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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A Review of the Shakespeare and Hathaway mystery television program

Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators is a British mystery television series set in Stratford-upon-Avon and produced by the BBC Birmingham from 2018 to the present. The many writers draw on Shakespeare’s plays for characters and situations but give every show a contemporary twist and use humor to lighten up tense situations. The main characters are private investigator Frank Hathaway (played by Mark Benton) and Luella Shakespeare (played by Jo Joyner).  Luella is a former hairdresser who joins Frank’s firm after he solves the mystery of who killed her fiancé.  They work together to solve various crimes in Stratford-upon-Avon, ably assisted by their employee Sebastian Brudenell (played by Patrick Walshe McBride), a young RADA-trained actor who uses his impersonation skill for their undercover investigations.  Detective Inspector Christina Marlowe (played by Amber Aga), who had been Frank’s subordinate at the local police department, sometimes helps and sometimes hinders Shakespeare and Hathaway.  Of course, Christopher Marlowe was a contemporary playwright competing with William Shakespeare.  The actors do a wonderful job in their roles. Most of the television programs…

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