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Ten Poems to Open Your Heart

Ten Poems to Open Your Heart
By Roger Housden

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Product Description

Devoted to the experience of love, this book presents ten poems that can stir in each of us one of the deepest, most powerful sensations known to mankind. Guiding us through the beautifully expressed thoughts of ten individual poets, Housden invites us to explore the full range of love, from the intimately personal, to love for fellow man, for the world and for God. Taking each poem in turn, we follow Housden's personl exploration of its themes as he unlocks the poem's meaning in the context of his own life. From his commentary we are offered an insight into the author's spiritual journey through love, as well as the chance to appreciate the poems themselves.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #836488 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-01-07
  • Format: Bargain Price
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 144 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
The author of Ten Poems to Change Your Life offers personal reflections on poems about love in a slim volume best enjoyed by people who don't ordinarily read poetry. Selections include Denise Levertov's "The Ache of Marriage," Galway Kinnell's "Saint Francis and the Sow," Naomi Shihab Nye's "Kindness" and Pablo Neruda's "Love Sonnet LXXXIX"; while the poems approach love from different angles, they share extremely "accessible style and language" (a prerequisite for inclusion) and offer an essential instruction to "Wake up and Love!" Housden follows each poem with an enthusiastic and often treacly discussion in which stories from his life weave in and out of a sort of basic emotional exegesis: Kinnell's poem will "give you the feeling of wanting to live large again on the canvas of you life," while with Neruda's, "you will know the tenderness...as I knew it this morning while reading this sonnet...to my wife in bed." This is a warm-hearted volume, and an encouraging entry point for readers who generally shy away from verse, but many readers may feel that there's a bit too much of Housden's flowery prose and not enough poetry here.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Some people like poetry, and many, claiming they don't understand it, don't. Housden loves it. He says poetry, like love, can open one's heart and "when the heart opens, we forget ourselves and the world pours in." The 10 fascinating poems about love that he presents here invite opening the heart, and he primes the pump, so to speak, by opening his heart and sharing a personal interpretation of each poem. His essays are moving, revealing, and beautiful even though or maybe especially because he isn't a poet himself. Indeed, proud of his status as an amateur--"a word whose roots lie in the Italian amatore, a lover"--he binds love to poetry in an eternal loop. By discussing the imagery and sentiments in each poem in relation to his own loves and his life, he makes poetry accessible, helps others relate it to their lives, and makes them feel they would like to read more. Good inspiration to read more poetry and also, perhaps, to write out one's feelings about it. Donna Chavez
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
Housden's lyrical new collection brings ten great poems to life. It will provide the key to life's best-kept secret garden… -- O, The Oprah Magazine


Customer Reviews

If I could give it 10 stars I would5
There's already a great review by G. Merrit of this book so all I want to do is to add my praise. The poem "St. Francis and the Sow" and the commentary by Housden is perhaps the most beautiful, life affirming, soul enriching text I have ever read in my life. To me it is "sacred text". I want to send a copy of it to every one I've ever loved, liked, hated or sat across from on a bus!

I am new to poetry - I've wanted to be interested in it and I've enjoyed it when it was quoted by others - but I never found it accessible. Housden's commentary has remedied that. But beyond that, Housden's books are more than commentary on poetry. They are the best books on spirituality, life, humanness, God, i.e. the "important topics" that I have ever read in my life. Thank you, Roger Housden, for opening this wonderful world to me.

"Wake up and Love!"5
This collection delivers exactly what it promises in its title, ten poems to open your heart. In his more recent anthology, RISKING EVERYTHING (2003), editor Roger Housden observes that "suffering is part of how it is on earth; it is an inherent part of the fabric of existence. And if we are lucky, it will break our heart open" (p. xiii). The ten poems Housden has collected here reveal that, even in the midst of life's difficulties, disappointments, and broken dreams, love can bloom. And, as Mary Oliver reflects in the book's opening poem, while there is life without love, it "is not worth a bent penny, or a scuffed shoe" (p. 15).

Housden knows his poetry. Great poetry, he says, "is a bridge between our heart and the heart of the world" that allows us to forget ourselves and the world pours in (p. 7). Each of the ten poems collected here approaches love from a different angle: compassionate, romantic, sexual, ecstatic, and transcendent. And each poem encourages us to follow our heart. whatever the consequences. Several poems brought tears to my eyes. As in his previous book in this series, TEN POEMS TO CHANGE YOUR LIFE (2002), Housden calls upon his reader to "Wake up and Love!" (p. 12). He again insightfully illustrates each poem with experiences drawn from his own life.

The ten poets collected here include Oliver, Sharon Olds, Galway Kinnell, Wislawa Szymborska, Czeslaw Milosz, Naomi Shihab Nye, Denise Levertov, Pablo Neruda, Robert Bly, and Rumi. My only criticism of this book is that, for whatever reason, Housden chose to limit his collection to ten poems, followed "a brief list" of "other poets to open your heart," leaving me to wonder why those poets weren't included here as well.

G. Merritt

Ten Poems3
This book wasn't exactly what I expected...the poems chosen in this book are good, by poets I enjoy...the commentary, dissection, opinions were not. Interpretation, I believe, should be left to the reader. If more information is wanted, then read a biography on the poet.