Do you love book stores? Those orderly, little universes of paper and gloss and yesterday's ideas, facts, memories, observations, and feelings into which, from time to time, the flesh-and-blood world enters?
Poet and Oral Historian Ralph Dranow does.
Having lived, worked, and breathed Bookstores for over fifteen years, he celebrated them in Sunday Ritual, which nycBigCityLit reviewer Tim Scannel believes are the best poems about the aura and patrons of the bookstore.
In his twenty-five poems in Sunday Ritual, Mr. Dranow drew from his fifteen-plus years as a bookstore clerk to narrate stories of the world shuffling in, and occasionally breaking open, outside and inside him. I found the poems by the always lucid Mr Dranow a compelling read. [Sunday Ritual, by Ralph Dranow, First Prize Winner, 2000 Nerve Cowboy Chapbook Contest; Liquid Paper Press, P. O. Box 4973, Austin, Texas 78765; $4
Out of the bookstore now, developing his oral history practice in Oakland; volunteering at the Faithful Fools in San Francisco, where he has been a witness to the lives of homeless persons on the streets; and reading to residents of Piedmont Gardens Retirement Community; it is clear the physical confines of Bookstores havent re-formed this lover of Bookstores, physically or mentally.
His lanky frame remains unstooped and his hazel eyes examine the world of San Franciscos old-new, desultory-vibrant, wicked-innocent, gritty Tenderloin with compassion and a twinkle as he embarks on new voyages of discovery that challenge his heart, spirit, and mind.
I enjoyed reading Ralph Dranow's poems in his book, Tenderloin Voices, which he has dedicated to the people of San Francisco's Tenderloin and the Faithful Fools, a Tenderloin neighborhood charitable and educational organ ization created in 1998 to address the existence of poverty in the midst of material wealth in this beautiful, famously liberal city-by-the-bay. The Tenderloinhome to Glide, St. Anthony, and St. Boniface churcheshas one of the densest concentrations of addiction, homeless, and other social services in the country.
I loved the flow of Mr. Dranows poems as they chronicle, brimful with details, the faces, voices, thoughts, feelings, and conditions of San Francisco's Tenderloin homeless. I admired the listening and observation skills, and the courage, both public and private, that these 21 poems represent. [Tenderloin Voices, by Ralph Dranow; Spruce Street Press, Oakland, CA; price $5; available from The Portable Blessings Ledger, P. O. Box 21622, Piedmont, CA 94620
Mr. Dranow is also the author of The Woman Who Knocked Out Sugar Ray - short stories; Sure Hands Lifting Me Skyward Poetry; Voyeur of the Heart Poetry; Green Leaves For Hair - a Poetry book in collaboration with Therese Baumberger.
Recently, I ventured to ask Mr. Dranow what had contributed to making him who he was.
Mr Dranow explained he had learned from his mistakes. As it so often happens, pain stimulated growth and change. He shifted from writing prose to Poetry about sixteen years ago after a divorce made him realize he needed to broaden his life, take more risks, and widen his consciousness. He joined a men's group, studied tai chi, started meditating, and reading books on Buddhism.
Writing Poetry, he added, has been an important way for me to reclaim my essential self, to overcome my sense of separation and instead to feel my connection with all other living beings.
Also, my second marriage, to Naomi Rose, has been a great opportunity for me to learn and grow, to see where I am off the mark and to work on coming closer, with Naomi's love, support, and wisdom.
And my work with the Faithful Fools has been inspiring; to be associated with people with generous hearts and spirits who are committed to creating more community and love in the world has been a great blessing.
Mr. Dranow's poems reflect his continuing journey into awareness and reclaiming his essential self.
Copyright 2005 Michael Chacko Daniels. All rights reserved.
ABOUT THE AUTOR: Don't you love people's stories, their challenges and struggles to overcome them, their successes, and what strengths and skills they used to succeed? San Franciscan Michael Chacko Daniels, who grew up in Bombay, does. He believes each person's story can be inspiring to all of us. Books: Writers Workshop, Kolkata: Split in Two (1971, 2004), Anything Out of Place Is Dirt (1971, 2004), and That Damn Romantic Fool (1972, 2005). Since 2005, he has been re-working the three novels, written over the last three decades, which had gathered dust in his closet while he devoted himself to providing services in Berkeley and Oakland at the Center for Independent Living and, later, to running the Jobs for Homeless Consortium through 2004. A flash fiction piece of his, Sing an Indian Name, was published on Denver Syntax free online magazine http://www.denversyntax.com/issue5/fiction/daniels/indian.html. Read all about his Indian and American journey on his website, US-India Writing Station, at: http://IndiaWritingStation.squarespace.com/
Author:: Michael Chacko Daniels
Keywords:: Nerve Cowboy winner, Bookstores, Tenderloin homeless, essential self, Poet, Oakland oral historian,
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