Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Dust Of My Soul - cover

Dust Of My Soul

Roland Meyung

Publisher: Poets Choice

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

" Dust of My Soul is the manifested essence of Roland Meyung’s mind. This book contains forty six original poems, each showcasing another section of the author's mind. Dust of My Soul engages with the reader on an intimate level, pulling them close so they can fully understand the poetry inside. It prompts the reader to begin to question these same things about themselves, pushing to inspire positive change through the art inside."
Available since: 06/03/2024.
Print length: 102 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Censors - with append - cover

    Censors - with append

    Mike Blake

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    CENSORS ::This Is a short poem about the subject of Censorship.Is it truly effective, and who are the Censors. Self censorship and evading the censors.There is also a new Censors Append to the Poem, which has been recorded seperately.More Poetry from the same Author:   https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00SG40RM8on Twitter: @miko_1_dollarInstagram:  wild_poetrys   //    wild.poetry.webs ~ Tumblr : ccobesor on Facebook page : https://www.facebook.com/new.poets.cornerTikTok: @mikeccoPoets Insta: Website: wwww.wild-poetry.com
    Show book
  • Romantic Healing Message - cover

    Romantic Healing Message

    Joe Ilunjo

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Description 
    A Poetic Journey from Heartbreak to Wholeness 
    In the quiet aftermath of love, we are left with pieces. Romantic Healing Message is a hand to hold in the dark, a lyrical guide that gathers those pieces and reveals how to mend with gold. 
    Structured as a profound five-act journey—through the Awakening, the Break, the Void, the Healing, and finally, the Message—this collection is more than a book of poetry. It is a conversation with your own heart. Joe Ilunjo’s intimate and vulnerable verse explores the entire spectrum of love: the dizzying heights of discovery, the crushing weight of loss, the silent reflection of absence, and the radiant dawn of self-forgiveness. 
    For anyone who has loved, lost, and is learning to love again—starting with themselves—this book offers a powerful affirmation: your scars are not signs of damage, but proof of your resilience. Let these words be the gentle reminder that you were never meant to stay broken; you were meant to glow. 
    (Thank you for choosing my audiobook. If you have any questions, feedback, or if you’d like to request a digital or paperback copy of the book, please feel free to reach out to me at joenduga@gmail.com.)
    Show book
  • Run Rebel - (stage version) - cover

    Run Rebel - (stage version)

    Manjeet Mann

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'I am strength
    I am power
    I am courage
    I am revolution
    I am Amber Rai'
    Amber is trapped – by her family's rules and expectations, and by her own fears. But on the running track she feels free. As her body speeds up, the world slows down. And the tangled, mixed-up words in her head start to make sense...
    It's time to start a revolution: for her mother, for her sister, for herself. Run, Amber. Run.
    Manjeet Mann's multi-award-winning verse novel, Run, Rebel, about a young woman beginning to take control of her life, was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 2021 and won the CILIP Carnegie Shadowers Choice Award, a UKLA Book Award, a Diverse Book Award and the Sheffield Children's Book Award.
    This fast-paced, mesmerising stage version, adapted by the author, was first produced in 2023 by Pilot Theatre, with Mercury Theatre, Colchester, Belgrade Theatre Coventry, Derby Theatre and York Theatre Royal. This edition also contains a range of teaching materials and resources designed to help educators bring the play to life for their students.
    'Mann's brilliant, coruscating verse novel lays out the anatomy of Amber's revolution, and the tentative first flowerings of hope and change'Guardian
    Show book
  • The Ballad of East & West - A visionary poem about differences around the world - cover

    The Ballad of East & West - A...

    Rudyard Kipling

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Joseph Rudyard Kipling was born in Mumbai, India on 30th December 1865.   
    As was the custom in those days, he and his sister were sent back to England when he was 5.  The ill-treatment and cruelty by the Portsmouth couple they boarded with Kipling said contributed to the onset of his literary life.  
    At 16 he returned to India to work on a local paper where he was soon contributing and writing.  It also exposed him to the issues of identity and national allegiance which pervade much of his work.  
    In 1886, his ‘Departmental Ditties’, collection of verse appeared in print followed by 39 short stories for his newspaper over only 8 months.  These were then published as ‘Plain Tales from the Hills’, shortly after his 22nd birthday.  
    He continued his prolific pace of writing before being dismissed in a dispute and, taking his pay-off and the profits from the sale of some publishing rights, decided to return to London, travelling via Rangoon, Hong Kong, Japan and the United States, all the while writing articles, and arriving at Liverpool in October 1889. 
    Over the next two years he saw further works published as books and in magazines, as well as a nervous breakdown for which he was prescribed a sea voyage, to South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and India.  
    Happier times came with marriage to Caroline Starr Balestier in January 1892.  The honeymoon began in Vermont and ended in Yokahama where they heard their bank had failed.  They returned to Vermont and settled.  Caroline was now pregnant and he was planning the ‘Jungle Books’.  
    A failed arbitration between the US and England resulted in an argument between Caroline’s brother and Kipling, and then his arrest.  At the hearing he was mortified by the exposure of his private life and after settling the matter they returned to England and life in Torquay.  ‘Kim’ was published in 1902, and ‘Just So Stories for Little Children’, a year later.  
    In 1907 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature with the citation “in consideration of the power of observation, originality of imagination, virility of ideas and remarkable talent for narration which characterise the creations of this world-famous author”.   
    When the Great War erupted, he scorned those who refused conscription.  His son enlisted and was killed at the Battle of Loos in September 1915, at 18, an exploding shell had ripped his face apart.  This death inspired Kipling’s writing thereafter, but the tragedy broke his life and by 1930 his prolific pen had almost ceased. 
    Rudyard Kipling died on 18th January 1936 from a perforated duodenal ulcer.  He was 70.  His ashes are buried at Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey.
    Show book
  • Eternal Hydra - cover

    Eternal Hydra

    Anton Piatigorsky

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Nominated for several Dora Awards
       
    When a young scholar finds Eternal Hydra, a long-lost, legendary and encyclopedic novel by an obscure Irish writer, she brings the manuscript to an esteemed publisher, hoping to secure an international audience for the book. But Vivian's obsession with the dead author, who has materialized in her life, is challenged by the work of a contemporary historical novelist,and she's forced to face confounding questions about authorship, racism, and ethical behavior.
       
    Weaving between modern-day New York, 1930s Paris and New Orleans in the years following the Civil War, Eternal Hydra is a postmodern look at the making of a modernist masterpiece.
       
    'A play of such tight structure, such cerebral content and such sure drama that the thoughtful theatregoer could hardly fail to be impressed.'
       
    —Globe and Mail
    Show book
  • Gaze Back - cover

    Gaze Back

    Marylyn Tan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Winner of the Singapore Literature Prize (Poetry 2020) 
     
    What do we expect of an author who is unapologetically female? What do we expect of consuming art in general? Should a work be easy, should a work be safe? 
     
    Marylyn Tan’s debut volume, GAZE BACK, complicates ideas of femininity, queerness, and the occult. The feminine grotesque subverts the restrictions placed upon the feminine body to be attractive and its subjection to notions of the ideal. The occultic counterpoint to organised religion, then, becomes a way toward techniques of empowering the marginalised. 
     
    GAZE BACK, ultimately, is an instruction book, a grimoire, a call to insurrection—to wrest power back from the social structures that serve to restrict, control and distribute it amongst those few privileged above the disenfranchised.
    Show book