Gjør som tusenvis av andre bokelskere
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from Excuses for my AbsenceI'm not about to make any excuses for my absence.Life is meant for the living and all that malarkey nonsense.Get busy dying or get busy writing.Is disjunction still "in"?My preference would be for a candidate with more than one book although I realize the realities of the job market.Meat as they say is murder.Obsolescence is the new Humanities department.We are looking for venture capital to invest in our massively overrated opinionated conundrum by which we will sustain a future for the idea of a university.Our ultimate goal is to be entirely self contained within the parameters of a global bubble economy.Double your pleasure double your pun with gender trouble mint gum.Is there a position available that hasn't already been filled in house?In fact all the adjuncts we hire receive a signing bonus and that is several lifetimes of crippling depression.Grade papers while u shop.You won't write anything for years even if you try.Oh I have been away for a while and I hope to be back again soon. Joshua Keiter wrote these poems between the years 2010 and 2019, while leaving academia. You can find him on the web at joshuakeiter.com.
These poems were written daily during the coronavirus pandemic from April 2020 through April 2022. I had participated in the National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo.net) during the month of April in years past, and as March became April became March became March again, I just kept writing, the way that some people maintained a sourdough starter. As a way of marking days that felt like no other, when even grocery shopping carried with it the weight of life-or-death risk, when ordinary moments could nevertheless crystallize into the hope of little stars, it only made sense to compile them into a book of days-days with an asterisk. About the authorJoshua Keiter lives in Reston, Virginia with his spouse and daughter. Originally from Philadelphia, he has worked in community and children's theatres, churches, libraries, coffee shops, and universities. He holds a PhD in creative writing from SUNY Binghamton. This is his first book. You can find him on the web at joshuakeiter.com.
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