A place for us
Anthology features writers seeking a better world
Welcome to Rocky Mountain Reader! We’re here because we value books and authors and the freedom to exchange ideas and explore new worlds through reading. We’re here to highlight the vast and varied landscape of literary arts in our home state of Colorado.
Join us each week by logging on to www.rockymountainreader.org; by subscribing to our weekly newsletter that will provide direct links to all new content; and by donating to our nonprofit in support of our operating costs and mission.
We’re happy to be here and we’re overjoyed to have you here with us on the website. Enjoy!
Anthology features writers seeking a better world
The Applicant chronicles an artist, an immigrant, a student’s search for definition
Memoir explores ranching life in a fast-changing world
Generations of pain and endurance, starting at Sand Creek in 1864
David R. Slayton’s latest turns Hogwarts on its head
Andrea Lani and family take on the Colorado Trail
Anthology celebrates creativity of Colorado Latinx storytellers
Debut novel inhabits Alaskan wilderness with two souls, lost and searching
coming storm marks each month of a year in poems. Like Matsuo Basho, the traditional haiku master, Colorado Springs-based poet and teacher Dave Reynolds invokes images of the natural world and seasons. Beginning with January, he reflects upon snow laden scenes, deer in moonlight and impending storms. His family is often the subject. Coffee and spouse’s moods percolate; arguments pave paths like an avalanche. February speaks to resolutions and the pull of unbreakable habits. Yet those moments are erased in a blanket of white, their marks only visible once feet leave a Hansel and Gretel trail. Spring begins with reflections on the past and wordplay: “another year / another columbine shooting / up through the dirt.” Here, Reynolds remembers April 20, 1999, and the Columbine High School mass shooting. He, too, is a high school educator, Chair of the English department at Fountain Valley School in Colorado Springs. In his haiku, he educates his reader, remembering past losses masked in the colors of mountain flowers. Reynolds canters into hopeful summer: “the fog lifts / one by one / horses on the prairie.” He steps outside the indoor classroom to open space. Meadowlarks trill, dandelion seeds blow in the wind and fireflies glow like what once was. As summer fades, sometimes life does too. Reynolds learns by “letting go” those memories, just as he breaks with traditional haiku in both syllable count and topic. Dave Reynolds uses humor, sadness, nostalgia and love to animate his delicate haiku. He dedicates his collection to the women in his life, as well as haiku writers and readers—those that inspire him and keep the art form alive today. — Shelli Rottschafer