Lucinda Clark & Daniel Y. Harris
Lucinda Clark is the founder of P.R.A. Publishing. She has worked with visual artists and authors on the promotion and marketing of their creative works for the past nineteen years. She wrote her first volume of “View from the Middle of the Road, where the greenest grass grows” in 2004. She has published 8 other titles by other authors since then. She currently resides in Martinez, Georgia with her husband Robert and their two children. She is the publisher of four “View from the Middle of the Road” volumes, and one of the poets included in the second volume. Daniel Y. Harris, M.Div, is the author of “Unio Mystica” (Cross-Cultural Communications Press, 2009), “Hyperlinks of Anxiety” (Pudding House Press, 2010) and co-author, with Adam Shechter, of “Paul Celan and the Messiah’s Broken Levered Tongue” (Cervena Barva Press, 2010). He is the associate editor of “The Blue Jew Yorker.” He was nominated for a 2009 Pushcart Prize. Among his credits are: “The Pedestal Magazine,” “Exquisite Corpse,” “In Posse Review,” “European Judaism,” “SoMa Literary Review,” “Mad Hatters’ Review,” “Poetry Salzburg Review,” “Wheelhouse Magazine,” “Moria, Ygdrasil,” “Wilderness House Literary Review,” “Poetry Magazine.com,” “Denver Quarterly,” “Convergence,” “Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture” and “The Other Voices International Project.” Among his art exhibitions credits are: The Jewish Community Library of San Francisco, Market Street Gallery, The Euphrat Museum, and The Center for Visual Arts. |
View from the Middle of the Road IV: Pathway to DreamsXavier Clark, Daniel Y. Harris, Pete Klimek, Clifford D. Ponder Read interview with authors on ReaderViews.com Read the review on ReaderViews.comSynopsis: "View from the Middle of the Road IV" is the fourth edition of the series. Contributors(all male) represent four voices from as far away as South Africa to the US shores both east and west. These poems share their views on life, love, loss, religion and the changes that time and society have on their point of view. The poems are funny, sad, tribute oriented and thought provoking. |
