About the Book
The Tenderest Petal Hears is Co-Winner of the first Blue Horse Press Chapbook Contest. It was selected by guest judge Larry D. Thomas, 2008 Texas Poet Laureate.This Tenderest Petal Hears is a skillfully executed poetic testament not only to a life fully lived, but a life lived with razor-sharp reflection, sensitivity, love, yearning, the power of memory, and the transcendent capabilities of language carefully studied, appreciated, and utilized to its full potential. Simultaneously classical and contemporary, these poems are richly textured with allusions to mythology, history, philosophy, music, fairy tales, and psychology: composed by a poet well versed in both the great literature of the past and the present. The poet's diction, although accessible to the college-educated reader, is scintillant with daring word clusters and intriguing turns of phrase: ..".Quixote midget tilting at little windmills," ..".trumpeted yowls / dancing on chordal clouds," ..".misty-mint aura / washing pastel across the day," "Orioles flap hunger to jam-dolloped platters," "rising like purple pagodas, spirit-scenting / promised whispers of healing," and "when a lover traced the curve of my hip / as if it were the lip of God." With an incantatory voice one would expect from a shaman, the poet of these poems leads the reader through a contemporary inferno of existential angst, betrayal, abuse, homophobia, the undying love and horrors of familial relationships, and promise unfulfilled, only to redeem that reader with the splendors and unfathomable mysteries of the natural world teeming at their fingertips. -Larry D. Thomas, Contest Judge, 2008 Texas Poet Laureate and Member of the Texas Institute of Letters
About the Author: After completing her Ph.D. from L.S.U., Charlotte Renk settled in Athens, Texas to teach English and Creative Writing. For thirty years, she has written poetry and short stories inspired by natural settings and local folk surrounding life in her small cabin nestled among tall pine woods, hickories, oaks, and wildflowers of East Texas. Eakin Press published her prizewinning collection of poetry, THESE HOLY HUNGERS: SECRET YEARNINGS FROM AN EMPTY CUP, 2009, and Poetry in the Arts published her book, SOLIDAGO, AN ALTAR TO WEEDS, 2010. She has published in such journals as Kalliope, Mochila Review, New Texas, Concho River Review, Sow's Ear, Langdon Review of the Arts in Texas, Re: Arts and Letters, and Southwest Review. She received the National Storyteller Award for fiction. Still writing, publishing, and conducting workshops on writing, she explores certain recurring subjects: love (from passion to compassion), family, loss, natural settings, teaching, and hiking.