|
Doris
Ferleger, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and poet
whose poetry and memoir essays have been published
in numerous literary journals including: Bridges,
California Quarterly, Calyx, Comstock Review, Confluence,
Many Mountains Moving, Northeast Corridor, Phoebe
(Suny), South Carolina Review, South Dakota Review,
13th Moon, and in anthologies entitled: Motherpoet
and Journey into Motherhood. She holds an
MFA in Poetry from Vermont College and has attended
well-regarded writers conferences including Bread
Loaf and the Krakow Polish Poetry Seminar, founded
by Polish poet Adam Zagajewski, which brought established
and emerging American poets to Poland to discuss
Polish poetry and the interface between poetry and
history. Ferleger's ardent interest in poetry and
history is reflected in her book entitled Big
Silences in a Year of Rain, which is currently
being considered for publication. Of Ferleger's
book, poet Bill Olsen writes:
Bonhoffer wrote of grace that "it is only
when one loves life and the world so much that
without them everything would be gone, that one
can believe in...a new world." That new world,
in all its astonishing difficulties and almost
unlovable vastness, is, I think, the subject proper
of Doris Ferleger's exceptional manuscript Big
Silences in a Year of Rain. The poetry
has a rough music, but it never slouches, it glides,
and away from Bethlehem, away from pretty ideals;
and it exists in and for this world, always. These
poems about Jewishness lost and found and about
parentage from both ends of experience are lived
inside with an intensity that is extremely rare,
and with such joy in the medium, resoundingly
celebratory of the invisible yet somehow palpable
powers of poetry.
|