Michael S. Glaser is a professor Emeritus at St. Mary's College where he served for 50 years. A Poet Laureate of Maryland (2004-2009), Glaser has received awards for his poetry, his teaching, and his service to poetry and the poetic tradition in Maryland. A former Board member of the Maryland Humanities, and the Kirkridge Retreat and Study Center, he served as a Maryland State Arts Council Poet-in-the-Schools for nearly 25 years and now co-leads retreats which embrace the reading and writing of poetry as a means of self-reflection and personal growth. Glaser has published several collections of his own poetry, edited three anthologies and co-edited The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton (BOA 2012). He writes book reviews for The Friends Journal and is the proud father of five children and ten grandchildren. He now lives in Hillsborough, NC with his wife, the educator and Courage and Renewal facilitator, Kathleen W. Glaser.
These poems return us to the sacred in our everyday lives, calling
us back to "the language of awe," as the poet puts it so gorgeously
in the opening poem. These poems feel both elemental and essential
themselves, capturing so many holy moments in nature, inviting us
into the solitude and presence from which absorbing poetry is born.
-James Crews, contest judge, poet, editor of How to Love the
World
Elemental Things is filled with invitational pause reminding us
that beneath the noise and pace we create, lies the overlooked
blessings that have accompanied us all along. These are poems with
room enough to allow the reader to incorporate their own experience
and turn the small, uncertain, crumpled words inside our own fists
into the kind of poem we want to live by. If pen to paper is a
prayer-these are word temples.- Deanna Nikaido, poet, educator,
visual artist
I have long admired the wisdom and artistry of Michael S. Glaser's
poems. He writes with compassion and depth, masterfully capturing
the fragility, dignity, and complexity of the human condition. His
poems remind us what a gift it is to be alive, even during
difficult times. In Elemental Things he explores what it means to
be blessed in a broken world and, like a modern-day Adam, he
challenges us to awaken from the amnesia we experience when we
forget to honor and connect with each other and the natural world.
Every poem hints at ways we can move toward wholeness. Glaser's
poems remind us, gently, to love who we are and what we can still
become. -Elizabeth Lund, reviewer and host of Poetic Lines
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