Bruce Arlen Wasserman
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Recent Posts
- “Clay,” “66,” and “How to Lose a Mother” published by Cathexis
- My Book Review: Shrapnel Maps, on NYJB website
- My Poem, “From Rechavia,” wins Anna Davidson Rosenberg Award for 2019, 2nd Place
- “What to Do While Waiting in Boston” released in the Fredericksburg Literary and Art Review
- Review: When Rap Spoke Straight To God
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AN UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY
AN UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY
Twitter
- RT @KerryDonovanCO: It’s official! I’m running for Congress against Lauren Boebert. We need a Congresswoman who understands that real toug… 2 months ago
- RT @mcbridesworld: Yesterday was the 100th birthday of the legendary Clark Terry. ❤️ My ultimate goal in music is to make people leave one… 4 months ago
- “Clay,” “66,” and “How to Lose a Mother” published by Cathexis brucearlenwasserman.com/2020/12/01/cla… 4 months ago
- An amazing testament to what we can do to heal the world... twitter.com/DanRather/stat… 6 months ago
- amyzhaopublishing.com/old-firehouse-… 7 months ago
- @BernardKerik @JoeBiden It's an election, Commissioner, not a "charge." 9 months ago
- RT @DalaiLama: What is important is not so much how long you live as whether you live a meaningful life. This doesn’t mean accumulating mon… 10 months ago
- My Book Review: Shrapnel Maps, on NYJB website brucearlenwasserman.com/2020/05/04/my-… 11 months ago
- My Poem, “From Rechavia,” wins Anna Davidson Rosenberg Award for 2019, 2nd Place brucearlenwasserman.com/2020/04/24/my-… 12 months ago
- RT @jaweedkaleem: NEW: There are fewer than 500 living survivors of Auschwitz in the U.S. Many have vowed to never set foot again inside th… 1 year ago
- RT @AspenWords: "People often think of poetry as a puzzle they have to solve...Poetry is an experience, you can let it wash over you...you… 1 year ago
- RT @Pontifex: This year I want to dedicate World Communications Day to the theme of storytelling. In order not to get lost, we must make th… 1 year ago
- RT @DalaiLama: I don’t like formality. There’s no formality when we’re born and none when we die. In between we should treat each other as… 1 year ago
- Shared by @DrLaz770: twitter.com/bruceawasserma… 1 year ago
- RT @SenSanders: I’m proud of my state, Vermont, for leading the nation in considering making free school meals universal for children. In… 1 year ago
- Shared by my friend Dr Laz: insights into the good that can be done when people take time to discover what they sha… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 year ago
- “What to Do While Waiting in Boston” released in the Fredericksburg Literary and Art Review brucearlenwasserman.com/2019/04/11/wha… 2 years ago
- Review: When Rap Spoke Straight To God brucearlenwasserman.com/2019/01/21/rev… 2 years ago
- RT @skjask: Dear God, This year, let the good outweigh the bad. Let giving outweigh taking, let the selfless outweigh the selfish, let peac… 2 years ago
Pages
AN UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY SPREADS ITS WINGS
An Undiscovered Country (Horace Simerman Press, 2011) is going further in its travels around the globe. The collection of poems by Bruce Arlen Wasserman exploring love in all its dimensions, is now being sold in Norway, Finland and Sweden and is being carried in the UK at Waterstones, which has nearly 300 shops in Britain and at Berkelouw Books in Australia, one of Australia's oldest booksellers.
These locations add to the expanding worldwide distribution network already in place for the collection. It is being marketed by booksellers in France, Germany, Australia, Japan and Croatia, as well as online in the USA at Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble.com and at other locations worldwide through independent and online booksellers.
Wasserman’s work takes an in-depth look at love in a unique way, exposing the sedimentary layers of this topic that traverses cultures to cut right to the root of the human condition. In addition to its unique poetic point of view, the work is being touted as a pivotal new look at relationships.
Comments on A Cowboy on the Loose in London
Early comments on A Cowboy on the Loose in London have been extremely positive! Here are a few:
“A witty, at times humorous, and charming read… This author knows exactly how to paint a picture.” -M. Sudhivoraseth
“You found your voice in Bruce Walker. What a great character!” S. Ponce-Pore
“Surprisingly funny! This book shows great insight into to the unique relationship between a cowboy and his horse.” K. Spradlin
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About Brucearlenwasserman
Bruce Arlen Wasserman assembled his first poetry manuscript at the age of seventeen and farmed and worked as a blacksmith in his twenties. He received a BA in Mass Communications from Winona State University and an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. His literary career has spanned work in news and periodicals, as a freelancer and an editor. His publications include a 2011 poetry collection, An Undiscovered Country (Horace Simerman Literary Press). His poem, “The Wet on Milan Street,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His poem, “Elegy for My Father,” was chosen for inclusion in the Proverse Poetry Prize Anthology, 2017, and his short story, “The Almost Living,” was selected as a semi-finalist for the 2017 Francine Ringold Awards for New Writers. His Poem, "Louisiana Life" will appear in the Spring/Summer, 2018 edition of the Fredericksburg Literary and Art Review. Bruce is a Literary Critic for the New York Journal of Books and the Washington Independent Review of Books, creates visual art as a potter, performs as a musician in a band, works with horses and is a dentist in clinical practice.