Vita Poetica Journal

PODCAST · arts

Vita Poetica Journal

A quarterly publication of the Vita Poetica Arts & Faith Collective, our online journal features creative work explored through a spiritual lens. Vita Poetica connects and upholds artists of faith, enlivening spiritual conversations through the arts. Learn more about us at www.vitapoetica.org.

  1. 233

    Cloud Study by Daniel Cooperrider

    Daniel Cooperrider reads his essay "Cloud Study" from our Spring 2026 issue.Daniel Cooperrider is a writer, ecotheologian, and pastor in the United Church of Christ. He is the author of Speak with the Earth and It Will Teach You, Gold Winner in the 2023 Nautilus Book Awards, and Live Each Season as It Passes. Cooperrider and family are based on the edge of the driftless region of Madison, WI.

  2. 232

    Poems by Brian G. Phipps & Andreas Fleps

    Brian G. Phipps reads his poem "Moving Day," and Andreas Fleps reads his poem "The Temple."Brian G. Phipps is the author of Before the Burning Bush (Univ. of St. Katherine Press, 2018), a collection of poems. His poetry has appeared in several journals, most recently in Presence and St. Katherine Review. “Moving Day” is part of a work-in-progress collection on the feasts of the church year and the seasons of the solar year as experienced by a person with seasonal affective disorder.Andreas Fleps is a poet/writer based in the suburbs of Chicago. He studied theology and philosophy at Dominican University, and his debut collection of poems entitled Well into the Night (via Energion Publications) was released at the end of 2020. His work has appeared in publications such as Marathon Literary Review, The Rappahannock Review, Waxing & Waning, Wild Roof Journal, The Windhover, and the award-winning anthology Glissando!, among others.

  3. 231

    Cinctura by Jeffrey-Michael Kane

    Jeffrey-Michael Kane reads his essay "Cinctura" from our Spring 2026 issue.Jeffrey-Michael Kane is the author of Quiet Brilliance: What Employers Miss About Neurodivergent Talent and How to See It (CollectiveInk UK). Disabled, he writes from this learned experience as an ASD-1. His prose work has been published in more than three dozen literary journals & magazines, including Plough, Vita Poetica, Dappled Things, and Metonym. He lives with his dogs and family in New Orleans, where he works as an attorney.

  4. 230

    Poems by Randy Koch & Mary Lanham

    Randy Koch reads his poem "Unfaithful," and Mary Lanham reads her poem "Survivor's guilt," from our Spring 2026 issue.Randy Koch is the author of four collections of poems: Composing Ourselves (Fithian Press, 2002), This Splintered Horse (Finishing Line Press, 2011), and forthcoming in 2026, both Against the Risen Flesh (Alternating Current Press) and Amends (Finishing Line Press). His poems have appeared in The Caribbean Writer, Chiricú Journal, The Texas Observer, Revista Interamericana, Sundial Magazine, and many others. A longtime columnist for LareDOS: A Journal of the Borderlands, he earned an MFA at the University of Wyoming and twice has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.Mary Lanham is a queer writer, editor, and collage artist based in Minnesota. She is originally from the South; her accent is still around if you know where to look. Mary's poetry has appeared most recently in Sheila-Na-Gig and Amethyst Review, and her online home is inspiritedword.com.

  5. 229

    The Still-ness of Space: A Review of Lost Cities by Valencia Robin

    Jessica Hudson reads her review, "The Still-ness of Space," a review of the poetry collection Lost Cities by Valencia Robin (Persea Books, 2025) from our Spring 2026 issue.Jessica Hudson (she/her) currently lives and libraries in Albuquerque. Her work has been published in DIAGRAM, New Delta Review, Quarterly West, and elsewhere.

  6. 228

    Poems by Caleb Horowitz

    Caleb Horowitz reads his poems "Where is that boat going?" and "We are wearing history heavy like a raincoat" from our Spring 2026 issue.Caleb Horowitz is a North Carolinian poet, teacher, and penguin enthusiast. When he is not chaperoning dozens of students across the country for high school speech and debate tournaments, you can find him reading or writing poems about whales. You can find more of Horowitz's writing with Jewish Book Council, Gashmius, Psaltery & Lyre, Tiger Leaping Review, and Calul Journal.

  7. 227

    Permeable Devotion: Darius Stewart Reviews Donika Kelly's The Natural Order of Things

    Darius Stewart reads his review, "Permeable Devotion": A Review of The Natural Order of Things by Donika Kelly (Graywolf Press, 2025).Darius Stewart is the author of Intimacies in Borrowed Light: Poems (EastOver Press, 2022) and Be Not Afraid of My Body: A Lyrical Memoir (Belt Publishing, 2024), which was named a 2025 Stonewall Book Award–Israel Fishman Non-Fiction Honoree and a Lambda Literary Award finalist for Gay Memoir/Biography. His essays have appeared or are forthcoming in Arkansas International, Brink, Bat City Review, Brooklyn Review, Colorado Review, Fourth Genre, and Salamander, among others, and received a Notable Essay distinction in Best American Essays 2022. He lives in Iowa City with his dog, Gizmo.

  8. 226

    Spring 2026: Be Quiet Like the Tree

    Co-Editor Caroline Langston introduces our new Spring 2026 issue with her letter, "Be Quiet Like the Tree." Tune in for what's to come, including a contemplative practice by Pico Iyer, essay from Daniel Cooperrider, three reviews of poetry collections for National Poetry Month, new poetry by Daniel Thomas, Joshua Coben, Marci Rae Johnson, and many others.

  9. 225

    Poems by Evan Leslie

    Evan Leslie reads his poems "Ricercar (rēCHərˈkär) music composition derived from the verb ricercare" and "Evensong," from our Winter 2026 issue.Evan Leslie grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and now lives in Houston, Texas, with his husband, Ryan, and their rescue pit bull, Rimbaud (formerly Rambo). A cellist and arts educator, he directs the University of Houston’s Community Arts Programs, the Texas Music Festival, and previously served as Artistic Producer at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. His poems have appeared in The Pinch, Troublemaker Firestarter, and New Verse News.

  10. 224

    Poems by Ali Beheler & Bern Mulvey

    Ali Beheler reads her poem "Vessel," and Bern Mulvey reads his poem "Snowfall at Aojima Shrine, New Year’s Day."Ali Beheler’s recent work appears in The Shore, SRPR, Rogue Agent, Tupelo Quarterly, Harpur Palate, ballast journal, and elsewhere. Winner of the SRPR Editor’s Prize (2024) and the Milton J. Kessler Memorial Prize in Poetry (2025), as well as residencies at Sundress Academy for the Arts and Dorland Mountain Arts Colony, she teaches at Hastings College in Hastings, NE. Find her at www.alibeheler.com.Bern Mulvey lived in Japan for seventeen years. His first book, The Fat Sheep Everyone Wants, won the Cleveland State University Poetry Center Prize, and his second book, Deep Snow Country, won the FIELD Poetry Prize. He lives now in Arizona and teaches writing at Eastern Arizona College.

  11. 223

    Lectio of Belonging: Resting in the Voice of Love

    In this contemplative practice, "Lectio of Belonging: Resting in the Voice of Love," John Farrelly guides us in a meditation on Psalm 100:3. John Farrelly has been married to Mary for 40 years and is a dad and grandad. He is a Special Needs Assistant working with 5th- and 6th-grade children with autism. He is a spiritual director and coordinator of the Guided Prayer Centre at Knock Shrine in Ireland. He leads contemplative retreats and founded the Silence@Six online prayer community that gather each day for 30 minutes of silent prayer in The Online Meditation Chapel. He contributes regularly to Contemplative Outreach’s Word of the Week reflections and is just now birthing a new Substack called Living from The Quiet Heart.

  12. 222

    Poems by Liza Moore & Johanna Caton, O.S.B.

    Liza Moore reads her poem "Under Van Gogh's Stars," and Johanna Caton, O.S.B., reads her poem "Little Dog" from our current Winter issue. Liza Moore is an artist and storyteller who resides with her husband and son in Round Rock, TX. She has created three children’s books, and some of her artwork, poetry, and essays have been published in various journals, including Fathom Mag, Ekstasis Magazine, EcoTheo Review, Apple Valley Review, Thimble Lit Mag, Humana Obscura, St. Katherine Review, and Calla Press. To learn more about Liza and her creative work, please visit https://campsite.bio/liza_moore_art.Johanna Caton, O.S.B, is a Benedictine nun of Minster Abbey, in Kent, England. Her poems have appeared in a number of publications, including The Christian Century, St. Austin Review, Ekphrastic Review, Amethyst Review, One Art, Today’s American Catholic, Fathom, Fare Forward, Windhover, The Catholic Poetry Room, and in two anthologies published by Amethyst Press: All Shall be Well, Poems for Julian of Norwich and Thin Places and Sacred Spaces. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee.

  13. 221

    Being Present: Finding God in Silence

    In this episode, Luke Wood guides us in the contemplative practice of silence, from our current Winter issue. We invite you to find a quiet spot during a pause in your day to engage in this meditation.⁠Luke Wood is a writer and artist who serves in the fields of spiritual formation, ministry, and counseling. His work explores the integration of spiritual formation and psychology, helping others experience healing and transformation. He lives in Colorado with his wife and their three children.

  14. 220

    Poems by Trevor Cunnington & Richard Jackson

    Trevor Cunnington reads his poem "Banlieue Blues," and Richard Jackson reads his poem "The Centurion's Report," from our current Winter 2026 issue.Trevor Cunnington is a writer/artist/educator who lives in Toronto. They are the poetry editor of KayTell Ink, and their work has appeared in Poetry Super Highway, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Literary Heist, BlazeVox, God's Cruel Joke, and others. You can find them on Instagram @trevorcunnington.Richard Jackson is the author of eighteen books of poems as well as a dozen of essays, interviews, translations, and editions. Winner of Guggenheim, Fulbright, NE, NEH, and The Order Of Freedom from the President of Slovenia, his poems have been translated into seventeen languages.

  15. 219

    "A kind of tribute to what we are": Rachel Grandey's Review of Reading Genesis by Marilynne Robinson

    Rachel Grandey reads her review, "'A kind of tribute to what we are': A Review of Marilynne Robinson's Reading Genesis." Rachel Grandey is a UK-based doctoral researcher in Extinction Studies, exploring religious perspectives around environment and culture in South East Asia. Her writing has featured in Agape Review, Amethyst Review, Paper Dragon and Monk in the World. She can be found on social media as @RachelGrandey or at rachelgrandey.wordpress.com.

  16. 218

    Poems by Temima Weissmann and Dion O'Reilly

    Temima Weissmann reads her poem "It Happened," and Dion O'Reilly reads her poem "It Is What It Is."Temima Weissmann is an eighteen-year-old poet from Passaic, NJ. She was the Editor-in-Chief of her high school literary journal Sambatyon, and was awarded The Hersh & Fannie Fluss Memorial Award for Excellence in Hebrew Literature at her high school graduation. Previously published in The Lerhaus, Temima's poetry explores the presence of religion and faith in everyday life.Dion O'Reilly is the author of Sadness of the Apex Predator (Cornerstone 2025), Ghost Dogs (Terrapin Books 2020); and Limerence, a 2025 finalist for the Floating Bridge Chapbook Competition. Her work appears in Cincinnati Review, Rhino, Alaska Quarterly Review, Gulf Coast, The Sun, and Rattle. A ​podcaster at The Hive Poetry Collective and co-editor of Ent•Trance Journal, she splits her time between California and Washington.

  17. 217

    Making Sense of Things in Community: Poet Jon Bishop

    In "Making Sense of Things in Community," poet Jon Bishop speaks with Vita Poetica Interviews Editor Christopher Honey about the influence of his Catholic faith and monastic community on his writing, teaching, and intellectual life.Jon Bishop holds an MFA in poetry from the University of St. Thomas in Houston. His work has appeared in both print and online, and he lives in New Hampshire with his family.

  18. 216

    Two Poems by Kelly Sawin

    On the podcast today, Kelly Sawin reads her poems "In the Beginning" and "Study in Light" from our current Winter issue.⁠Kelly Sawin's work has appeared in Ekstasis Magazine, The Windhover, River Teeth: Beautiful Things, the Appalachian Review, Susurrus, the Virginia Literary Review, and elsewhere. She was a finalist in the 2024 National Poetry Series, a semifinalist in the 2025 Lexi Rudnitsky First Book Prize in Poetry and in the 2024 Orison Poetry Prize. She lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia with her husband and three small children.

  19. 215

    In Defense of Bad Meditation by K.D. Battle

    K.D. Battle reads his essay "In Defense of Bad Meditation" from our Winter 2026 issue.K.D. Battle is a multi-genre writer and teacher living in Kalamazoo—he's a father, Navy submarine veteran, and a composer of musical theatre, and more. Battle's poems, stories, and essays have been published in anthologies and literary journals like White Wall Review, Line of Advance, and Vita Poetica, and he recently won the Wright Memorial Writing Award. He earned his MFA from Western Michigan University, where he is now pursuing a PhD and serves as the nonfiction editor for Third Coast. Battle is a Buddhist and invites you to walk the Dao with kindness, humility, and grit.

  20. 214

    Poems by Mary B. Moore & James B. Nicola

    Mary B. Moore reads her poem "Everything in the Dream is Me, Says Jung," and James B. Nicola reads his poem "Epiphany XIV: Nigh." ⁠Mary B. Moore’s newest poetry collection Amanda Chimera, won Madville Publishing’s Arthur Smith prize and came out January, 2025. Prior poetry books include Dear If (Orison Books 2022), a contest finalist; Flicker (Dogfish Head Prize, 2016); The Book Of Snow (Cleveland State U Poetry Center, 1997); and prize-winning chapbooks Amanda and the Man Soul and Eating the Light. Poems have appeared lately in New Letters, Catamaran, POETRY, I-70 Review, South Dakota Review, Birmingham Poetry Review (BPR), NELLE, Nimrod, and Prairie Schooner. ⁠⁠James B. Nicola is the author of eight collections of poetry, the latest three being Fires of Heaven: Poems of Faith and Sense, Turns & Twists, and Natural Tendencies. His nonfiction book Playing the Audience: The Practical Actor’s Guide to Live Performance won a Choice magazine award. A graduate of Yale, he has received a Dana Literary Award, two Willow Review awards, Storyteller's People's Choice award, one Best of Net, one Rhysling, and eleven Pushcart nominations—for which he feels stunned and grateful.⁠

  21. 213

    As the Mind Dissolves by Chris Weigel

    Chris Weigel explores dementia as a bardo state in her essay "As the Mind Dissolves" from our Winter 2026 issue.Chris Weigel is a professor of philosophy at Utah Valley University, where she has been teaching for over 20 years. She received her bachelor’s degrees in music performance and philosophy from Lawrence University and her Ph.D. in philosophy from Temple University. She has published academic papers on confabulation, free will, and most recently, on the ethics of caregiving for people with dementia. She lives in Salt Lake City with her family and her mom, whom she has been taking care of since 2018.

  22. 212

    Winter 2026 Issue Trailer

    Co-Editor Caroline Langston introduces our new Winter 2026 issue. Tune in for a preview of what's to come, and listen to Caroline's letter, "⁠⁠Frozen Fire."

  23. 211

    Lay Me Down Gently by Onyeka Ndukwe

    On this Giving Tuesday, we invite you to support Vita Poetica with a tax-deductible donation. Gifts of any amount help us sustain our work to uplift artists of faith and enliven spiritual conversations through the arts. Thank you!This multimedia piece features Onyeka Ndukwe's poetry and music, "Lay Me Down Gently." Onyeka Ndukwe, a Canadian artist currently residing in Ottawa, Ontario, is a lyrical poet whose work has graced the pages of esteemed publications. His first poem titled "Trust Half Spent" was featured in the Praised by December anthology (2021) published by Wingless Dreamer. Beyond his poetic endeavors, Onyeka is an avid history reader and occasionally indulges in anime, forging a creative path that blends artistry and intellectual curiosity.

  24. 210

    Poems by Julia Lisella & Lisa López Smith

    Julia Lisella reads her poem "Amulet," and Lisa López Smith reads her poem "Emigrant."Julia Lisella’s latest collection of poems, Our Lively Kingdom (Bordighera Press), was named a finalist in the 2023 Paterson Book Prize and Grand Prize Finalist and Poetry Honorable Mention for the Eric Hoffer Book Award. Her other collections include Always, Terrain, and the chapbook, Love Song Hiroshima. Her poems have appeared in Ploughshares, Alaska Quarterly, The Common, Nimrod, Pangyrus and many others. She has received writing residencies at MacDowell, Millay and the Vermont Center for the Arts. She teaches at Regis College and co-curates the Italian-American Writers Association Literary Reading Series in Boston. For more, see www.julialisellapoetry.com.Lisa López Smith is a mother and farmer based in Mexico. Her poems and essays have appeared in over sixty literary journals and have been nominated for the Pushcart, Best New Poets, and Best of the Net. She has a chapbook published by Grayson Books and a forthcoming collection from Nightwood Editions.

  25. 209

    Art by Ellen June Wright

    Ellen June Wright discusses her artwork featured in our current Autumn issue. ⁠View the art and read her artist statement here⁠.Ellen June Wright, an artist, photographer and poet, was born in England but raised in New Jersey. Her artwork revolves around the power of color and the emotions and memories they evoke. She is inspired by the works of Stanley Whitney, Mary Lovelace O’Neal, Howardena Pindell and Frank Bowling. Her watercolors have been published by Gulf Stream Magazine, Wild Roof Journal, Burningword Literary Journal, Hole In The Head Review, Oyster River Pages, Kitchen Table Quarterly, NOVUS Literary Journal and others. To see more visit https://8-ellen-wright.pixels.com/

  26. 208

    Going Somewhere by Sheri Reda

    Sheri Reda reads her poem "Going Somewhere" from our Autumn 2025 issue.Sheri Reda lives in Chicago, where she works as a celebrant, public speaker, and youth librarian. Her poems have appeared in Eocene Journal of Environmental Humanities (2025, 2023), The Nature of Our Times (2024), and the award-winning Dear Human at the Edge of Time (Paloma Press, 2024). She is the author of Stubborn (LocofoChaps/Moria Press, 2017). Her collection entitled Diaspora will be published by Finishing Line Press in 2026.

  27. 207

    Echoes of Infinity by Natalya Raduenz

    Natalya Raduenz discusses her artwork I Am Near (featured on our Autumn 2025 cover) and Zeit.los!, both part of her Echoes of Infinity series. View the art and read her artist statement here.Natalya Raduenz (b. 1980, Ukraine) is a metamodern artist and iconographer based in Germany. Her art combines traditional and modern methods and creates multi-layered, symbolic pictorial spaces that deal with themes such as transformation, spirituality, and the intersection of cultures. Her works have been exhibited and honored worldwide and are held in private collections across Europe.

  28. 206

    Poems by Megan Willome & Constance Clark

    Megan Willome reads her poem "St. Michael, rooster," and Constance Clark reads her poems "A Galaxy by the Pond" and "The Garden."Megan Willome is the author, most recently, of a poetry collection titled Love & other Mysteries. Her work has also appeared at Every Day Poems, Solum Journal, The Way Back to Ourselves, and The Windhover. Her day is incomplete without poetry, tea, and a walk in the dark.Constance Clark is a writer and retired teacher from central NJ. Her poems have appeared in Litbreak Magazine, Heavy Feather Review, Kosmos, anthologies, and elsewhere. She is currently working on a collection of poems focused on the notice of nature and the concept of Japan’s 72 microseasons.

  29. 205

    Havening with Affirmations

    Wai-Chin Matsuoka guides us in her contemplative practice, "Havening with Affirmations," from our Autumn issue.Wai-Chin Matsuoka is adjunct faculty at Christos Center for Spiritual Formation’s Tending the Holy, and served on staff and as coordinator of the Chicago satellite program and as a facilitator for Alumni Development. She is also a trained supervisor for spiritual directors and a facilitator of her Soul-Tending Retreats. With more than two decades of experience in facilitating others into healing encounters with God the Divine Physician, Wai-Chin helps others “doula” new life from the ashes of trauma, change, and transition. Wai-Chin is credentialed as an Ensoulment Coach to guide others to live from the fullness of their souls, a certified InterPlay leader, and a Focused Energy Balance Index (FEBI) coach. These somatic streams add a holistic dimension to her spiritual companionship that is mind-body-heart-spirit focused.

  30. 204

    Poems by Brittany Deininger

    Brittany Deininger reads her poems "The Seed Collectors," "Sarah's Dream," and "Rebirth Motif."Brittany Deininger is a poet, feminist theologian, and educator. She received an MFA in poetry from Sarah Lawrence College and an MATC from The Seattle School of Theology and Psychology. Her work has appeared in On Being, EcoTheo Review, The Ekphrastic Review, Metphrastics, Pensive and elsewhere. She lives in New York.

  31. 203

    Strong Back, Soft Front, and Open Hands by Eric Massanari

    Eric Massanari leads this contemplative practice to strengthen our confidence while growing our compassion, so that we are ready to generously give, graciously receive, courageously release, and compassionately serve. Eric Massanari (he/him) is an ordained minister in Mennonite Church USA, and currently serves as the Executive Conference Minister of the Pacific Northwest Mennonite Conference of MCUSA. Eric also serves as a spiritual director and recently concluded seven years of service on the Spiritual Directors International (SDI) Board of Directors. An avid poet and essayist, he lives with his family in Bellingham, WA, on the unceded lands and waterways of the Coast Salish Peoples.

  32. 202

    Poems by Anne Myles & Jonathan Chibuike Ukah

    Anne Myles reads her poem "The Woman Who Lives without Bread," and Jonathan Chibuike Ukah reads his poem "I Am Going Higher." Anne Myles is the author of Late Epistle (Headmistress Press, 2023), and her work has appeared in numerous journals. She is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Northern Iowa and holds an MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Arts. Originally from New York, she now lives in Greensboro, NC. Learn more at annemyles.com.Jonathan Chibuike Ukah lives in the United Kingdom. His poems have been featured in Lucky Jefferson Literary Magazine, The Pierian, Propel Magazine, Atticus Review, The Journal of Undiscovered Poets, and elsewhere. He won the Alexander Pope Poetry Award in 2023. He was the Editor’s Choice Prize Winner of Unleash Lit in 2024, the Second Poetry Prize Winner at the Streetlights Poetry Prize in 2024, and Winner of the Poet of the Month December-January 2025 at the Literary Shark Poetry Contest. His chapbook, A is for Anfang, is forthcoming from Island of Wak Wak.

  33. 201

    Leaving the Labyrinth by Lory Widmer Hess

    Lory Widmer Hess reads her essay "Leaving the Labyrinth."Lory Widmer Hess grew up near Seattle and now lives in Switzerland, where she works with adults with developmental challenges. Trained as a spiritual director, she companions individuals in their spiritual journey and leads online groups in the practice of Sacred Reading. Her writing has been published in magazines and journals including Parabola, Amethyst Review, Handwoven, Pensive, and Motherwell, and she is the author of When Fragments Make a Whole: A Personal Journey Through Healing Stories in the Bible (Floris Books, 2024). Find her online at enterenchanted.com.

  34. 200

    Poems by William Doreski & Lauren Suchenski

    William Doreski reads his poem "These Can't Be Real Angels," and Lauren Suchenski reads her poem "Prometheus."William Doreski lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire. He has taught at several colleges and universities. He has published three critical studies, including Robert Lowell’s Shifting Colors. His essays, poetry, fiction, and reviews have appeared in various journals.Lauren Suchenski has a difficult relationship with punctuation. She has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize and four times for The Best of the Net. Her full-length collection All You Can Measure (2022), as well as a chapbook Full of Ears and Eyes Am I (2017), is available from Finishing Line Press. Another chapbook, All Atmosphere, is also available from Selcouth Station (2022). More of her writing can be found on Instagram @lauren_suchenski.

  35. 199

    Negative Space by Steven Ovadia

    Steven Ovadia reads his short story "Negative Space" from our Autumn 2025 issue.Steven Ovadia a writer and librarian. He lives in White Plains, New York, with his wife and two daughters. This is his debut fiction publication.

  36. 198

    Autumn 2025 Trailer

    Co-Editor Caroline Langston introduces our new Autumn 2025 issue. Tune in for a preview of what's to come, and listen to Caroline's letter, "An Invitation to Brilliant Multiplicities."

  37. 197

    Poems by Maureen Sherbondy

    Maureen Sherbondy reads her three poems, "Imposter Syndrome of the Jewish Kind," "Rabbi Rachel Is Dead," and "Trying to Change the Past" from our current Summer issue.Maureen Sherbondy's forthcoming book is The Body Remembers. Her work has appeared in European Judaism, Calyx, Southern Humanities Review, and other journals. Maureen lives in Durham, NC. This is the last episode of our podcast seasons. Be sure not to miss other works from our Summer issue, including art by John L. Gronbeck-Tedesco, Douglas Campbell, Mary Jane Miller, and our cover artist Robert T. Rogers.

  38. 196

    Book Review by Dinah Ryan

    Dinah Ryan reads "Grief's Unmaking and Remaking of the Self," a review of Jessica Bebenek's books of poems, No One Knows Us There. Dinah Ryan is a writer whose practice includes fiction, poetry, cultural criticism, and independent curation. She is a contributing editor for Art Papers and Professor Emerita of English at Principia College, where she was the Cornelius Ayer and Muriel Prindle Wood Professor of the Humanities.

  39. 195

    Poem by David Blumenfeld

    David Blumenfeld reads his poem "Seeing God the Easy Way: Big Sur 1963."David Blumenfeld is a former philosophy professor who resumed writing stories and poems after a more than 40-year break. Since 2022, he has been nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize, one of his pieces received a “notable essay” mention in The Best American Essays 2023, another was in The Best American Haiku, 2023, and 10 of his works were finalists or received other high praise in literary magazines.

  40. 194

    Shirley Paulson's Review of "The Girl Who Baptized Herself"

    Shirley Paulson reads her review "“Sacred Rage” and Spiritual Defiance," discussing the book The Girl Who Baptized Herself by Meggan Watterson.Shirley Paulson is the principal producer of the Early Christian Texts website, earlychristiantexts.com, which features the “Bible and Beyond” series of blog posts, articles, online courses, events, discussions, and a monthly podcast. Shirley’s academic work focuses on early Christian texts, especially those relating to healing practices and theology.

  41. 193

    Poems by Riley Morsman & Claire Scott

    Riley Morsman reads her poem "Like a Mother Peeling Oranges," and Claire Scott reads her poem "Lord, Give Us Seven Hearts."Riley Morsman’s poetry and nonfiction work has been published in Fathom Magazine, Coffee + Crumbs, Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, and elsewhere. Her current writing projects include a poetry collection about the prairie and a hybrid memoir about matrilineage and mental health. You can find her on Instagram and Substack at @rileybethmo.Claire Scott is an award-winning poet who has received multiple Pushcart Prize nominations. Her work has appeared in the Atlanta Review, Bellevue Literary Review, New Ohio Review and Healing Muse among others. Claire is the author of Waiting to be Called and Until I Couldn’t.

  42. 192

    Awed by Creation by Deb Baker

    Vita Poetica's Contemplative Practices Editor Deb Baker invites us to be "Awed by Creation." Many of our fellow beings have ways of knowing that elude us, and Deb presents us with an opportunity to consider the presence of all our kin in creation -- and the Creator who brought all of us into being.Deb Baker lives in New Hampshire and works for a climate justice organization and in a hospital. She is a poet and spiritual director, and writes about what she’s been reading at bookconscious.wordpress.com.

  43. 191

    Poem by Alea Peister

    Alea Peister reads her poem "Thoughts upon Reading On Beauty and Being Just at the Oncologist's Office."Alea's writing has been featured in Relief, Solum, Ekstasis, The Curator, Whale Road Review, and Art for the Isolated, among others. In 2025, she will graduate with an MFA in Spiritual Writing from Seattle Pacific University. Alea is passionate about the relationship between creativity and prayer, which she explores in ministry at her church. She daylights as a copywriter at a marketing firm. You can follow her writerly escapades on Instagram at @alea_peister and Substack at aleapeister.substack.com.

  44. 190

    Art for Meditation: A Conversation with Iconographer Philip Davydov

    Iconographer Philip Davydov speaks with Vita Poetica co-founder and board member Lisa Shirk about the history and practice of iconography, his approach to his work, and how this ancient practice is still relevant today.Philip Davydov is a second-generation iconographer with an MA from the State Fine Art Academy of Saint Petersburg (faculty of Theory and History of Art). Since March 2022, he lives and works from the Republic of Georgia, teaching iconography in Australia, Italy, and the United States. Learn more about his work, workshops, and courses at iconography.online and sacredmurals.com. 

  45. 189

    Poems by Barry Casey & Elizabeth Cranford Garcia

    Barry Casey reads his poem "At Prayer," and Elizabeth Cranford Garcia reads her poems "Tree of Faith" and "Trash Meditations."Barry Casey is the author of Wandering, Not Lost, a collection of essays on faith, doubt, and mystery, published by Wipf and Stock (2019). His recent work has appeared in Brevity, Faculty Focus, Detroit Lit Mag, Fauxmoir, Humans of the World, Lighthouse Weekly, Mountain Views, Patheos, Pensive Journal, Rockvale Review, Spectrum Magazine, The Dewdrop, The Purpled Nail, and The Ulu Review. He holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy of Religion from Claremont Graduate University. He writes from Burtonsville, Maryland.Elizabeth Cranford Garcia’s debut collection, Resurrected Body, received Cider Press Review’s 2023 Editor’s Prize. Her work has appeared in Southern Humanities Review, Tar River Poetry, Image, RHINO, Chautauqua, Rappahannock Review, Portland Review, CALYX, and Mom Egg Review, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. She is a PhD student at Georgia State and mother of three. Read more at elizabethcranfordgarcia.com.

  46. 188

    Expansive Prayer & Lectio Divina with Poetry by Holly Porter Phillips

    Pastor and spiritual director Holly Porter Phillips shares about expanding our understanding of prayer and guides us in a practice of lectio divina with poetry.Holly Porter Phillips is a pastor, writer and trained spiritual director (Anam Cara). She loves the slow pace of spiritual direction and the gift of walking alongside others, bearing witness to their lives. Holly serves as co-pastor at a small church in Austin, Texas, where she lives with her musician husband, their three kids, and a backyard full of birds. She can be found on Substack at hollyporterphillips.substack.com.

  47. 187

    Poems by Eric Machan Howd & Fred Gallagher

    Eric Machan Howd reads his poem "Doorways," and Fred Gallagher reads his poems "The Mystic in Between" and "Anamnesis." Eric Machan Howd (Ithaca, NY) is a poet, musician, and educator. His work has been seen in such publications as Slab, Caesura, Stone Canoe, Vita Poetica, and Nimrod. He is currently working on a collection of poems based on flowers.Fred Gallagher is a writer whose faith informs his poetry, short stories and essays with an incarnational worldview. His work has appeared in the St. Austin Review, Agora, Sanskrit, and the Cold Mountain Review, among others. He was a finalist in the 2024 Catholic Literary Arts Sacred Poetry Contest and winner of Prime Number Magazine's 2023 Annual Poetry Prize. He is also a Pushcart Prize nominee. He and his wife reside in Charlotte, NC.

  48. 186

    The Dead Hand by Micah Harris

    Micah Harris reads his short story "The Dead Hand" from our Summer 2025 issue.Micah Harris is a writer and political theorist. His first novel, Only Small Things Are Good, was praised by a former Assistant Secretary of Defense as "a must read for anyone who wants to understand life in the Pentagon." He is currently a postdoctoral associate at Duke University and lives in Carrboro, North Carolina.

  49. 185

    Summer 2025 Trailer

    Co-Editor Caroline Langston introduces our new Summer 2025 issue. Tune in for a preview of what's to come, and listen to Caroline's editorial letter, "The Quest for Discernment."

  50. 184

    Poems by Wayne Bornholdt

    Wayne Bornholdt reads his poems "Sunday Prayers" and "Intinction."Wayne Bornholdt is a retired bookseller. He holds degrees in philosophy and theological studies. He lives in West Michigan with his wife, three Golden Retrievers and stacks of unread books.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

A quarterly publication of the Vita Poetica Arts & Faith Collective, our online journal features creative work explored through a spiritual lens. Vita Poetica connects and upholds artists of faith, enlivening spiritual conversations through the arts. Learn more about us at www.vitapoetica.org.

HOSTED BY

Vita Poetica

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!