Book Announcements, poetry

New Release! “Man Afield” by Jim Krosschell

We are pleased to announce the New Release of Man Afield by Jim Krosschell.

Jim Krosschell has published poems and essays in some 85 journals, plus two essay collections: One Man’s Maine, which won a Maine Literary Award, and Owls Head Revisited. He lives in Deer Isle, ME and Newton, MA, and volunteers on Boards for Coastal Mountains Land Trust and the Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance.

His poetry collection, Man Afield is a lyrical journey through the living world, guided by a backyard naturalist attuned to both wonder and warning. These poems chronicle spiritual and physical excursions into landscapes larger than any one mind or body — places where awe, joy, disorientation, and reckoning intertwine.

Organized in six evocative sections, the collection:

I. bears witness from a seaside deck;

II. wanders through yard and neighboring woods;

III. explores the shifting shoreline;

IV. imagines the vast and restless ocean;

V. surveys the scars of environmental damage;

VI. honors home in its many meanings.

Throughout, the poems dwell in the charged space where humans and the natural world meet. They examine our peculiar paradox: we are the only species that knowingly fouls its own nest — and the only one capable of choosing restraint. With clear-eyed honesty, Man Afield mourns the grinding erosion of precious places while celebrating the stubborn beauty that persists despite us — and sometimes because of us.

From deck to forest trail, from tidal pull to smoke-streaked sky, these poems trace one person’s evolving relationship with plants, animals, weather, memory, and spirit. Intimate yet expansive, they invite readers to travel outward into the wild and inward toward belonging.​

Man Afield is at once a field journal, a meditation, and a love song — to earth, to home, and to the fragile bond between them./


What reviewers have to say:

A “backyard naturalist,” Jim Krosschell writes about human relationships with the natural world. His previous books include One Man’s Maine and Owls Head Revisited. He has been Board President for Coastal Mountains Land Trust and the Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance and continues to volunteer in conservation and publishing communities. Before retirement, he worked in science publishing in Boston and now lives in Deer Isle, Maine and Newton, Massachusetts.

I read Man Afield in one sitting, delighted as the speaker in these poems trains his roving eyes and ears on his surroundings and the wonders of the natural world, searching for any “wildly beating heart.” There is no high or low in the cataloguing and noticing that happens here—gnats, ants, many kinds of birds and trees, rivers, oceans, the delicious names of plants all receive attention and care. These poems are clear-eyed, not romantic—they take in the “miles of Walmart, Ford, and Shell” and Land Cruisers “junked on the veldt” and know well how precarious our world is. Krosschell still chooses, again and again, to draw his careful attention to, say, three loons on “this stretch of shore / on the coast of Maine…” and to allow himself, and us, to be mesmerized.

Gibson Fay-LeBlanc, Author of Deke Dangle Dive


What a satisfying and uplifting ride it is to join Krosschell’s journey from young man, “with his dreams of rivers” to old man with his “permanent perch on a hermit’s wild ledge,” overlooking the forest and coast of Maine, mindful of carbon’s engulfing demise, delighting in the “manna of joy administered only in crumbs.” From Man Afield’s opening flight of poems that expose what’s small and barely perceptible, to its closing epics and late-life gatherings, these are poems of a specific earned grace brought to beauty by Krosschell’s firm roots in the natural world. There is lament here for irreparable loss but also humor and social commentary (“Turkeys,” “White Man’s Footstep”), a retort to Frost (“Whose Woods These Are”), and a brilliant ode of reflection to Thoreau, “March Into April” and its haunting question, “will spring still come to the window and wake me?” Man Afield’s poems are grounded in the terra firma of New England, but their reach is universal, and they reward fully with the music of observation.

Bruce Willard, Author of In Light of Stars


In graceful, accessible language, Jim Krosschell’s poems create a glass pane through which to view and ponder the wonders of the natural world and the fraught relationship of humankind to it. Often clear and bright, sometimes dark, and always reflective, these poems reveal a man alive to the world he observes precisely and lovingly, and to which he longs to connect his self and the transcendent. Something we all, in our own way, seek in our lives. Man Afield is a collection that invites us in to learn from one man’s journey to our benefit.

Brian Schulz, Poet

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Announcements, Book Announcements, Book Funnel, caregiving, poetry

When Cancer Enters the Family

When someone you love is diagnosed with late-stage cancer, language shifts.

Ordinary words—appointment, waiting room, prognosis—take on new gravity. Time bends. Conversations sharpen. Silences grow louder.

In Cancer Courts My Mother, LindaAnn LoSchiavo transforms that altered landscape into poetry that is intimate, unsparing, and profoundly human.


When Cancer Enters the Family

This is not a clinical account of illness.

It is a daughter’s reckoning.

A caregiver’s vigil.

A complicated love story between mother and child—layered with devotion, resentment, memory, humor, and the quiet tenderness that surfaces when the end approaches.

Across 25 poems, LoSchiavo gives voice to:

  • The exhaustion of caregiving
  • The ache of unresolved history
  • The strange flashes of beauty inside sorrow
  • The love that refuses to leave

Her poems do not look away. But they also do not surrender to despair.

Instead, they ask:

What does it mean to accompany someone to the threshold?
How do we hold grief and grace in the same hand?
What remains when words fail?


Why Readers Are Saying Yes

Readers and reviewers have described the collection as:

  • “Candid and unflinching.”
  • “A testament to complicated love.”
  • “Tender without sentimentality.”
  • “A lyrical exploration of resilience.”

The poems resonate because they speak to universal themes—loss, reconciliation, anger, hope, and the stubborn persistence of love—even as they remain deeply personal.

If you have ever:

  • Managed medications and memories
  • Struggled with unfinished conversations
  • Loved someone through decline

You will recognize yourself here.


A Voice of Candor and Grace

LindaAnn LoSchiavo writes with clarity and restraint. Her lines are spare yet resonant. Her images—closets, gardens, corridors, dance-like metaphors of movement and stillness—carry emotional weight without excess.

There is sorrow here.

But also wit.

There is anger.

But also forgiveness.

And, perhaps most powerfully, there is presence.


Receive a Free Sample

If you’re curious about the emotional depth and artistry of this collection, we invite you to experience it for yourself.

Read a free sample of Cancer Courts My Mother and step into a poetic journey that honors both the fragility and the fierce beauty of love at the edge of loss.

✨ Inside the sample, you’ll discover:

  • Selected poems from the collection
  • A glimpse of LoSchiavo’s lyrical voice
  • An intimate portrait of caregiving and connection

Let these poems accompany you—whether you are navigating illness, remembering someone you’ve lost, or simply seeking language for the complexities of love.

Get your free sample now and begin reading today.


Because sometimes poetry says what prose cannot.

And sometimes, when everything feels uncertain, a poem is the one steady thing left to hold.

View more at https://www.prolificpulse.com/lindaannloschiavo