Gary Boelhower's second major collection includes sixty-five poems that explore the ways we are named and branded with multiple identities, a clay vessel molded and imprinted from the inside and the outside by those who know us or think they do; by wounds, worries, stones, and nicknames; by place and absence; by teachers and traitors.
Gary Boelhower has taught ethics, leadership, and spirituality at the undergraduate and graduate levels for thirty years. He is the author of Marrow, Muscle, Flight: Poems, which won the Midwest Book Award for poetry.
Gary Boelhower's second major collection includes sixty-five poems that explore the ways we are named and branded with multiple identities, a clay vessel molded and imprinted from the inside and the outside by those who know us or think they do; by wounds, worries, stones, and nicknames; by place and absence; by teachers and traitors.
Gary Boelhower has taught ethics, leadership, and spirituality at the undergraduate and graduate levels for thirty years. He is the author of Marrow, Muscle, Flight: Poems, which won the Midwest Book Award for poetry.
Gary Boelhower's poetry has been published in anthologies: Amethyst and Agate: Poems of Lake Superior, Holy Cow! Press (2015), The Heart of All That Is, Holy Cow! Press (2013), The Cancer Poetry Project 2, Tasora Books (2013) Beloved on the Earth: 150 Poems of Grief and Gratitude, Holy Cow! Press (2009), Trail Guide to the Northland Experience in Prints and Poetry, Calyx Press Duluth (2008), and County lines: 87 Minnesota Counties 130 Minnesota Poets, Loonfeather Press (2008) and in journals and magazines: America, Duluth Superior Symphony Orchestra Magazine, The Freshwater Review, Lake Superior Magazine, New Millenium Writings, Out of Words, Prove, Shavings, and Willow Review. His 2011 collection of poems, Marrow, Muscle, Flight (Wildwood River Press) won the Midwest Book Award. He was awarded the Foley Prize in poetry from America magazine in 2012 and a career development grant from the Arrowhead Regional Arts Council in 2010.
His recent nonfiction books include Choose Wisely: Practical Insights from Spiritual Traditions, Paulist Press (2013) and Mountain 10: Climbing the Labyrinth Within, (co-authored with Joe Miguez and Tricia Pearce) Mountain Ten Resources (2013). Boelhower teaches at The College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minn. in ethics, spirituality, and leadership. He has held leadership positions in higher education, including chair of humanities, dean of life-long learning, dean of graduate studies and vice president for academic affairs. He has created non-profit community organizations for feeding the hungry and for adult literacy. He has consulted with and provided training for a broad range of organizations on dialogue, authentic leadership, values and vision, the respectful workplace, and wise decision-making.
"Naming Rites is such a generous collection it offers both
blessings and confessions, dirt and bread, miracles and explosions,
cruelty and mercy, great blue herons who resemble monks and blue
jays clowning around, a lover's tender touch and the horrors of the
nightly news. In second grade, Gary Boelhower admits, he won 'the
glow-in-the-dark statue of Mary, ' and his religious drive, now
mature, is still alive in these poems. They aim for (and often
achieve) not just a personal record but transubstantiation,
transforming experience into wisdom, fear into freedom, language
into song. Naming Rites is the autobiography of a soul, reaching
out beyond the boundaries of the self."--Bart Sutter, author of Cow
Calls in Dalarna and Chester Creek Ravine: Haiku "Naming Rites by
Gary Boelhower rings with an immense rhythm and rises 'out of the
earth/ in waves, music, birth.' The cadence is measured and the
titles have Biblical echoes. The words shine with grace. In the
Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were granted the right to name the
animals. Inside the covers of this book, these narrative poems
examine the myriad ways that we name others, ourselves, and our
experience. As a gay man and a professor of ethics and religion,
Gary Boelhower walks with courage in the world, and his poems are
fierce and tender. He evokes the power of Sophia, and he searches
and finds soul in the '...bright vesicle in the vestibule of chance
/ in the palm of the heart.' In one poem "Preparing the Soil," he
tells a story of summers on a farm, riding in the tractor. Once,
his uncle scooped a handful of the fine and warm earth, ashes and
dust, but also the place for seeds. The poems trace scars of abuse
but also the marvels of wing and grasshopper and dance. Some poems
are love poems like the Songs of Solomon. There are many that
celebrate life, like "A Song of the Salmon." There is humor and
pathos in the poem "Homeland Poetry." He explores memory and
experience, both light and dark. Boelhower knows the things that
haunt a soldier home from the war. He contemplates the red wire of
a suicide bomber, the hunger of starving children, the frail
machinery of the body, and the emotional scars of sexual abuse. He
doesn't turn away from the names that are epithets, aspersions,
labels, and whispered in shame. These poems claim the right to name
one's self and to claim one's body, passion, love and desire. This
is a spiritual book, a mystical one, and one grounded in the
natural landscape. The simple act of learning to articulate and to
name has the power to heal. This poet presents the reader with a
rich place to plant the seeds of hope and forgiveness. In a sensual
collection, Gary Boelhower gathers the difficult world and finds
the 'common code swimming / in the helix of your muscle and
marrow.'"--Sheila Packa, former Duluth Poet Laureate and author of
Echo & Lightning, Cloud Birds, and Night Train Red Dust "Gary
Boelhower's poems resist convention and confinement even as they
speak deeply of and from history, family, and community. The
persona names and narrates himself into being as he chronicles
profound and tender encounters as well as 'tectonic shifts and
betrayals.' Software engineers meditate, children go hungry, and
faith is lost and reconfigured. 'Let me not forget to be what I
have spoken, ' Boelhower reminds himself and his readers. Naming
Rites is an important and sustaining book for our times, with its
'cadence that calls us into the streets with voices / of protest
and hope.'"--Julie Gard, author of Home Studies
"Naming Rites is such a generous collection it offers both
blessings and confessions, dirt and bread, miracles and explosions,
cruelty and mercy, great blue herons who resemble monks and blue
jays clowning around, a lover's tender touch and the horrors of the
nightly news. In second grade, Gary Boelhower admits, he won 'the
glow-in-the-dark statue of Mary, ' and his religious drive, now
mature, is still alive in these poems. They aim for (and often
achieve) not just a personal record but transubstantiation,
transforming experience into wisdom, fear into freedom, language
into song. Naming Rites is the autobiography of a soul, reaching
out beyond the boundaries of the self."--Bart Sutter, author of Cow
Calls in Dalarna and Chester Creek Ravine: Haiku "Naming Rites by
Gary Boelhower rings with an immense rhythm and rises 'out of the
earth/ in waves, music, birth.' The cadence is measured and the
titles have Biblical echoes. The words shine with grace. In the
Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were granted the right to name the
animals. Inside the covers of this book, these narrative poems
examine the myriad ways that we name others, ourselves, and our
experience. As a gay man and a professor of ethics and religion,
Gary Boelhower walks with courage in the world, and his poems are
fierce and tender. He evokes the power of Sophia, and he searches
and finds soul in the '...bright vesicle in the vestibule of chance
/ in the palm of the heart.' In one poem "Preparing the Soil," he
tells a story of summers on a farm, riding in the tractor. Once,
his uncle scooped a handful of the fine and warm earth, ashes and
dust, but also the place for seeds. The poems trace scars of abuse
but also the marvels of wing and grasshopper and dance. Some poems
are love poems like the Songs of Solomon. There are many that
celebrate life, like "A Song of the Salmon." There is humor and
pathos in the poem "Homeland Poetry." He explores memory and
experience, both light and dark. Boelhower knows the things that
haunt a soldier home from the war. He contemplates the red wire of
a suicide bomber, the hunger of starving children, the frail
machinery of the body, and the emotional scars of sexual abuse. He
doesn't turn away from the names that are epithets, aspersions,
labels, and whispered in shame. These poems claim the right to name
one's self and to claim one's body, passion, love and desire. This
is a spiritual book, a mystical one, and one grounded in the
natural landscape. The simple act of learning to articulate and to
name has the power to heal. This poet presents the reader with a
rich place to plant the seeds of hope and forgiveness. In a sensual
collection, Gary Boelhower gathers the difficult world and finds
the 'common code swimming / in the helix of your muscle and
marrow.'"--Sheila Packa, former Duluth Poet Laureate and author of
Echo & Lightning, Cloud Birds, and Night Train Red Dust "Gary
Boelhower's poems resist convention and confinement even as they
speak deeply of and from history, family, and community. The
persona names and narrates himself into being as he chronicles
profound and tender encounters as well as 'tectonic shifts and
betrayals.' Software engineers meditate, children go hungry, and
faith is lost and reconfigured. 'Let me not forget to be what I
have spoken, ' Boelhower reminds himself and his readers. Naming
Rites is an important and sustaining book for our times, with its
'cadence that calls us into the streets with voices / of protest
and hope.'"--Julie Gard, author of Home Studies
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |