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by Arthur J. Stewart To be released by Celtic
Cat Publishing
Arthur Stewart was born in Michigan City, Indiana, living in what is now the Indiana Dunes National Park. He also spent time in Arizona, studying biology and chemistry at Northern Arizona University. Later, after a stint in the Peace Corps, he earned his PhD in aquatic ecology at Michigan State University. He did postdoctoral research on the toxicity of coal oil and shale oil at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), then taught and learned about stream ecology at the University of Oklahoma, then went back to ORNL as an ecotoxicologist, group leader and senior scientist. To pursue his interests in improving science education, Art earned a MS Ed at the University of Tennessee – Knoxville. As a project manager for Oak Ridge Associated Universities, he now works with several multifaceted science education projects, including the Tennessee Science Bowl, the Appalachian Regional Commission – ORNL Math-Science-Technology Summer Institute, and the Department of Energy‘s ORNL Academies Creating Teacher Scientists program. He lives in Lenoir City, not far from the hubbub of Knoxville. Stewart’s first collection of poems, Rough Ascension and Other Poems of Science was published in 2003. His second collection of poems, Bushido: The Virtues of Rei and Makoto, was published in 2005. “In this
third collection of poems and essays, scientist Art Stewart writes
about life and death. Driven by the death of the poet’s father,
he examines influence and learning, and what these mean for living
and legacy. As always, Stewart connects science and literature through
careful choice of words, and echoes his strong belief that young scientists
can enhance communication skills through understanding and use of
poetry.” “Circle, Turtle, Ashes is about a journey— a journey we are all on, in our own different ways. Art Stewart brings the clarity of a scientist to poetry. The bones of life are laid bare for us to pick over, browse, consider. This moving collection reminds us of our place in the natural world. “ --Professor Anne Osbourn, Associate Research Director, John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK “Art Stewart invites us to travel with him through the various stages of boyhood and initiation into the natural world. Here are painful losses along with pranks of exploding cigar boxes and numerous scientific experiments (the most hilarious involving a duck and distilled spirits). We are led finally into the adult profession of science with its intricate and complex language. But the range of these poems and essays is always human —as teacher, experimenter. spokesperson, guide, his focus always takes us into the heart of the matter.” --Jeff
Daniel Marion, Jack E. Reese Writer in Residence, University
of Tennessee Libraries “Art Stewart
has written a powerful, deeply personal collection of poems and essays
that link his keen eye and deep affection for nature to universal
milestones in human life. The death of a father, the reactions and
recollections of family, and the hope and tenderness displayed in
instructing new generations, are all captured in this volume. As a
poet-scientist, Stewart uses his unique insight to celebrate the cycles
of humans, and our chemical constituents that weave and separate in
the dance of life.” “Your work is every
bit as powerful and beautiful a bridge as any of Hokusai’s—I
find your intertwining of the poetic and scientific modes just a thrill
to step inside of—like any maestro, you make the hard look easy,
without disrespecting particulars—Mary’s enthusiasm for
your work is now mine as well.” THREE WEEKS LATER Three weeks later I begin
by the dad‘s death
soft tissue torn do not for no good reason CIRCLE, TURTLE, ASHES While deploying
the ashes of the father at his homestead site in what took time, putting him home on the grass, the weeds,
the beautiful as a child forty-eight
years ago nothing before that, the youngest
a great box turtle: perfect
reincarnation is a fact
2. bromine, a little zinc
I think orange flowers of life
now 3. one whitetail deer before turning and casually leaping for higher ground
and we gulls nearby, the boys
now and then for fragments
of crinoid fossils, the stacks and we sprinkled his ashes
there, too, at the water‘s edge, LADOGA LAKE AND NYOS Nominated for 2010 Pushcart Prize 1. nothing howled: just the
wind starving for freedom Women stood in chill houses
overlooking At night for the stuttering drone
of German planes 2. just the right time, the perfect thing for death, before breathing
out souls sleeping 3. nothing in the classical
limnology course to my students, END OF A CIRCLE The end of a circle We are closed, we are open;
we give We are the ash We are the flames leaping
We are dust: the silent
sprinkle We will become We will be recycled, released
from the tight We will be set free by
death to become bacteria, springtails,
earthworms, |