Meet the author and have your copy signed at The Holly Dickens Festival this weekend, December 14 and 15 in beautiful downtown HollyMichigan. Visithttp://hollydickensfestival.org/index.htmlfor more information.
With a multitude of memorable characters, a sense of place as deep as the knee-high snow, and a heartwarming story filled with laughter, action, and romance, get ready to enjoy Friends, Snowmen, Countrymen, Be of Good Cheer.
Taking place in a snowy midwestern town on Christmas Eve and Christmas day, Friends, Snowman, Countrymen, Be of Good Cheer takes you back to December 1940, when much of the world is at war, while in the United States, citizens celebrate what will be their last Christmas of peace for five years.
If you want a story that will transport you to a Christmas without too much hustle and bustle, and fill you with a sense of the good cheer of family, friends and neighbors, you will want to spend time in the pages of Friend, Snowmen, Countrymen, Be of Good Cheer.
Without giving away any spoilers, the plot starts as visiting Arizonian Phil Wellbright tries to do a good deed by building a snowman for the little girl next door on Christmas Eve. Poor Phil thinks the little girl is terribly sick, that her mother has been in an accident, and that her father has abandoned them. So earnest is his intention to do something to bring cheer to the child, that Phil’s friend Frankie decides to help build not just one snowman, but a whole snow-family!
What happens next is pure comic delight as the boys pursue their mission with admirable and zany determination.
The beautiful, full color cover artwork and inside sketches are by the wonderful illustrator Anne Zimanski. http://www.annezimanski.com/
Besides the Snow-family, there are plenty of other Christmas and wintertime staples to add to your pleasure. Snowball fights, Christmas cookies, Christmas carols and ice skating to name just a few. With Petey the faithful dog, and a perky Chihuahua named Regalo plus a host of friends and neighbors, Friends, Snowmen, Countrymen, Be of Good Cheer, is a Christmas story you will want to read yourself, and to give to the loved ones on your list.
Order your copies of Friends, Snowmen Countrymen, Be of Good Cheer. A tale of Christmas Time by Richard K. Morris for Christmas giving and enjoyment today at http://amazon.com/author/morrisrk
Exciting news! I am happy to announce that both the paperback and e-book versions of my book “Good Words and Sunbursts” is available now at Amazon. I hope you will visit and purchase a copy for yourself, and extras as gifts to share with loved ones. This is a great way for you to support the work and art here at LVR.com and listenviewreview.com, plus get a volume of original poems to read and to keep for future enjoyment. Thanks for visiting and please purchase “Good Words and Sunbursts” by Richard K. Morris at http://amazon.com/author/morrisrk, and don’t forget to leave a review that will encourage and lead others to discover and enjoy these vivid verses!
As summer weather continues and the temperatures rise to the level commonly referred to as a scorcher, there are many ways you can beat or enjoy the heat. One way is of course to cool off in the water, be it a lake, the ocean, a swimming pool, or perhaps your neighbors bird bath, if they happen to be away. Where these options are not available, you may choose to stay inside as much as possible, with the shades drawn and the air conditioner blasting. There is of course, the option of sitting in front an open refrigerator, or the methods I often employed as a child, going out beneath the shade of a tree, or running through the sprinkler. While all of these options have their own merits, there is another I would like to propose, which, while not actually cooling your body, has proven to be a very effective way to enjoy the summer weather while it lasts.
I am referring to the colorful, cool, and relaxing experience of watching an Ester Williams water spectacular motion picture. For those of you unfamiliar with this iconic Hollywood motion picture star, there is no better time than a hot, hot summer day or sultry evening to pour yourself, and perhaps a loved one, if you are fortunate enough to have a loved one handy, a refreshing beverage, collapse into a comfortable chair, and enjoy the splashing, synchronized swimming, and technicolor glory of an Esther William film; and there is no better place to start this rewarding pursuit than with her first starring film, Bathing Beauty. This 1944 MGM release features Esther looking lovely and athletic in a bathing suit, with some great water numbers that will transport you to cool poolside. Bathing Beauty also stars Red Skelton, who is both hilarious and full of pathos as Esther’s falsely discredited love interest. Basil Rathbone, familiar to many from his role as the villainous Sir Guy of Gisbourne in 1938’s The Adventures of Robin Hood, and from a whole series of pictures playing the brilliant detective Sherlock Holmes, gets a break from his heavy and serious roles to play a likeable cad who starts all the trouble for Red .
With romance, comedy, music, brilliant costumes and sets and of course Esther Williams swimming and diving, in cool, refreshing water Bathing Beauty is a great way to the make the best of summer heat.
Speaking of music, BathingBeauty delivers with a top-notch roster of musical entertainment. Not one, but two big name bands, Harry James and his Music Makers along with arguably the top vocalist of the era, Helen Forrest, and Xavier Cugat and his orchestra, with Lina Romay! Plus, not one, but two top individual musical names: organist Ethel Smith, and singer Carlos Ramirez. Besides her usual wizardry at the organ, we also have the treat of hearing Ethel Smith utter the immortal line, thought by some to be attributed to an unpublished work of William Shakespeare, “Cheese it, here comes Piccolo Pete.” Just one of many minor touches that add to the enormous entertainment value of this film. One of the musical highlights of Bathing Beauty is the rendition of Loch Lomond, adapted to a contemporary swing score, performed by Red Skelton and an ever growing ensemble, and ultimately played by Harry James and His Music Makers.
If you can’t get to the water, get to a TV monitor and cool off with Esther Williams and the entire all star cast of MGM’s 1944 technicolor treat Bathing Beauty.
Support works that entertain and delight, and that build up in truth and love. Order other works by this author. Makes a great gift! https://www.amazon.com/author/morrisrk
A little something I composed and premiered Friday, June 21 Poetry Pour Over at The Proving Grounds Coffee and Ice Cream on Main Street in Milford, Mi.
The communities of Highland and Milford are known for the breadth and depth of artistic venues and activities within their areas. From the Huron Valley Council for the Arts in Highland, to the Village Fine Arts Association and the Suzanne Haskew Art Center in Milford,to excellent theatre, music, and musical theatre provided by Milford and Lakeland High schools, and area middle schools, and a vibrant roster of community theatre, to many dance studios, and even writing contests sponsored by Milford’s own River’s Edge Brewery, and open mic poetry reading along Main Street in Milford at The Proving Grounds Coffee and Ice Cream, to name just a few, the arts are thriving in the Huron Valley.
One local artist, Rick Morris recently turned his energies to writing poetry, and his efforts have been rewarded with both critical and popular recognition.
The critical acclaim came on March 30 of this year, as the Village Fine Arts Association hosted their 27th annual Poetry Art Night (PAN) to a packed house at the Suzanne Haskew Arts Center (the SHAC) on South Main Street in Milford. More than sixty stunning works of visual arts in various mediums , each with a companion poem displayed alongside, graced the display walls of the “SHAC”. For his entry titled “Tracks in the Snow” which accompanied the beautiful pleine air painting of the same name by noted Huron Valley artist Paul Tibedeau. poetry judge Joy Gaines-Friedler awarded the 2nd Place Village Fine Arts Association Poetry Award to Mr. Morris. In her comments on the work by Morris, judge Gaines-Friedler noted “Language, beautifully simple language, drives this poem…If the speaker is transformed, so too is the reader. It is an act of intimacy.”
The popular approval for the works of poetry by Rick Morris has been ongoing and may be illustrated by his latest title : The Falling Man. Rick posted the work to the website listenviewreview.com on May 10 and to Facebook at LVR.com in a poster form on the same day. The poster has been gaining numerous shares on social media, and views of The Falling Man on listenviewreview.com lead all other posts for the current quarter. In addition to this, the positive comments on The Falling Man, as well as Rick’s other works, continue to come in, a fact which the writer says provides him with encouragement to create and share more works. “I appreciate my audience, and I am always encouraged to find that someone has engaged with and received a benefit from my work. Reading poetry requires an intellectual effort; even though a poem may have a very emotional appeal, just like a song, but without the added attraction of engaging the senses with music and providing another layer of entertainment with the words, the poet, besides utilizing their own talent, must rely on the commitment and ability of the reader to stay with them.”
Morris attributes a universal experience expressed in The Falling Man as a contributing factor in the poems wide appeal. “My poetry writing often starts with a personal experience, but where I believe it gains value to the reader is that I go from merely personal to universal. Each one of us is The Falling Man; we have all experienced failure, and perhaps even worse, the sense that we always fail; yet we do not give up, we do not surrender. Knocked down, beaten, bloodied, we stumble forward, we press on. I believe that is what so many people find appealing in The Falling Man: they recognize themselves, and even though it is painful, they see their own strength and the beauty of the human character as it endures through suffering.”
The current output of poetry started for Morris in October 2018, when The Proving Grounds Coffee and Ice Cream shop in downtown Milford started hosting the “Poetry Pour Over” open mic night on alternate Fridays. Rick attended the first Pour Over, and has been a regular ever since. “The Poetry Pour Over is a great venue for poets and story-tellers to share their works in front of an audience, in an intimate setting along our beautiful Main Street. I am grateful to be a part of this ongoing event, and want to acknowledge Proving Grounds owners Jodie and James Courtney for hosting the Poetry Pour Overs, and poet Isabella Mansfield for approaching Jodie and James with the idea of doing an open mic poetry event here in Milford. I encourage anyone who has a fondness for poetry, or who would like to share their own works, to join us at Proving Ground Coffee and Ice Cream on Main Street.”
You can learn more about Rick’s works at www.listenviewreview.com, and on Facebook at LVR.com. E-mail your questions about Poetry Pour Over, or writing in general to rick@listenviewreview.com,