspectives on life, love, and globalization in his first book of poems to be published in the United States. A journalist whose normal beat is international economy and culture, Hill is known to readers of his poetry as, in the words of Light Quarterly (Chicago), “a polylingual perversely talented poet, [who] does devilishly contrived things with the language. He’s raunchy, unsolemn, and very funny.”
"Long an admirer, I had been prepared to be amused by David Hill's new collection of poems. I was not quite prepared for was how astonishingly good they are. He is also well on his way to becoming a major poet—perhaps the first for the era of globalization."—James Bowman, former American editor, the Times Literary Supplement
Wednesday
01Oct
Excerpt from Consumed
Wednesday, October 1, 2008 at 02:02AM
Click image to order from Amazon.comPavarotti’s Lament
Today I thought I’d do a bit of dusting
And clean the three big armchairs in the lounge.
The way that those two leave things, it’s disgusting.
It’s Pavarotti scrubs, while they just scrounge.
Now, I don’t mean to carp about Carreras,
But while I’m touching up the pinewood glaze,
He’s sat out swatting insects on the terrace—
The only Bs he ever hits, these days.
Who cleaned up last? It must have been Domingo.
What that guy’s hidden, no one else can find.
It’s not as if he’s talented. He’s Ringo,
While I, of course, am John and Paul combined.
Oh sure, we’ve had a few good games of Twister,
That time we all went surfing was a scream.
Just wish I could work out which ugly sister
Keeps hogging all the blankets while I dream.
Wednesday
01Oct
David Hill, Author, Poet, Translator, Editor
Wednesday, October 1, 2008 at 01:53AM David Hill is a writer, translator, editor and author of Consumed.
David Hill, Author of Consumed
Covering economy, travel and culture, he has contributed to nonfiction books published by Blue Guides, Oxford Business Group, and the Stockholm Network, and to news products from the Financial Times and Economist groups. He was editor-in-chief of the Budapest Business Journal in 2004-05.
As a literary writer, he has been published in anthologies from Rattapallax (US), Bluechrome (UK) and DC Books (Canada). A debut collection of poetry was issued in 1999 by the UK’s National Poetry Foundation. His literary translations have appeared in The Independentand the Times Literary Supplement. He has provided lyrics for recording artists, including the Little Cow band. Commissions for stage and screen include a version of Molière’sMisanthrope. He has spoken at conferences, festivals, comedy shows, and arts events in Seattle, New York, London, Copenhagen, Vienna, Budapest, and Prague.
David Hill studied languages at Oxford University, graduating with a First in 1995. He lives with his wife in the northwest United States. His website is www.davidhill.biz.
Tuesday
09Sep
Grounded in Love
Tuesday, September 9, 2008 at 07:04PM
Nancy Roth believes that the future well-being of planet Earth is dependent on the human will and that becoming aligned with truth rather than falsehood, with altruism rather than selfishness, and with action rather than passivity, is good for the soul. And for the Earth. Her book is a passionate and hopeful challenge to people of faith and seekers for truth.
"Roth's gentle commentary and elegant passion entice us to a oneness with creation and each other that is both active and rooted in faith."
-Phyllis Tickle, compiler The Words of Jesus: A Gospel of the Sayings of Our Lord
"Rev. Nancy Roth gets at the big questions here. Christians in our era will be judged by how they respond to the ecological crisis we now face."
-Bill McKibben, author of The Comforting Whirlwind: God, Job, and the Scale of Creation
"This immensely alluring book is a spiritual invitation into a deeper experience of intentional life. I hope many people will join Nancy on this journey into the soul and spirit of conscious universe."
-The Rt. Rev. Steven Charleston, President and Dean, Episcopal Divinity School
Nancy Roth is an Episcopal priest, retreat leader, author, dancer, and musician. The author of numerous books, including Organic Prayer: A Spiritual Gardening Companion, she lives in Oberlin, Ohio, where she is an Affiliate Scholar at Oberlin College and an Assisting Priest at Christ Episcopal Church.
Monday
08Sep
Ken Arnold Books: POD is OK for Big Publishers, It Appears
Monday, September 8, 2008 at 10:41PM PublicAffairs, publisher of Scott McClellan’s fast-selling memoir, What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington’s Culture of Deception, has had to use POD (Print on Demand) technology to fill a several-thousand copy gap in supply. Read a quick summary here from PW. Now I think it’s terrific that Lightning Source is capable of printing as many as 7,000 copies almost immediately to meet the needs of PublicAffairs. Does this make McClellan’s book a POD title? Well, no, because there was also a standard printrun and the book is apparently being reprinted on a standard press. But if a book is POD for part of its life, is it tainted with the slime of POD publishing? Will Kirkus review it (since Kirkus states that it will not review POD titles)? Will certain bookstores I know about refuse to carry the book now that it will be coming from Lightning Source? (One bookseller told me, vehemently, “I will not deal with Lightning Source.” Not even now when everyone is screaming for copies of McClellan’s book?)
Ok, the point here is a simple one. POD is ok when a big name publisher uses the technology to handle a production problem. It is not ok when a publisher uses POD technology routinely to meet consumer and bookseller needs. Such a publisher is stigmatized by the industry for…what? Not being big? Not filling warehouses with books? Saving trees? Saving money? Using scarce resources to promote authors?
POD has been stigmatized by booksellers and reviewers primarily to keep self-published authors out of the hallways. There has been a huge increase in the past few years in the number of self-published books on the market and the only way reviewers and booksellers can think of to keep them at bay is to categorically eliminate POD books, since so many self-published authors use the technology. (It’s like using nets to sweep the ocean floor–you get your flounder and if a few thousand other flora and fauna are destroyed, well, who cares?)
The difficulty with this approach is, as we see with McClellan’s book, that the refusal to consider POD books is not in fact a categorical refusal; it depends on what book is being printed POD and by what publisher. Ok, so now we know that the issue is not POD. It’s a problem of narrowing the corridor for books that are considered legitimate.
The second difficulty then is that a few reviewers and bookstores are deciding what constitutes a legitimate book and can’t come up with anything more creative that to designate a mode of production as the distinguishing factor.
Some self-published books are actually worth reading. Many POD books are also worth reading, even when they are not self-published. Is Scott McClellan embarrassed that his book is now available from Lightning Source? Just spell his name right on the royalty check.
Monday
08Sep
The Tao of Now
Monday, September 8, 2008 at 09:23AM 
“This avatar of the Tao Te Ching comes to us as a contemporary, familiar creature, an incarnation both timeless and timely. In The Tao of Now, Daniel Skach-Mills gives us wisdom as refreshing and new as this moment’s wind in the trees, wisdom as secure in tradition as the cardinal directions with which we name any wind’s path.”--Paulann Petersen, author of A Bride of Narrow Escape, The Wild Awake, and other books of poetry.
The Tao of Now shows us ourselves in eighty-one poems that, like the ancient Tao Te Ching, offer no answers. But they do challenge us to go beyond the intellect and reconnect with wisdom in a time of desperate need. As the author writes, “The contemporary urgency for a consciousness and heart revolution is no longer an option if the planet, and humanity as a species, are to survive.” His poems are here to help us make that shift.
Aimed not at the thinking mind but at that part of our being which already knows the truth of what is here, Daniel Skach-Mills’ poems are more like a remembering than a teaching. Each one calls us back to another voice but leaves us right where it finds us.
These writings stand as a contemporary witness that the eternal Tao is alive and well, if people would only unplug, unwind, and take the time to listen with their whole Being.
Daniel Skach-Mills is an award-winning poet, whose poems have appeared in a variety of publications and anthologies, including The Christian Science Monitor, The Christian Century, Sojourners, Open Spaces, and Prayers to Protest: Poems That Center and Bless Us (Pudding House Publications, 1998). His chapbook, Gold: Daniel Skach-Mills's Greatest Hits, 1990-2000, appeared in 2001 from Pudding House. He and his partner live in Portland, Oregon.
ISBN: 978-0-9799634-5-2. Available: Now; Publication date: October 1, 2008.
by Daniel Skach-Mills
180 pages. $14.00 paper.




