Review of Janet Ruth Heller’s poetry book Nature’s Olympics published in MidAmerica

The scholarly journal MidAmerica just published Margaret Rozga's review of my poetry book Nature's Olympics (Wipf and Stock, 2021).  Margaret Rozga is a professor emeritus of the English Department at the University of Wisconsin-Waukesha.  MidAmerica focuses on literature of the Midwest, and the editor is Marcia Noe, who teaches liberal arts, international studies, and women's studies courses for the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. Here are Professor Rozga's comments about my poems in Nature's Olympics.   Wisconsin-born and University of Chicago-educated Janet Ruth Heller finds inspiration for her poems in the upper Midwest, especially the states that border Lake Michigan. The more distant settings featured in these poems include Arizona and Mississippi, but the travel in this volume most often takes place from Midwestern cities to Midwestern woodlands, rivers, and lakes. The western shore of Lake Michigan provided Heller her early geographic orientation, as the largely autobiographical poem, “Growing Up on the Other Side of Lake Michigan, an Ode,” makes clear. She moved to the east side of the lake for her career as a literature professor at several Michigan universities. She is a past president of The Society…

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Three Articles Analyze Exodus Poems by Janet Ruth Heller

Prof. Anat Koplowitz-Breier has written three scholarly articles that include analysis of my poems in Exodus (WordTech Editions, 2014) about women in the Bible. She discusses my poems "Leah," "Lot's Wife," and “Yiftach’s Daughter." Her article "Modernizing Leah" discusses many contemporary women writers' depiction of Leah (Women's Studies 47:5 [2018]: pp. 527-540. Koplowitz-Breier's new article will analyze different writers' views of Lot's wife (forthcoming in Literature and Theology). Her article "A Nameless Bride of Death" discusses five different women writers' portrayal of Jephthah’s daughter (Open Theology 6 [2020]: pp. 1-14. I'm thrilled that she admires my poems and analyzes them so thoroughly. Cover of Janet Ruth Heller's poetry book Exodus

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