From the Münchner Bücherschau: the German edition of Feeding the Doves, Taubenfuettern, on display, taking its place among my earlier Fruit Dove Press titles.
Tag Archives: publications
‘you and I’
.
you and I this winter ellipsis
.
Modern Haiku vol. 46.1 winter-Spring 2015
‘permission’
‘cloud drift’ and ‘polar vortex’ in A Hundred Gourds
Delighted to see two of my poems:
‘cloud drift’ and
‘polar vortex’
in A Hundred Gourds … (pp. 6 and 14, 3:3, June 2014) together with so many wonderful poems!
Check them out here and here
‘consolation’ in tinywords
.
consolation in each raindrop the sea
.
Delighted to have my one-liner appear on tinywords today!
‘dovecot’
dovecot
knowing the way
home
.
Presence #49, 2014, p. 29
Feeding the Doves
Feeding the Doves: 31 short and very short stories, and haibun
Available through Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.de and Kindle
Patty Apostolides on Amazon.com:
“Lyrical and Concise”: “…well written and full of beautiful, touching, and sometimes haunting, melodic stories.”
Read the review by author of Greek Novels Patty Apostolides here
*
Dr. Joseph Berke on Amazon.co.uk:
“Feedings the Doves = feeding the soul”: “This is a wonderful, evocative book, rich in imagery…”
The review by author and psychotherapist Dr. Joseph Berke on Amazon.co.uk
*
Katie Low in Sabotage Reviews:
“…characters recall how that sad event shaped their own histories, but the tone is one of hopefulness, of looking to the future and making the best of situations that will always be imperfect.”
“This sparseness extends to the stories individually, which do not waste their limited word-count on scene-setting or extraneous characterisation; each one evokes a mood, makes a point, or charts a phase in an individual’s development without telling us anything more than we need to know.“
Read the whole of what Katie Low has to say here
*
Marjory McGinn on Amazon.co.uk:
“Stunning insight into the Greek experience”
“… each story is poet gem, offering … moments of revelation and introspection”
Read the whole of Marjory McGinn’s review here
Marjory McGinn is the author of “Things Can only Get Feta”
*
Blogcritics: Daniel Burton:
“Unique and surprising, tight and passionate language”
“Every once in a while, I get a book in the mail that is unique from anything else I’ve ever read. As a collection of short stories, Stella Pieride’s Feeding the Doves has given me a new definition of what short means, not to mention how quickly a story can be told… ”
“…references to Greece and its geography and culture, ancient and modern, pepper Pieride’s stories. It’s a wonderful setting for her flash fiction, and I found her writing a refreshing and unique collection.
“Each feels like an intimate glimpse into someone’s life, a brief moment in time. And given that each is so quick, so fast, and yet so personal, it’s saying something that Pieride is able to levy language to create this impact in such sort space.”
*
Neos Kosmos Review (Australia’s leading Greek community news source) by Helen Velissaris:
“These stories manage to show universal themes entwined with the Greek psyche to give a new perspective on the Greece in the media’s headlines.
Above all, these stories show Greece isn’t defined by its current bank account, but rather the people that inhabit it.”
*
Mia Avramut‘s review on Amazon.co.uk:
“From a symbol of the divine (“A Life-Changing Story), to an object of meditation and near-worship in Syntagma Square (as in the title story), to their possible end in a soup kitchen destined to feed hungry children (“Pigeons”), doves’ journey functions as a counterpoint to the human sacrifice and quest for nourishing truths. Several glimpses into silent, sometimes tortured lives, end in haiku. It serves to deepen the reader’s understanding, and add new dimensions to the prose. And it’s a treat, as Pierides is both an archeologist of experiences, and a mistress of haibun.
Since Yourcenar and Kazantzakis, nobody has illuminated with such wisdom and compassion the often unseen lives that make the humanity what it is: a traveling, travailing organism with feet of myth.”
.
Mia Avramut is a Romanian-born writer, physician, researcher, and poetry editor at Connotation Press.
***
About
Having left Greece in her youth, Stella Pierides, the author of “Feeding the Doves”, returns to the country of her birth through a collection of stories that lie at the heart of Greek identity.
About the Book:
Greece has been in the headlines for a very long time. Recently, the headlines have been gloomy and negative, the country facing some of its most difficult years. Against this background, “Feeding the Doves” explores recurrent elements of the Greek psyche, tracing them back to challenges posed by the country’s history, culture, and environment.
The widow, the old loner, the refugee, the immigrant, the young, the writer, the expatriate, tell us their stories, touching upon themes at the heart of Greek being: Love and loss, civil war, immigration and diaspora, emigration, poverty, religion, history and catastrophe, and above all, the will to survive.
“What I admire here are the shining moments of revelation, of truths large and small bursting through the lives and memories of these characters. So many characters, and so rich!”
—John Wentworth Chapin
Founding Editor, 52|250 and A Baker’s Dozen
“Stories to surprise and entertain, to wake and calm, to wrench and elate, to tell the Greek story, past and present, and everyone’s story.”
-—Michael Dylan Welch, poet, writer,
and editor/publisher of Press Here books
*
Fruit Dove Press
Email: admin@fruitdovepress.com
http://www.fruitdovepress.com
Perfect softbound
87 pages, 90gm cream interior paper
Full-color laminated cover
129 mm x 198 mm trim size
ISBN: 978-3-944155-03-6
Price: £8.00 UK and EUR 9,00
Available through Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.de
‘first dawn’ in the Diogen greeting card 2014
first dawn…
slow drip of last year’s
snow
prvo svitanje…
sporo kapanje lanjskog
snijega
.
A Happy, Healthy and Fulfilling New Year 2014, everyone!
Poem in the Diogen pro Kultura magazine greeting card, p. 9
‘treading grapes’ in Writers & Lovers Cafe
treading grapes
steps on the hem
of her gown
‘cutting edge’ in Bones #3, 2013
.
cutting edge with scissors
.
I am what I am
a leaf that prays
.
in Bones: Journal for Contemporary Haiku, 15 December 2013, pp. 21 and 42
‘heatwave’ The Heron’s Nest
‘fireflies’ in the HSA Anthology
.
fireflies
the stars in the embers
.
in ‘this world’ the Haiku Society of America Anthology, 2013.
‘autumn loneliness’ in Haiku News
autumn loneliness
the farmer makes a wife
for his scarecrow
.
This haiku appeared in Haiku News: No: 2 Vol. 33
(First publication in Asahi Shimbun, From the notebook section)
See more of my haiku in Haiku News here
‘pending’ and ‘Plato’s cave’
pending your answer the moon’s glare
(p. 8)
.
Plato’s cave each day a new shadow
(p. 49)
.
in Bones, journal for contemporary haiku, No. 2, 15 June 2013
‘Human Rights and Wrongs’ in Amnesty’s Livewire blog
Amnesty International’s Livewire blog features the blog post I wrote for Blog Action Day 2013, “Human Rights and Wrongs”. One of their three favourite blogs, it can be seen by clicking here
“Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 3 million supporters, members and activists in over 150 countries and territories who campaign to end grave abuses of human rights.” Read more about Amnesty’s work here
Feeding the Doves: First Goodreads reviews!
Good news first: Three reviews of my “Feeding the Doves” are now up on Goodreads! They can be viewed by clicking and scrolling down here (though you need to sign in to see them all). A big thank you to the readers who took the time to read and comment.
The bad news? I tried configuring the Goodreads Reviews button for my website and failed! The button would show the latest reviews as they appear on the right of this page. Instead, in that space, I only managed to include the Goodreads URL!
Feeding the Doves: 31 Short and Very Short Stories, and Haibun
Feeding the Doves Now available to order from amazon.co.uk, amazon.de and Kindle
“Unique and surprising, tight and passionate language”
“Every once in a while, I get a book in the mail that is unique from anything else I’ve ever read. As a collection of short stories, Stella Pieride’s Feeding the Doves has given me a new definition of what short means, not to mention how quickly a story can be told… ”
“… I found her writing a refreshing and unique collection.”
Read Daniel Burton’s review here: Attack of the Books!
The review is also available on Amazon.com
***
Extract from Mia Avramut’s review on Amazon.co.uk:
“From a symbol of the divine (“A Life-Changing Story), to an object of meditation and near-worship in Syntagma Square (as in the title story), to their possible end in a soup kitchen destined to feed hungry children (“Pigeons”), doves’ journey functions as a counterpoint to the human sacrifice and quest for nourishing truths. Several glimpses into silent, sometimes tortured lives, end in haiku. It serves to deepen the reader’s understanding, and add new dimensions to the prose. And it’s a treat, as Pierides is both an archeologist of experiences, and a mistress of haibun.
Since Yourcenar and Kazantzakis, nobody has illuminated with such wisdom and compassion the often unseen lives that make the humanity what it is: a traveling, travailing organism with feet of myth.”Mia Avramut is a Romanian- born writer, physician, researcher, and poetry editor at Connotation Press.
***
Having left Greece in her youth, the author of “Feeding the Doves” returns to the country of her birth through a collection of stories that lie at the heart of Greek identity.
About the Book: Greece has been in the headlines for a very long time. Recently, the headlines have been gloomy and negative, the country facing some of its most difficult years. Against this background, “Feeding the Doves” explores recurrent elements of the Greek psyche, tracing them back to challenges posed by the country’s history, culture, and environment.
The widow, the old loner, the refugee, the immigrant, the young, the writer, the expatriate, tell us their stories, touching upon themes at the heart of Greek being: Love and loss, civil war, immigration and diaspora, emigration, poverty, religion, history and catastrophe, and above all, the will to survive.
“What I admire here are the shining moments of revelation, of truths large and small bursting through the lives and memories of these characters. So many characters, and so rich!”
—John Wentworth Chapin
Founding Editor, 52|250 and A Baker’s Dozen
“Stories to surprise and entertain, to wake and calm, to wrench and elate, to tell the Greek story, past and present, and everyone’s story.”
-—Michael Dylan Welch, poet, writer,
and editor/publisher of Press Here books
Email: admin@fruitdovepress.com
http://www.fruitdovepress.com
Perfect softbound
87 pages, 90gm cream interior paper
Full-color laminated cover
129 mm x 198 mm trim size
ISBN: 978-3-944155-03-6
Price: £8.00 UK
Available from August 2013 through Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.de.
.
Feeding the Doves
Forthcoming
Feeding the Doves
31 Short and Very Short Stories, and Haibun
Greece has been in the headlines for a very long time. Since ancient times, her philosophers, historians, mathematicians, shipbuilders, traders, and artisans have been making the news – and, indeed, history. So, amidst the country’s most difficult years in recent times, many people believe that they know Greece and the Greeks.
.
Against this backdrop, the stories – short and very short – collected in “Feeding the Doves” explore recurrent elements of the Greek psyche, tracing them back to challenges posed by the country’s history and environment. The widow, the old loner, the refugee, the immigrant, the writer, the expatriate tell us their stories, touching upon themes at the heart of Greek being, as well as our common humanity: love and l loss, war, civil war, immigration and diaspora, emigration, poverty, religion, history, and above all, the will to survive.
Cover Design:
Rob Ward, Freelance Animator
Fruit Dove Press
Email: admin@fruitdovepress.com
.
[The title story “Feeding the Doves” and the cover image were inspired by a photo taken by Robert Geiss, titled “Feeding Doves” and posted on his (sadly, no longer active) blog “Daily Athens Photo.”]
Haiku From German Tongues
Pleased to be featured in Haiku From German Tongues.
The site founders, owners, and admin, Heike Stehr and Ralf Bröker, by presenting haiku in Englsih, aim
“to give at least a certain impression of the particular range covered by haiku from German tongues to a wider international audience.”
They are doing a great job. Visit and see… you’ll be impressed by the range of haiku and the haiku poets writing it.
‘spring snow’ in Presence 48, June 2013
spring snow…
anything for a singing
insect
.
Presence 48, June 2013
‘winding road’ Blithe Spirit 23:2, 2013
.
winding road to nowhere rituals
.
Blithe Spirit 23:2, 2013
‘warm days’ Modern Haiku, 44.2, 2013
.
warm days wrapped up in a word too many
.
Modern Haiku 44.2, 2013
‘ivy’ in Modern Haiku, 44:1, 2013
.
ivy clinging to the tree trunk her long nails
.
Modern Haiku, 44:1, 2013, p. 109
‘spit polishing’ in Haiku News Vol. 2 No 17
spit polishing
her scuffed shoes—
war child
.
Haiku News, Vol. 2 No. 17: Karma Tenzing Wangchuck, Stella Pierdes, Michael Henry Lee
May 13th, 2013
.
First appeared on NaHaiWriMo
‘screeching tyres’ in Blithe Spirit 23:2
screeching tyres
the red camellias
in her front garden
.
Blithe Spirit, vol 23:2
‘poems in waiting’ in Issa’s Untidy Hut
poems in waiting
the years I lost for fear
of chrysanthemums
.
9 May 2013 Issa’s Untidy Hut
‘poacher’s moon’ Haiku News 6 June 2013
poacher’s moon
a crocus knows how
to wait
.
Haiku News Vol. 2 No. 20: Sandip Sital Chauhan & Stella Pierides
‘spring tides’ A Hundred Gourds 2:3 June 2013
spring tides
the doctor keeps wiping
his nose
.
A Hundred Gourds 2:3 June 2013
‘hot day’ in Moongarlic, issue 0, May 2013
hot day –
on the train only the dog
meets my eye
.
In the new Moongarlic E-zine
edited by Sheila Windsor and Brendan Slater, issue 0, May 2013, p. 15
.
(First credit: In the Garden of Absence, Fruit Dove Press, 2012, p.16)
‘storks’ nest’ Kernels, Spring 2013
storks’ nest
the chimney sweep
holds his breath
.
Kernelsonline, Premier edition, Spring 2013

l