Woodland Manitou

Publisher: Homebound Publications

Woodland Manitou: To Be on Earth is a collection of essays rooted in the rhythm of the natural world. Through the turn of the seasons, Heidi Barr illustrates how the cycles of the earth have informed her everyday life from community to vocation to the food that finds its way to the dinner table.  Through gardening, simple living, and prioritizing sustainability, Barr paints a picture of how remaining close to the earth provides a solid foundation even as the climate changes and the story of the world shifts.  Part stories, part wonderings, and part call to act, this collection of meditations invites reflection, encourages awareness, and inspires action.

About Heidi Barr

Award winning author of several books, Heidi Barr is committed to cultivating ways of being that are life-giving and sustainable for people, communities and the planet.  She works as a wellness coach, holds a Master’s degree in Faith and Health Ministries and occasionally partners with organic farms and yoga teachers to offer retreat experiences.  At home in Minnesota, she lives with her husband and daughter where they tend a large vegetable garden, explore nature and do their best to live simply. Visit her at heidibarr.com or connect on social media:  Facebook: @HeidiBarrwriter | Instagram: @heidicbarr

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Binding EAN ISBN-10 Pub Date PAGES Language Size Price
Paperback 9781938846724 1938846729 2017-09-19 252 0.00 x 5.53 x 8.26 in $17.95

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Cold Spring Hallelujah

Cold Spring Hallelujah

by Barr, Heidi

Cold Spring Hallelujah explores the experience of being human in a world that often seems broken...

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Seeds Under the Tongue

Seeds Under the Tongue

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In this second collection, McLaughlin wields a boldly ecstatic voice to explore a confluence of themes: wanderings on the wild earth, relations with more-than-human presences, engagement with indigenous ceremony, reckoning with catholicism, the swirl of young family life. These heart scores are delivered in a euphonic, incantatory brand of storytelling that delights and provokes at the depths...

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Mouthbrooders

Mouthbrooders

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Where does language originate, especially the language of poetry?in the brain or the emotions? In the images we behold, or in the memory? In this deeply observant collection, Amy Nawrocki asks, "What language do you have / for the barren days when nothing catches your eye?" And although "The contortionist is unable to speak / from all her sword swallowing," Nawrocki whose brain and emotions once...

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Before the Sun Rises

Before the Sun Rises

by Morgan, Gwendolyn

Before the Sun Rises is poetry of awakening and listening to the natural world at this turbulent time on our planet.  Gwendolyn Morgan evokes a dreamtime threshold of climate change, global initiations, corvid and celestial convergences...

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The Temple of Warm Harmony

The Temple of Warm Harmony

by Owen, Frank LaRue

The Temple of Warm Harmony is a book of poems, but it is also something of a map. Some of the poems are about the author, some are about the reader, while other poems are about the times we’re all living through...

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The Voices of Rivers

The Voices of Rivers

by Dickerson, Matthew

Dickerson’s lovingly crafted narratives take us to waters from sockeye spawning streams of Alaska’s Lake Clark and Katmai National Parks, to Rocky Mountain rivers in the national parks and forests of Montana and Wyoming, to the little brook trout creeks in his home waters of Maine...

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What Comes Next

What Comes Next

by Barr, Heidi

Job loss.  It’s not something that most people want to think about, whether it happens to them or not--but in modern society, it’s all too common for the words “lay off” and “company downsize” to grace a conversation about how life is going...

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Great Pan is Dead

Great Pan is Dead

by Lehman, Eric D.

From the small-world accidents of finding lost toys and meeting old friends in strange places, to apparent twists of fate that lead to historical events, people continue to find meaning in coincidence. In Great Pan is Dead, author Eric D. Lehman investigates this phenomenon through the lens of his own mysterious stories and ponders how the puzzles of our lives fit together...

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Painted Oxen

Painted Oxen

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Two men, three realms, one goal: to find the heart of the world. Painted Oxen is a novel of transcendence, one that not only invites its readers into its story, but somehow enmeshes them in its alchemy, leaving them changed in unexpected ways at its journeys end...

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Naming the Unnameable

Naming the Unnameable

by Fox, Matthew

“Matthew Fox elegantly offers a contemplative practice that transforms the names of God to the experience of God...

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The School of Soft-Attention

The School of Soft-Attention

by Owen, Frank LaRue

It has been said that poetry can be a marker of where a poet has been, or a way for a poet to point to places where we, the reader, can go. Both types of poems appear in The School of Soft-Attention...

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A Fistful of Stars

A Fistful of Stars

by Collins-Ranadive, Gail

We are made up of star stuff! This elegant idea became tangibly real when the liberal clergy author was handed a cottonwood twig with a tiny star hiding inside.  Gathering up fists full of these star sticks, and in collaboration with her ‘rocket scientist’ partner, she set out to reframe the human experience within its cosmic context...

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Terranexus

Terranexus

by Leff, David K.

Connect with ordinary places close to home.  Discover inspiration and beauty nearby through the art of deep travel. Intrigue and wonder beckon just beyond your doorstep.

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The Bone Pile

The Bone Pile

by Werner, Maximilian

In The Bone Pile: Essays on Nature and Culture, author Maximilian Werner uses the vehicles of fly fishing, every day experience, and some of our most sacred rituals to explore the origins and limitations of our behavior and ideas. These essays range from the quasi-mystical to the polemical and from the polemical to the ecological...

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The Expanse of all Things

The Expanse of all Things

by Smith, James Scott

In the spirit of coyote guidance through the borderland of liminal space, James Scott Smith is offering one exquisite cairn after another to the soul wandering but not lost. The Expanse of All Things is a testament of the journey from form to faith, and of the love for tradition as long as it serves the evolution of consciousness...

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The Comet's Tail

The Comet's Tail

by Nawrocki, Amy

I do not remember the tubes, the tests, or the icy cold of space. I do not remember losing six months of my life.At age nineteen, Amy Nawrocki returned from her first year of college, scribbled a few notes in her journal, and took a terrifying summer trip. She remembers one night of disorientation, then nothing until Christmas, when awareness slowly restarts...

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The Strait

The Strait

by Jarvis, Andrew

The Strait explores sensory experiences gleamed from the natural environment, historic traditions, archeological findings, and folklore of the Pacific Northwest. Jarvis presents a spiritual and honest landscape rich with images and metaphors that define our place in this beautiful, multicultural world and what it means to be human...

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To Lose the Madness

To Lose the Madness

by Browning, L.M.

In this career-defining work, Browning explores the breaking point every mind has after finding her own limit during a gauntlet of traumatic events...

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Tinker's Damn

Tinker's Damn

by Leff, David K.

Deeply rooted in place and time, these poems explore nature, the built environment, and human relationships with an acute sense of reverence and wonder that renews the spirit.

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Seasons of Contemplation

Seasons of Contemplation

by Browning, L.M.

In Seasons of Contemplation, Browning offers the reader humble yet impacting meditations on the topics of religion, connection, mindfulness, ecology, the spiritual journey, and the perils of modern culture. The ruminations gathered within these pages provide simple insights that help bring sense to the chaos and hustle of our daily life...

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Stories Dreamed from Dust and Distant Light

Stories Dreamed from Dust and Distant Light

by Abel, Walker

In his second collection, Walker Abel continues to voice the archetypal and contemplative presences awaiting us within the natural world. These are poems of surprise, poems of revelation. Not quite fairy tale, not quite magical realism, the poems are stories out of the unconscious, which is to say, out of the wild. For Abel, the poem is a threshold...

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The Salmon in the Spring

The Salmon in the Spring

by Kirkey, Jason

Here at the end of the Cenozoic Era with the life systems withering away, a surprising creativity appears, a kind of mystical balancing act. The world’s spiritual traditions are entering into deeply engaged conversations through which the riches of each are ignited in new ways...

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Night, Mystery & Light

Night, Mystery & Light

by McDowell, J.K.

"McDowell often ends his poems with a challenge to 'Jim,' a question usually asking him to make sense of his life. Yet as we feel our way through the earlier stanzas, living within their diaphanous walls, we overhear this final question as if it were directed at us. One of the joys of reading McDowell's poetry is precisely this-that his questions urge us to make deeper sense of our own lives...

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Creatively Maladjusted

Creatively Maladjusted

by Richards, Theodore

Education is the subject of much public debate. Politicians and bureaucrats, educators and parents, students and concerned citizens all have an interest—and a stake—in the way we educate our children...

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Crow Feathers, Red Ochre, Green Tea

Crow Feathers, Red Ochre, Green Tea

by Morgan, Gwendolyn

Gwendolyn Morgan’s first collection, Crow Feathers, Red Ochre, Green Tea, offers richly textured poetic renderings of natural landscapes and emotional nuances in response to those landscapes...

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Nature's Calling

Nature's Calling

by Collins-Ranadive, Gail

Steeped in the faith tradition of the American Transcendentalists (the majority of whom, like Emerson, were Unitarian ministers) the author's own spiritual life was likewise grounded and guided by nature. So of course she said yes to a career in interim ministry that would require her to relocate every summer...

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Chewing Sand

Chewing Sand

by Collins-Ranadive, Gail

What happens when an Easterner who needs trees, hates heat, and doesn't gamble spends a year living in Las Vegas? Follow the author's reflections as she comes to appreciate the surrounding desert so deeply that she returns seven years later to hear more of the Mojave's message...

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The Crucifixion

The Crucifixion

by Richards, Theodore

The Crucifixion is a modern American myth reframing the Old Testament in terms of the flight of African Americans from the Deep South during the Great Migration and the New Testament as the struggle for meaning in the modern, urban America. It is the story of a young man who is lost and alone, and must return to the city of his birth to find his place in the world...

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Airstream

Airstream

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Vagabonds, prophets and vanishing societies, hunters of rare species and rare truths, silent canyons and the New Jersey Turnpike-Audrey Henderson's witty and profound poems lead us on a pilgrimage to the extreme edges of artistic and spiritual exploration.

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My Mother's Kitchen

My Mother's Kitchen

by Ekkanath Klein, Meera

My Mother's Kitchen is an enchanting place filled with promise, change and good food. If the weathered walls of this magical room could talk they would tell the story of Meena and her childhood life. Each chapter is a slice in her young life and depicts her spunk and youthful spirit. A visit to the local Fruit and Flower Show becomes an adventure as told by Meena...

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Wildness

Wildness

by

"I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in." ? John Muir Celebrating Homebound Publications' 5th Anniversary, the press gathers a circle of 19 of its most beloved authors to create this anthology celebrating the confluence of the internal and natural landscape.

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Sheltered in the Heart

Sheltered in the Heart

by Norris, Gunilla

To have the deep love of a friend is to have the shelter in which to embody more and more of the essence that we each are. In her book Gunilla Norris shows how in holding each other with trust and compassion our shells fall away and we emerge into the world as freer beings. Participating in a true friendship is profound and holy work. This book is a gift for the journey.

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Similar Titles

  • Seeds Under the Tongue
  • Mouthbrooders
  • Before the Sun Rises
  • The Temple of Warm Harmony
  • The Voices of Rivers
  • What Comes Next
  • Great Pan is Dead
  • Painted Oxen
  • Naming the Unnameable
  • The School of Soft-Attention
  • A Fistful of Stars
  • Terranexus
  • The Bone Pile
  • The Expanse of all Things
  • The Comet's Tail
  • The Strait
  • To Lose the Madness
  • Tinker's Damn
  • Seasons of Contemplation
  • Stories Dreamed from Dust and Distant Light
  • The Salmon in the Spring
  • Night, Mystery & Light
  • Creatively Maladjusted
  • Crow Feathers, Red Ochre, Green Tea
  • Nature's Calling
  • Chewing Sand
  • The Crucifixion
  • Airstream
  • My Mother's Kitchen
  • Wildness
  • Sheltered in the Heart
  • Cold Spring Hallelujah