Barbara Loots added to Poetry from Daily Life Free Video Library

Hi everyone,

I’m glad to say that BARBARA LOOTS (rhymes with coats) has now been added to Poetry from Daily Life Free Video Library. Her column appeared in the newspaper series on August 18, 2024. We caught up with Barbara on an island in Ontario, Canada and she recorded the column for the library.

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Barbara, who lives in Kansas City, Missouri, is another poet who found her calling early and was writing poems by 3rd grade. She says she even made a book of her poems but her piano teacher suggested that she keep practicing the piano. Favorite audience? “I like to write for people with a sense of humor.” Two books that gave her pleasure to write are Road Trip and The Beekeeper and other love poems. She says a unique fact about her is being herself. Hard to argue about that! Barbara currently has poems online at Asses of Parnassus, Light Poetry Magazine, and Pulsebeat.  She is also in the current issue of Light as the Review Editor. 

Barbara and I worked together as editors at Hallmark Cards in the 1960-70s. I’m delighted to reconnect these many years later as poets working on the same project. Thank you, Barbara! And thanks to all who will take a moment to send this link along to others who enjoy good poems and learning about the poets who write them.

Here’s the link to Barbara’s recording. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgZ7iyx-IbI . And here’s the link to the whole collection of 60 voices. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5wGqp5vbw2K0N7cFcGwN5w

Barbara Loots link to Poetry from Daily Life

Hi everyone,

Here’s the link to this weekend’s Springfield News-Leader online edition of Poetry from Daily Life, featuring my guest BARBARA LOOTS. https://www.news-leader.com/story/entertainment/2024/08/18/poetry-from-daily-life-how-to-know-if-you-are-real-poet/74804782007/

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Barb’s work has been appearing in numerous popular and literary magazines and anthologies for sixty years. In today’s column she writes about the doubts that many unpublished poets have: “Am I a real poet?” It’s an excellent choice and will resonate with many. As I do every Sunday, I ask you to share the column through your own social media. The more readers we have, the better. Thank you, Barbara Loots!

Barbara Loots coming to Poetry from Daily Life

Hi everyone,

This week I welcome an old colleague from our days at Hallmark more than fifty years ago, BARBARA LOOTS. (Loots rhymes with goats.) Barbara is a poet with a sense of humor. An example is what she tells on herself. In the 3rd grade, she made a book of her poems and shared it with her piano teacher. Her teacher encouraged her to keep up with piano lessons. Lucky for us all, Barbara kept writing poetry. Her poems have been appearing in print since the 1960s in numerous popular and literary magazines and anthologies.

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Some of Barbara’s most recent accomplishments include being named a top 4 winner in the Maria Faust Sonnet competition and placing poems in Thin Places and Sacred Spaces (an anthology from the editors of Amethyst Review) and The Orchards Poetry Journal (a substantial issue from publisher Karen Kelsay). 

This weekend Barb’s guest column will appear in print on Saturday in Springfield’s News-Leader and on Sunday in its online edition. When I receive the link on Sunday, I’ll post it here for all to enjoy and share. Thank you, again, Barbara Loots!

Talents from the past

Hi everyone,

The Missouri Arts Council table, where I sat on Saturday during the Heartland Book Festival, was adjacent to The Writers Place table. I belong to TWP and was privileged to speak to them last year. Among the talented authors at the table during the day were our most recent former state poet laureate, MARYFRANCES WAGNER and two of the editors on the staff during my days at Hallmark Cards more than fifty years ago, TINA HACKER and BARBARA LOOTS. Barbara gave me a copy of her book of poetry, The Bee Keeper and Other Poems.

I’m reading Barbara’s book now and thoroughly enjoying it. She’s a gifted poet. So is Tina, whose work I’ve been reading for the last several years. I’m reminded of how many talented people worked there when I did. One of the editors had a Ph.D. Another was a published novelist. BARBARA BARTOCCI went on to publish numerous books and tour the country giving inspirational talks. CHARLIE BARSOTTI became a cartoonist whose comic series, Sally Bananas, was syndicated and carried in numerous newspapers before he became a longtime contributor to The New Yorker. One time I sent Charlie a note and asked, “What are you doing?” He answered, “Just sitting here waiting for my muse to drop by.” One Hallmark editor left to start his own card company. So much talent.

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At the time when I served as the Editorial Manager, the department was divided into four groups: editors of seasonal cards, editors of everyday cards, the writers, and the clerical group. As I remember, there were more than thirty of us in total. During the years after I left to return to Springfield to run Glenstone Block Company, at least one of the former staff members — LOIS HUNT –was promoted to the same job I’d had. I’ve lost track of most of the others from my days in Kansas City, 1963-1973, but I know there were others who went on to successful careers in other fields.

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The art department dwarfed editorial. At that time, it was the largest commercial art group in America. Many of those who worked at Hallmark at some point in their lives were highly gifted artists who held frequent showings of their work. We have paintings by some hanging in our home. That was true in homes and museums throughout the country. One such wonderful artist (and writer) is CHERYL HARNESS, whose many books have brought joy to countless young readers and whose artwork can be found in such places as the Harry Truman Library in Independence, Missouri.

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When I left science to find a more creative environment for my day job (in hopes that it would stimulate my night job of writing), I doubt that I could have made a better choice anywhere in the country. And fifty years later, I’m reading poems by Hacker and Loots and being reminded that I’ve been privileged to work with many, many talented people.

A busy but quiet week

Hi everyone,

It’s good to be home and at work. The Heartland Book Festival was fine and I enjoyed meeting a lot of people, especially two of my old colleagues from Hallmark days — TINA HACKER and BARBARA LOOTS — both of whom are published poets, and MARYFRANCES WAGNER, my predecessor as Missouri’s poet laureate. My thanks to creators of the festival and to GINNY SANDERS and MICHAEL DONOVAN from Missouri Arts Council for making arrangements to get me on the agenda and taking care of so many of the details that make a conference visit successful. A great bonus was seeing MICHAEL FRIZELL and JULIA RITTER from Springfield who stayed at the same hotel we did. I also had the pleasure of meeting DANNA YORK.

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This week I’m attempting to catch up on mail and declutter the tops of every surface that needs it = 100%. I hope to get back to my chapter book story but may not make it. First I have to work on my part of a presentation with TIM RASINSKI and MARY JO FRESCH and one with Mary Jo for NCTE next month in Columbus, Ohio. I also hope to get together online with GEORGIA HEARD and the editors of Missouri Reader about an article we’ve proposed to write for that journal. And Tim and I are writing our response to our editor at Routledge / Taylor & Francis Group about their reader reviews of our book proposal with them.

All considered, you can count on me to be mostly quiet this week, a change from the last few weeks.