Snowbound
Poems for Winter Days
Foreword by J. Richard Watson
Imprint: Resource Publications
S T Kimbrough, Jr. holds a PhD from Princeton Theological Seminary and is currently a Research Fellow of the Center of Studies in the Wesleyan Tradition at Duke Divinity School in Durham, North Carolina. He is author of the following books by Wipf and Stock: The Lyrical Theology of Charles Wesley; Radical Grace: Justice for the Poor and Marginalized; Participation in the Divine Nature in the Writings of Charles Wesley; May She Have a Word with You? Women as Models of How to Live in the Poems of Charles Wesley; and three books of poetry: Why Should a Child Be Born? Poems for Peace and Renewal in the Middle East; Of Death and Grief: Poems for Healing and Renewal; and A Seagull Lunch and Other Nature Poems (Save Our Planet!).
“What might be a monotonous experience for many is for S T Kimbrough a poetic opportunity. With keen observance and attentiveness, he has written poems exploring his response to daily snowfall outside his window, and to his own inner changes of mood—awestruck, reflective, brooding, longing, hopeful, impatient, sometimes bored. With sharp description of sensory details, with humor, and a practiced ear for classic poetic form, Kimbrough’s book is a gift for any season.”
—Barbara Day Miller, Associate Professor Emerita in the Practice of Liturgy and Music, Candler School of Theology, Emory University
“Pick up S T Kimbrough’s collection of poetry and turn it over. Watch each poem gently settle into a global scene. Each holds its own crystalline shape and sense, and as the volume deepens, we can begin to read the footprints in the snow. This is a spiritual journal of a man bound on a mission for God. Merry or melancholy, heartbroken or hopeful, the poems invite the reader/believer to join in singing, ‘Let it snow.’”
—Heather Murray Elkins, Hannan Professor of Worship and Preaching Emerita, Drew University