000 01648nam a22001937a 4500
003 OSt
005 20230304141628.0
008 190629b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781099636783
040 _cNew Zealand National Baha'i Reference Library
100 _9448
_aRichard Thomas
245 _aGoing Home to My Soul
_bCollected Poems and Narratives
260 _aUnited States
_bHopeful Press
_c2019
300 _axiii, 110 p. illus.
500 _aAfter a successful career as a historian, author and advocate for Racial Amity, Richard W. Thomas is returning home to his poetic roots. This retrospective of Richard's poetry from the ‘60s is full of the fire, passion and pain of that era. Richard grew up in Detroit, Michigan and came of age “at the raw beginning of one of the most socially turbulent decades of the Twentieth Century: the 1960s.” He was drawn to poetry and to the great tradition of speaking hard truth to a world in peril. His work was noticed by some notable poets of that era, among them Margaret Danner, Amiri Baraka and Langston Hughes. “Langston Hughes has selected some of your poetry for submission” reads one letter Richard received. Thus began a brief period of writing and publishing poetry that mirrored the intensity of the times.“I’m feeling the urge to reflect more on what really matters in life. At various times over the years I have been encouraged by wonderful friends to return to my ‘first love.’ They have summoned me once again to return home to my soul.”—Richard W. Thomas
600 0 _9448
_aRichard Thomas
650 0 _aPoetry
_vBaha'i Faith
_9249
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK
999 _c29964
_d29964