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This collection of Peter Payack's poetry was culled from over 2,000 new and previously published poems by his longtime editor and friend, Roland Pease. This is Pease's third collection of Payack's work, including No Free Will in Tomatoes (1988) and Blanket Knowledge (1997), both published by Zoland Books. Payack has been anthologized widely in such critically acclaimed publications as The Paris Review Anthology, Asimov's Wonders of the World Anthology, Astronomy, from Earth to the Universe, Rolling Stone, and The New York Times.
Global Warming threatens Christmas as rising seas engulf the enchanted village at the North Pole and Rudolf the Reindeer's nose loses its gleam. As the world's governments and scientists fail in their attempts to solve the crisis, the children of the world unite to save Christmas.
Award winning science fiction poet Peter Payack's New and selected poems from 1975-2020. The Internationally acclaimed Payack has published over 2,000 poems, stories, prose poems, photos and articles including multiple appearances in The Paris Review, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, The Cornell Review, Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Creative Computing and the Boston Globe. Payack is one of a handful of authors who has published Issac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine for six decades, dating back to 1978. Peter is also one of the rare authors who as not only placed poems in the leading science fiction magazines but also in such luminary publications as The Paris Review, The New York Times, The Cornell Review and Creative Computing. The Migration of Darkness, won the 1980 Rhysling Award, signifying The Best Poem in Science Fiction Poetry, and was recently has been acclaimed The #1 poem that unites art and science (Quirk Press). Omni Magazine has named it as #2 of the top Science Fiction poems of all time. It was named #5 in Ten Great Scifi poems by io9.com. The London Based, TES, (Times Educational Suppliment) uses the poemas Chapter 15, in it's "What is Science Fiction?" web based course Peter Payack is the First Poet Populist of Cambridge, Massachusetts. As a Sky Artist Peter is long renowned for putting poetry in public spaces and has done so as a commissioned artist at M.I.T's International Sky Art Conference (Delphi, Greece), The Harvard 350th Anniversary celebration, the New York Avant Garde Festival and Boston's First Night. His first foray into making poetry public was his innovation Phone-a-Poem, The Cambridge/Boston Poetry Hotline, (1976-2001.) This Achievement has now been archived at Harvard's Lamont Library's Woodberry Poetry Room, and has now been digitalized to hear such poets as Allen Ginsberg, Jane Kenyon and James Tate.
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