Description
Blame it on the Moon is a collection of new poetry from Lisa Shatzky that speaks in a myriad of ways to the experience of wanting and needing more fullness of life and the imperative of each of us to become ourselves as fully as we are able. The voice in these poems is witty, vulnerable, passionate, and sharp. Some of the poems show us the losses and perils of midlife, of lost love, lost opportunities, and the frightening recognition that sometimes our sense of who we thought we were - our identity - no longer sustains the larger person inside of us. Other poems point to new doors and possibilities and our longing for deeper contact and intimacy in our relationships with others.
About the author
Lisa Shatzky's poetry has been published in The Vancouver Review,Room Magazine,Quills Canadian Poetry Magazine, The Nashwaak Review, The Antigonish Review, The Dalhousie Review, Canadian Literature, Canadian Woman's Studies, The Prairie Journal, Jones Ave.,The New Quarterly, Monday's Poem, and six chapbooks by Leaf Press (edited by Patrick Lane) along with anthologies across Canada.� Shatzky has also had prose published in a new book called "Living Artfully: Reflections from the Far West Coast" published by The Key Publishing Group in September 2012. When not writing she works as a psychotherapist on Bowen Island. B.C. where she lives with her three teenage children, an assortment of Ragdoll cats, and her partner Don on a sailboat called "Pelican.