The Frost Place Poetry Trail - Franconia, NH 2010
Behind Robert Frost's Franconia, NH home, a poetry trail takes visitors through Frost's woods where poems written during his years in the house are displayed.
Attractions & Things to do in Franconia, New Hampshire
Attractions & Things to do in Franconia, New Hampshire: Franconia Notch State Park, Flume Gorge, Clark's Trading Post, Cannon Mountain, Cannon Aerial Tramway, Old Man of the Mountain Profile Plaza, Echo Lake Beach, Franconia Notch Hike, Flume Covered Bridge, Artist Bluff Trail, New England Ski Museum, Mount Lafayette, The Frost Place, Avalanche Falls
Frost Place
The Frost Place is a museum and nonprofit educational center for poetry located at Robert Frost's former home in Franconia, New Hampshire, United States.More info visit
frost place seminar,
frost place museum,
frost place conference on poetry and teaching,
frost place chapbook,
don sheehan and the frost place,
frost place festival,
frost place conference,
After Apple Picking by Robert Frost -- Read by Paula Bohince
After Apple Picking by Robert Frost -- Read by Paula Bohince
Frost in the Air is a digital project of The Frost Place aimed at collecting diverse voices reading the poetry of Robert Frost. Contact us about recording a Frost poem. We want to hear Frost in your voice: frost@frostplace.org
2012 Dartmouth Poet in Residence at The Frost Place:
Paula Bohince is the author of two poetry collections from Sarabande: The Children (2012) and Incident at the Edge of Bayonet Woods (2008). Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, The Times Literary Supplement, Poetry London, and The Yale Review. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Amy Clampitt Trust, and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, as well as the Discovery/The Nation Award and the Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholarship.
The Frost Place is a permanent home and museum for poets and poety.
We honor the legacy of Robert Frost and encourage the creation and appreciation of poems. frostplace.org
Poetry at the Albany Library - Rebecca Foust
2nd Tuesdays Featured Poets & Open Mic
7-9pm Tuesday, June 10 2014
featuring: Rebecca Foust (2014 Robert Frost Fellow)
Susan Browne
Susan Cohen
Roy Mash &
Jeanne Wagner
June's Poetry at the Albany Library celebrates Robert Frost and his continuing influence and popularity in the United States. Rebecca Foust, the 2014 Frost Place Poet-in-Residence, will be joined by colleagues in her writing group to read and discuss Frost's poems. The poets will also share their own works.
*Please bring a Frost poem or Frost-influenced poem to read at the open mic. If your muse shuns Frost, we would love to hear why and will still welcome your open mic choice.
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Rebecca Foust has been selected the 2014 Dartmouth Poet-in-Residence at the Frost Place (a post held by Robert Hass in 1978). Foust will spend two months this summer living and working at Robert Frost's farm in Franconia, New Hampshire. In 2010, Foust received an MFA from Warren Wilson College. Her books include All That Gorgeous Pitiless Song and God, Seed. Recent poems appear in Bayou, Hudson Review, Massachusetts Review, Sewanee Review, and Zyzzyva.
Susan Browne's poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, Subtropics, The Mississippi Review, American Life in Poetry, Writer's Almanac, and other literary journals. Her first book, Buddha's Dogs, was selected as the winner of The Four Way Books Prize by Edward Hirsch. Her second book, Zephyr, won the Editor's Prize at Steel Toe Books. Susan teaches at Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill, California, and offers private poetry workshops online. susanmariebrowne.com.
Susan Cohen has won awards for her journalism and her poetry, including the 2013 Milton Kessler Memorial Prize for Poetry from Harpur Palate. Her recent poems appear or are forthcoming in Hunger Mountain, Los Angeles Review, Poet Lore, Salamander, Sou'wester, and The Bloomsbury Anthology of Contemporary Jewish American Poetry. She holds an MFA from Pacific University and is the author of the full-length book of poems, Throat Singing.
Roy Mash is a long-time board member of Marin Poetry Center. He is currently appearing as a regular in the movie of his life, where his character can be found doodling his days away, staring out of café windows, dabbing up the seeds that have fallen from an everything bagel. His first full-length book, Buyer's Remorse, came out in 2014. With Rebecca Foust, he has written and presented an entertaining and informative argument about Robert Frost, found at
Jeanne Wagner's numerous national awards include the 2013 Saranac Review Prize and the Thomas Merton Poetry of the Sacred Award. Her poems appear in Alaska Quarterly Review, Cincinnati Review, Valparaiso, and American Life in Poetry. She has published five collections of poetry, including In the Body of Our Lives, released by Sixteen Rivers Press in 2011. She is on the editorial staff of California Quarterly.
Franconia Notch Flume Waterfalls New Hampshire Relaxation/Meditation
The Flume Gorge is a natural gorge extending 800 feet (240 m) horizontally at the base of Mount Liberty in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire, United States. Cut by the Flume Brook, the gorge features walls of Conway granite that rise to a height of 70 to 90 feet (21 to 27 m) and are 12 to 20 feet (3.7 to 6.1 m) apart. Discovered in 1808 by 93-year-old Aunt Jess Guernsey, the Flume is now a paid attraction that allows visitors to walk through the gorge.
Nearly 200 million years ago in Jurassic times, the Conway granite that forms the walls of the Flume was deeply buried molten rock. As it cooled, the granite was broken by closely spaced vertical fractures which lay nearly parallel in a northeasterly direction. Sometime after the fractures were formed, small dikes of basalt were forced up along the fractures. The basalt came from deep within the earth as a fluid material, and because of pressure, was able to force the Conway granite aside. The basalt crystallized quickly against the relatively cold granite. Because of this quick cooling, the basalt is a fine- grained rock. Had this material ever reached the surface, it would have become lava flows.
Erosion gradually lowered the earth's surface and exposed the dikes. As the overlying rock was worn away, pressure was relieved and horizontal cracks developed, allowing water to get into the rock layers. The basalt dikes eroded faster than the surrounding Conway granite, creating a deepening valley where the gorge is now.
The gorge was covered by glaciers during the Ice Age, but the ice sheet did not greatly change the surface. It partially filled the valley with glacial debris and removed soil and weathered rock from the vicinity. After the Ice Age, Flume Brook began to flow through the valley again.
The highly fractured granite and basalt have been eroded by frost action as well as by the brook's water. As you walk through the Flume, look at the floor of the gorge and you may notice remnants of the main basalt dike, and on the walls of the gorge, small trees are growing. Erosion is still occurring.
The Flume was discovered in 1808 by 93-year-old Aunt Jess Guernsey when she accidentally came upon it while fishing. She had trouble convincing her family of the marvelous discovery, but eventually persuaded others to come and see for themselves. At that time, a huge egg-shaped boulder hung suspended between the walls. The rock was 10 feet (3.0 m) high and 12 feet (3.7 m) long. A heavy rainstorm in June 1883 started a landslide that swept the boulder from its place. It has never been found. The same storm deepened the gorge and formed Avalanche Falls.
Vacation Driveway Camping in New Hampshire
Look at all these Colors - Forth Iron, NH
Fourth Iron Campground Fall 2016
Songs:
- Kungs vs Cookin on 3 Burners. This Girl. N.d. MP3.
- Max Frost. Adderall. N.d. MP3.
New Hampshire | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
New Hampshire
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
New Hampshire is a state in the New England region of the northeastern United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts to the south, Vermont to the west, Maine and the Atlantic Ocean to the east, and the Canadian province of Quebec to the north. New Hampshire is the 5th smallest by area and the 10th least populous of the 50 states.
Concord is the state capital, while Manchester is the largest city in the state. It has no general sales tax, nor is personal income (other than interest and dividends) taxed at either the state or local level. The New Hampshire primary is the first primary in the U.S. presidential election cycle. Its license plates carry the state motto, Live Free or Die. The state's nickname, The Granite State, refers to its extensive granite formations and quarries.In January 1776, it became the first of the British North American colonies to establish a government independent of the Kingdom of Great Britain's authority, and it was the first to establish its own state constitution. Six months later, it became one of the original 13 states that founded the United States of America, and in June 1788 it was the ninth state to ratify the Constitution, bringing that document into effect.
Historically, New Hampshire was a major center for textile manufacturing, shoemaking, and papermaking, with Amoskeag Manufacturing Company in Manchester once being the largest cotton textile plant in the world, and numerous mills located along the various rivers in the state, including the Merrimack and Connecticut Rivers. Many French Canadians migrated to New Hampshire to work the mills in the late 19th and early 20th century; New Hampshire still ranks second among states by percentage of people claiming French American ancestry, with 24.5% of the state. Manufacturing centers such as Manchester, Nashua, and Berlin were hit hard in the 1930s-1940s, as major manufacturing industries left New England and moved to the Southern United States or overseas, reflecting nationwide trends. In the 1950s and 1960s, defense contractors moved into many of the former mills, such as Sanders Associates in Nashua, and the population of Southern New Hampshire surged beginning in the 1980s as major highways connected the region to Greater Boston and established several bedroom communities in the state.
With some of the largest ski mountains on the East Coast, New Hampshire's major recreational attractions include skiing, snowmobiling, and other winter sports, hiking and mountaineering (Mount Monadnock in the state's southwestern corner is among the most climbed mountains in the U.S.), observing the fall foliage, summer cottages along many lakes and the seacoast, motor sports at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway, and Motorcycle Week, a popular motorcycle rally held in Weirs Beach near Laconia in June. The White Mountain National Forest links the Vermont and Maine portions of the Appalachian Trail, and has the Mount Washington Auto Road, where visitors may drive to the top of 6,288-foot (1,917 m) Mount Washington.
Among prominent individuals from New Hampshire are founding father Nicholas Gilman, Senator Daniel Webster, Revolutionary War hero John Stark, editor Horace Greeley, founder of the Christian Science religion Mary Baker Eddy, poet Robert Frost, astronaut Alan Shepard, rock musician Ronnie James Dio, author Dan Brown, actor Adam Sandler, inventor Dean Kamen, comedians Sarah Silverman and Seth Meyers, restaurateurs Richard and Maurice McDonald, and President of the United States Franklin Pierce.
The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost -- Read by Leon Stokesbury
The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost read by Leon Stokesbury.
Frost in the Air is a digital project of The Frost Place aimed at collecting diverse voices reading the poetry of Robert Frost. Contact us about recording a Frost poem. We want to hear Frost in your voice: frost@frostplace.org
The Frost Place is a permanent home and museum for poets and poety.
We honor the legacy of Robert Frost and encourage the creation and appreciation of poems. frostplace.org
Robert Frost Farm (Derry, NH)
Frost lived in the house between the fall of 1900 until it was sold in November 1911. The majority of the poems collected in his first two books, A Boy's Will and North of Boston, were written here. Many of the poems in his 1916 collection Mountain Interval were also written at the Derry farm. Frost once said, There was something about the experience at Derry which stayed in my mind, and was tapped for poetry in the years that came after.
Elliott, first son of Frost and his wife Elinor, died on the farm in 1900 at age four, likely due to influenza. The other children were educated at home by their parents. Lesley Frost later recalled she was taught the alphabet on a typewriter... My mother taught the organized subjects, reading (the phonetic method), writing (then known as penmanship), geography, spelling. My father took on botany and astronomy.
A hired man named Carl Burrell (and, occasionally, Burrell's father) assisted with farming duties like building hen coops, tending livestock, and picking apples and pears. Locals thought Frost was lazy as a farmer.[He later recalled that they were correct: I always liked to sit up all hours of the night planning some inarticulate crime, going out to work when the spirit moved me, something they shook their heads ominously at, with proper prejudice. They would talk among themselves about my lack of energy. I was a failure in their eyes from the start.
The family moved out in the fall of 1909 to rented lodgings in Derry Village while Frost taught at the Pinkerton Academy. They later moved to Plymouth, New Hampshire
so that Frost could teach at the Plymouth Normal School.
[edit] Modern historyThe property, originally owned by Frost's grandfather, was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1968. The property is a New Hampshire state park.[
It is located on the east side of Rockingham Road (New Hampshire Route 28), two miles (3 km) southeast of Derry Village. It is open to the public seasonally.
It is open from May 4 through October 10. GPS address is : Route 28
Derry, NH 03038
Phone: 603-432-3091
Source: Wikipedia, New Hampshire State Parks.
The Oft-Repeated Dream by Robert Frost -- Read by Dawn Potter
The Oft-Repeated Dream by Robert Frost -- Read by Dawn Potter
Frost in the Air is a digital project of The Frost Place aimed at collecting diverse voices reading the poetry of Robert Frost. Contact us about recording a Frost poem. We want to hear Frost in your voice: frost@frostplace.org
Dawn Potter, director of the Conference on Poetry and Teaching, is the author of two collections of poetry—Boy Land & Other Poems (Deerbrook Editions, 2004) and How the Crimes Happened (CavanKerry Press, 2010)—with a third, Same Old Story, due out from CavanKerry in 2014. Her memoir, Tracing Paradise: Two Years in Harmony with John Milton (University of Massachusetts Press, 2009), won the 2010 Maine Literary Award in Nonfiction. Her anthology, A Poet's Sourcebook: Writings about Poetry, from the Ancient World to the Present, is forthcoming from Autumn House Press in 2013. Twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize, she has received grants and fellowships from the Elizabeth George Foundation, the Writer's Center, and the Maine Arts Commission. New poems and essays appear in the Sewanee Review, the Threepenny Review, Guernica, and many other journals in the United States and abroad. In addition to writing, teaching, and editing, Dawn sings and plays fiddle with the acoustic band Doughty Hill. She lives in Harmony, Maine, with photographer Thomas Birtwistle and their two sons.
The Frost Place is a permanent home and museum for poets and poety.
We honor the legacy of Robert Frost and encourage the creation and appreciation of poems. frostplace.org
GRANITE STATE OF MIND (Jay-Z Parody - The SSP)
Yeah. Yeah, Imma up at Conway
Now I'm down in Manchester
Next to Adam Sandler
But I'll be woods forever
I'm the new Salinger
Cuz I could live anywhere
But I choose to live here
The middle of nowhere
I used to shop in Salem
Next to Rockingham Park
Right there up on 28
Youll find Canobie Lake Park
Bring me up to Portsmouth
the saloon at State Street
Catch me up at Gilleys after closing for some late eats
Its not the kangamangus
The Kancamagus
Its a scenic byway
That I like to drive in August
Now Im down at Bedford
Home of Seth Meyers, yeah
Also Sarah Silverman
were funny motherfuckas here
We like to say whatsup guy, its the way we say hi
In February it is good to know a plow guy
It is shaped like a key, also where I like to ski
Tell by my belt buckle that I most definitely from...
NEW HAMPSHIRE
LAND WHERE THERES NO INCOME OR SALES TAX
THERE S NOTHING MUCH TO DO
HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
THESE TREES WHERE LEAF PEEPERS DRIVE TO
MAPLE SYRUP IS PRO-DUCED
THIS IS NEW HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE
Catch me up at Loudon, at the Speedway for the race yo
I made the flannel shirt more famous than a scarecrow
Dont drink and drive here, listen to what I say
even though we put our liquor stores right on the highway
You can drive Mount Washington
hike up Mount Monadnock
in 1787 we invented the alarm clock
Concord Coach, Dartmouth Coach, DowneasterAmtrak
On Squam Lake, Henry Fonda taught yall how to act
Derrys Alan Shepard, first guy in a spaceship
Its a pity Christa McCaulliffe didnt make it
Didja hear about the ice storm in December of 08
I went without power for eleven straight days!
You can buy a handgun
You can buy some fireworks
Sandwich Fair, Rest in peace Daniel Webster
Americas Stonehenge, long live the dairy trade
Long live the old man
I'm from the Granite State thats
NEW HAMPSHIRE
PLACE WHERE STONYFIELD YOGURT IS MADE IN
AND COW TIPPINGS SO COOL
HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
DSL SERVICE IS BRAND NEW
YOU MIGHT EVEN SEE A MOOSE
HERE IN NE W HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep
Thats some Robert Frost, hes our most famous poet
It was actually written up in Vermont but its associated with
The 603, where its a fact I
Dont know any Hispanics and just one black guy
You can go to Bike Week thats up in Laconia
In the winter months hit the notch in Franconia, home of
B-O-D-E our Olympic Ski Champion
He faced high pressure like my man Al Kaprielian
NEW HAMPSHIRE
IF YOU DONT WANT TO WEAR A HELMET
THERES NOTHIN THEY CAN DO
HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
MARKEYS VERSE BROWNS ON THE SEAFOOD
TELL ME WHICH ONE WILL YOU CHOOSE
WHEN YOURE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE HAMPSHIRE HAMPSHIRE
NINTH STATE RATIFIED OUT OF ALL FIFTY
IT CAN GET COLD
BUT STILL THE AUTUMNS VERY PRETTY
WHEN THIS SONG MAKES ME RICH,
I'M A MOVE TO RYE
EVERYBODY PUMP YOUR FISTS AND YELL
LIVE FREE OR DIE! LIVE FREE OR DIE!
IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
STATE WHERE TRIPLE H THE WRESTLER HAILS FROM
THAT GUY WOULD DESTROY YOU
IF YOU KNOCK NEW HAMPSHIRE
ITS JUST LIKE OLD HAMPSHIRE BUT NEW
WERE OUT OF JOKES TO DO
ABOUT NEW HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE, HAMPSHIRE
Robert Frost Farm
The Robert Frost Farm in Derry, New Hampshire, was the home of poet Robert Frost from 1900 to 1911. Today it is a New Hampshire state park in use as a historic house museum. The property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as the Robert Frost Homestead.gghjjkkj
New Hampshire | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
New Hampshire
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
New Hampshire is a state in the New England region of the northeastern United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts to the south, Vermont to the west, Maine and the Atlantic Ocean to the east, and the Canadian province of Quebec to the north. New Hampshire is the 5th smallest by area and the 10th least populous of the 50 states.
Concord is the state capital, while Manchester is the largest city in the state. It has no general sales tax, nor is personal income (other than interest and dividends) taxed at either the state or local level. The New Hampshire primary is the first primary in the U.S. presidential election cycle. Its license plates carry the state motto, Live Free or Die. The state's nickname, The Granite State, refers to its extensive granite formations and quarries.In January 1776, it became the first of the British North American colonies to establish a government independent of the Kingdom of Great Britain's authority, and it was the first to establish its own state constitution. Six months later, it became one of the original 13 states that founded the United States of America, and in June 1788 it was the ninth state to ratify the Constitution, bringing that document into effect.
Historically, New Hampshire was a major center for textile manufacturing, shoemaking, and papermaking, with Amoskeag Manufacturing Company in Manchester once being the largest cotton textile plant in the world, and numerous mills located along the various rivers in the state, including the Merrimack and Connecticut Rivers. Many French Canadians migrated to New Hampshire to work the mills in the late 19th and early 20th century; New Hampshire still ranks second among states by percentage of people claiming French American ancestry, with 24.5% of the state. Manufacturing centers such as Manchester, Nashua, and Berlin were hit hard in the 1930s-1940s, as major manufacturing industries left New England and moved to the Southern United States or overseas, reflecting nationwide trends. In the 1950s and 1960s, defense contractors moved into many of the former mills, such as Sanders Associates in Nashua, and the population of Southern New Hampshire surged beginning in the 1980s as major highways connected the region to Greater Boston and established several bedroom communities in the state.
With some of the largest ski mountains on the East Coast, New Hampshire's major recreational attractions include skiing, snowmobiling, and other winter sports, hiking and mountaineering (Mount Monadnock in the state's southwestern corner is among the most climbed mountains in the U.S.), observing the fall foliage, summer cottages along many lakes and the seacoast, motor sports at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway, and Motorcycle Week, a popular motorcycle rally held in Weirs Beach near Laconia in June. The White Mountain National Forest links the Vermont and Maine portions of the Appalachian Trail, and has the Mount Washington Auto Road, where visitors may drive to the top of 6,288-foot (1,917 m) Mount Washington.
Among prominent individuals from New Hampshire are founding father Nicholas Gilman, Senator Daniel Webster, Revolutionary War hero John Stark, editor Horace Greeley, founder of the Christian Science religion Mary Baker Eddy, poet Robert Frost, astronaut Alan Shepard, rock musician Ronnie James Dio, author Dan Brown, actor Adam Sandler, inventor Dean Kamen, comedians Sarah Silverman and Seth Meyers, restaurateurs Richard and Maurice McDonald, and President of the United States Franklin Pierce.
Desert Places by Robert Frost -- Read by George Drew
Frost in the Air is a digital project of The Frost Place aimed at collecting diverse voices reading the poetry of Robert Frost. Contact us about recording a Frost poem. We want to hear Frost in your voice: frost@frostplace.org
George Drew was born in Mississippi and raised there and in New York State, where he currently lives. He is the author of four collections of poetry: Toads in a Poisoned Tank, from Tamarack Editions; The Horse's Name Was Physics, from Turning Point Press; American Cool, from Tamarack in 2009; and The Hand that Rounded Peter's Dome, from Turning Point in 2010. Drew was the winner of the 2003 Paumanok Poetry Prize, the 2007 Baltimore Review Poetry Prize, the 2008 South Carolina Review Poetry Prize, and was runner-up for the 2009 Chautauqua Literary Journal Poetry Contest, which also nominated him for a Pushcart Prize. American Cool won the 2010 Adirondack Literary Award for best poetry book of 2009. A fifth collection, The View from Jackass Hill, was the 2010 winner of the X. J. Kennedy Poetry Prize, Texas Review Press, 2011.
The Frost Place is a permanent home and museum for poets and poety.
We honor the legacy of Robert Frost and encourage the creation and appreciation of poems. frostplace.org
Mowing by Robert Frost-- Read by Chase Davenport
Mowing by Robert Frost read by Chase Davenport.
Frost in the Air is a digital project of The Frost Place aimed at collecting diverse voices reading the poetry of Robert Frost. Contact us about recording a Frost poem. We want to hear Frost in your voice: frost@frostplace.org
Chase Davenport is a poet from Humboldt, Tennessee. For the past three years, Chase studied poetry under Blas Falconer (Four Way Books) at Austin Peay State University. Chase is the editor-in-chief for the 2012-2013 undergraduate literary journal, the Red Mud Review, and is also the founder and president of the largest collegiate, student-based writing organization in Tennessee, The Austin Peay Creative Writing Club. In May, Chase will graduate from Austin Peay State University with a BA in English and a minor in creative writing.
The Frost Place is a permanent home and museum for poets and poety.
We honor the legacy of Robert Frost and encourage the creation and appreciation of poems. frostplace.org
Just how bad are my roads in Central-New Hampshire?
What we have here is Route 4 in Dorchester, NH. The same road that claimed my Volkswagen Plastic Oil Pan.
This is my commute and why I have to be conservative with suspension upgrades to my car If you'd like to support my work, please consider lending a $1 per month on Patreon - Links to my riding gear, cameras used and motorcycle tools and maintenance: Patreon:
Amazon Store:
Blog:
Flickr:
Video Blog Review of Bishop Farm, Lisbon New Hampshire
This is my video review of the excellent B&B in Lisbon New Hampshire, Annie and Maggie are especially welcoming they made our stay especially nice.