These poems reflect a year of journeys to sacred river sources in India. Laurie Patton's poems were written after a decade of writing and reading in interpretation of India's most sacred Sanskrit compositions -- the Veda. The book's first half, "Festivals", follows the main festivals of a Hindu year. Each poem is written in the voice of a bhakta, or devotee, as he or she performs rituals of devotion -- whether it be floating a flame down the river at Diwali or listening to the bell at a Ganesh temple at Ganeshotsav. The second half of the book, "Crossings" refers to the traditional term tirtha, or holy place. In India, a tirtha is a place where a god crossed over to be on earth. "Crossings" employs the images of Sanskrit learning to think about ordinary moments in contemporary life -- a lost lover, running with dogs, an encounter with a spiderweb, what a widow might say about her broken bangles.
Illustrated by: Lika Tov
Foreword by: Narendra Panjwani