Dandelion fluffs dance on the wind,brief as a held breath, scattering secretsto their wild kin — the nation of Taraxacum.They birth themselves in the hairline breaksof sidewalks, in the gutters of our days,unfazed by the concrete worlds we build. Golden cups open like small beacons;a child’s palm cupped, a commuter’s step— quiet proofs that life … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Taraxacum Census” – Ephemeral, v.2
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Merry Wives of Windsor by Shakespeare
Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor is often treated as a lightweight comedy, a cheerful outlier among his more psychologically layered and poetically elevated plays. Yet that judgment undersells its accomplishment. Beneath its brisk plotting, domestic mischief, and antic disguises lies a tightly observed satire of class pretension, masculine vanity, and social performance. The play … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Merry Wives of Windsor by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Cathedral of Roots” – Dragon Head, v.3
I wander through a parliament of trunks—their leaves exchanging secret currencies of light.The path is a shroud: a carpet of upturned roots,brown and papery as fossilized sails. One root reveals itself like a counted vertebra,curved and patient as a memory. I kneel—the earth remembers a throat, a jaw—not with facts but with the hollow of … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Cathedral of Roots” – Dragon Head, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature, and Spirit by Lyanda Lynn Haupt
Lyanda Lynn Haupt’s Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature, and Spirit is best read not as a conventional nature book, but as a work of ecological devotion. The publisher frames it as a meditation on how “science, nature, and spirit” meet, and that is exactly its achievement: Haupt refuses the old split between … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature, and Spirit by Lyanda Lynn Haupt
Revisionist Poetry – “Afterheat” – Dragon Head, v.2
I wander through the woods; unfamiliar trunkstilt their whispered councils overhead—leaves gossip of buried light, of what the dark keeps.Beneath my feet a tangle: upturned, rotting roots,someone's ribcage turned to earth. Deeper, my thoughts unmoor. One peeled rootbends like a dragon's rib, its spine still mappedin the soil's slow ridges. I don't name the beast—I … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Afterheat” – Dragon Head, v.2
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Sonnets by William Shakespeare
Reading the Sonnets is less like opening a single book than stepping into a long, intimate chamber of rhetorical experiments in which a brilliant mind tries on voices, arguments, and selves until language itself is refashioned. This sequence is not merely an anthology of pretty poems; it is a sustained performance of thought about love, … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Sonnets by William Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Good Morning ” – Downward Glance, v.3
There’s a whole field of sunflowers doing the usual —faces up, sun-chasing, like they all agreed on the plan.But you? You tilt your head down like you’re shy or thinking. I walk closer. You don’t make a fuss; you just open,petals folding back like pages, the center humming a little light —not loud, just enough … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Good Morning ” – Downward Glance, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare
There are comedies that simply make us laugh and comedies that quietly complicate our laughter until it tastes of something stranger. Twelfth Night belongs to the latter group: at once a carnival of language and a probing study of identity, desire, and social pretence. From the opening invocation — “If music be the food of … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Tilt” – Downward Glance, v.3
Rows of heads follow the morning like habit;one keeps its face lowered, a slow refusal.The stem bends at the knuckle as if remembering rain;petals close over the center like a folded letter. Light bleeds through in a thin, stubborn seam —as if the plant keeps a hidden lamp against the cold.Around it the field murmurs … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Tilt” – Downward Glance, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare’s early tragedy reads like a moral and theatrical experiment pushed to its bloodied extremes: brutal in action, often uneven in technique, but stubbornly alive in its capacity to shock and to provoke questions about law, family, and the theatrical appetite for spectacle. At face value the plot is simple—Titus, a war-hero and patriarch, … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare
