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memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Book of Nightmares Galway Kinnell, 1971 A book-length poem evokes the horror, anguish, and brutality of 20th century history. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Death in the Works of Galway Kinnell , |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: When All That's Left of Me Is Love Linda Campanella, 2011-08 When All That's Left of Me Is Love is an intensely personal story about one family's determination to enjoy life while anticipating death. Linda Campanella's emotional account of her last year with her mother, Nancy Sachsse, wrote itself on the pages of her mind as she lay awake unable to sleep in the days and weeks following Nan's death one year and one day after a diagnosis of terminal cancer. It is a heartwarming memoir filled with insights and inspirations that will help anyone jolted into confronting the inevitability and sudden imminence of death. Join the author as she reconstructs and relives a year of living while dying and, in the process, comes to terms with the pain and permanence of her loss. When All That's Left of Me Is Love is indeed a sad story born of death, but it is above all an uplifting portrait of living, loving, believing, and letting go. It is a celebration of the special bond between mothers and daughters, a touching love story, a spiritual journey, a poetry lesson, and even a case for happy hour. This story of a daughter's undying love for her dying mother will move and inspire not only those who face or fear death but also those who love and embrace life. 'This book is truly a testament of love, as the title suggests. It is about love refined and deepened by grief and gratitude. It is a tribute to a mother who loved with her last breath and beyond. It is the story of a daughter who gives herself away through the gift of her pen.' -Sharon G. Thornton, Ph.D., Professor of Pastoral Theology at Andover Newton Theological School |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: When One Has Lived a Long Time Alone Galway Kinnell, 2013-03-06 From the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, a collection of poems ranging from melancholy meditations of a solitary mind concerning estrangement and the longing for reconnection to the natural world and its creatures closely observed. “When One Has Lived a Long Time Alone is a poem that invites us, too, to pay such keen attention—both by seeing and listening—to the world, while also paying respect to our own inner lives, our feelings of solitude or self-estrangement, our longings and obligations to each other.—Jennifer Grotz |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Collected Poems Galway Kinnell, 2017 The first complete showcase of one of the true master poets of his generation, Galway Kinnell (1927-2014): a lifetime's work and a deeply lived life reflected in over two hundred poems. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Galway Kinnell Richard James Calhoun, 1992 In this original study of the life and works of the American poet Galway Kinnell, Richard J. Calhoun offers a fresh, comprehensive look at this award-winning writer, who has so often been misunderstood by critics. Neither a leader of a movement nor a follower, Kinnell has received relatively little representation in standard poetry anthologies, despite his importance in modern verse. He has nevertheless attracted a devoted readership and an increasing amount of critical attention, winning the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1983, and sharing an American Book Award in the same year. This critical study seeks to convey the full range of Kinnell's achievement. Kinnell has produced abundantly in the course of a career that has spanned more than thirty years, publishing eight major volumes of poetry, a novel, assorted critical essays and commentary on his own works in the form of self-interviews and an acclaimed translation of the verse of Francois Villon. In this study, Calhoun places Kinnell in the tradition of the postmodern, personal poets like Theodore Roethke and Robert Lowell, and demonstrates the wide variety of models Kinnell has followed, from Whitman to Rainer Maria Rilke. In doing so, Calhoun challenges those critics who have perceived Kinnell as a poet undeviatingly concerned with mortality, and provides a fresh, nuanced interpretation of Kinnell's work, one that does not try to force the variegated work of this accomplished poet into preconceived categories. Considering in turn Kinnell's life, milieu, works, and influence, Calhoun concludes that the poet has attempted to imaginatively identify with all living creatures of the natural world, to understand the morality required of conscious, living creatures in the face of their mortality.--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: True Refuge Tara Brach, 2013-01-22 From the award–winning author of Radical Acceptance comes “a healing and helpful meditation [and] a gracefully written spiritual gem on awareness, refuge, and presence” (Spirituality & Practice). “This is a precious gift, filled with insight, shared from heart to heart.”—Thich Nhat Hanh How do you cope when facing life-threatening illness, family conflict, a faltering relationship, old trauma, obsessive thinking, overwhelming emotion, or inevitable loss? If you’re like most people, chances are you react with fear and confusion, falling back on timeworn strategies: anger, self-judgment, and addictive behaviors. But there is another way. Beneath the turbulence of our thoughts and emotions exists a profound stillness, a silent awareness capable of limitless love. Tara Brach calls this awareness our true refuge, because it is available to every one of us, at any moment. Based on a fresh interpretation of the three classic Buddhist gateways to freedom—truth, love, and awareness—True Refuge shows us the way not just to heal our suffering, but also to cultivate our capacity for genuine happiness. Through spiritual teachings, guided meditations, and inspirational stories of people who discovered loving presence during times of great struggle, Brach invites us to connect more deeply with our own inner life, one another, and the world around us. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Spiral of Memory Joy Harjo, 2021-08-02 With the recently-published The Woman Who Fell from the Sky, Joy Harjo has emerged as one of the most powerful Native American voices of her generation. Over the past two decades, Harjo has refined and perfected a unique poetic voice that speaks her multifaceted experience as Native American, woman and Westerner in twentieth-century society. The Spiral of Memory gathers the conversations in which Harjo has articulated her singular yet universal perspective on the world and her poetry. She reflects upon the nuances and development of her art, the importance of her origins, the arduous reconstruction of the tribal past, the dramatic confrontation between Native American and Anglo civilizations, the existential and artistic itinerary through present-day America, and other provocative and profoundly human themes. Joy Harjo is the author of several volumes of poetry. She received awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Before Columbus Foundation, and the Poetry Society of America. She is Professor of English, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Laura Coltelli is Associate Professor of American Literature, University of Pisa. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Frank O'Hara Lytle Shaw, 2006-06 Providing a synthesis of New York's artistic and literary worlds, this book uses social and philosophical problems involved in reading a coterie to propose a language for understanding the poet, art critic, and Museum of Modern Art curator, Frank O'Hara. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Strong is Your Hold Galway Kinnell, 2008 Presents a collection of poetry by the winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, including When the Towers Fell, his requiem for the victims of the September 11 attacks. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Rattle Bag Seamus Heaney, Ted Hughes, 2005-03-17 Edited by Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes, and conceived of as a collection of their own favourite poems, The Rattle Bag has established itself as the classic anthology of our time. Heaney and Hughes have brought together an inspired and diverse selection, ranging from undisputed masterpieces to rare discoveries, as well as drawing upon works in translation and traditional poems from oral cultures. In effect, this anthology has transformed the way we define and appreciate poetry, and it will continue to do so for years to come. Including writers from Shakespeare and Blake to Sylvia Plath and T. S. Eliot, The Rattle Bag is eclectic, instructive and inspiring at the same time. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Best Words, Best Order S. Dobyns, 2016-04-30 In this new edition of Best Words, Best Order, Stephen Dobyns further explains the mystery of the poet's work. Through essays on memory and metaphor, pacing, and the intricacies of voice and tone, and thoughtful appreciations of Chekhov, Ritsos, Mandelstam, and Rilke, Dobyns guides readers and writers through poetry's mysterious twilight communiques. For this new second edition, Dobyns has added two new essays, one dealing with the idea of beauty in poetry and another dealing with the almost mystical way poets connect seemingly disparate elements in a single work. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Encyclopedia of American Poetry: The Twentieth Century Eric L. Haralson, 2014-01-21 The Encyclopedia of American Poetry: The Twentieth Century contains over 400 entries that treat a broad range of individual poets and poems, along with many articles devoted to topics, schools, or periods of American verse in the century. Entries fall into three main categories: poet entries, which provide biographical and cultural contexts for the author's career; entries on individual works, which offer closer explication of the most resonant poems in the 20th-century canon; and topical entries, which offer analyses of a given period of literary production, school, thematically constructed category, or other verse tradition that historically has been in dialogue with the poetry of the United States. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: This Carting Life Rustum Kozain, 2005 Moving between vastly different landscapes, this collection of poetry encounters both the real and imaginary the world over from the U.S. and Cape Town to London and Russia. Against this backdrop of wandering, the varied themes include topics such as God, love, art, and politics. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Ditch Memory Todd Davis, 2024-08-01 In an age when many find themselves disconnected from the natural world, celebrated poet Todd Davis offers the possibilities of reconnection, of listening to the earth’s labored breathing, to the thoughts of other-than-human animals and the languages trees speak. In thirty new poems, and with ample selections from his previous seven books, Davis’s roots run deep in Rust-Belt Appalachia, attending to the harmed but healing landscape, the people whose lives are too often neglected, and the looming threat of climate collapse and extinction. Orion Magazine likens Davis’s work to Wendell Berry and Mary Oliver, as he continues to demonstrate what one reviewer describes as his knowledge of “Latin names, common names, habitats and habits . . . steeped in the exactness of the earth and the science that unfolds in wildness.” Known for both narrative and lyrical impulses, Davis asks readers to acknowledge their kinship with all living beings, which demands some grieving for past sins but also suggests a way toward restoration. With a Foreword by David James Duncan. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Columbia Granger's Index to Poetry in Anthologies , 2007 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Heresy and the Ideal David Baker, 2000-04-02 Heresy and the Ideal is a powerful collection of essays and essay-reviews which David Baker wrote and published throughout the 1990s. He thoroughly discusses the work of more than fifty contemporary poets, including T. R. Hummer, Miller Williams, Albert Goldbarth, Jane Kenyon, Galway Kinnell, Charles Simic, Ted Kooser, David Wojahn, Alice Fulton, Louise Glück, and Charles Wright. He takes as his models some of the great critical books of the past three decades, especially Richard Howard's masterpiece, Alone with America, and Helen Vendler's Part of Nature, Part of Us, as well as other works by Laurence Lieberman, Majorie Perloff, Carol Muske, and Mary Kinzie. At its center, Heresy and the Ideal is based on Baker's sense of Romantic poetics, especially on how contemporary poets have applied, altered, or rejected certain Romantic principles. He uses the Romantic trope to measure the tension between passion and reason and between the problems of literary transcendence and the obligations of social engagement. The result is a welcome variety of enlightening, practical criticism devoid of exclusionary jargon and based on persistent attention to an individual poem or book of poems. Utilizing the essay-review, Baker considers each poet's purposes and achievements. He blends the strategies of explanation, analysis, and evaluation, clarifying each poet's work instead of complaining or condemning. Heresy and the Ideal addresses a wide and diverse range of contemporary poetry and should take a deserved place both as a critical introduction to the work of many important poets and as a work that documents and explores the shape of poetry at the end of the millennium. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: My Years at the Gotham Book Mart with Frances Stelloff, Proprietor Howard Koch, Matthew Tannenbaum, 2009-09-11 This short story was written in 1984 by one of Hollywood's finest screenwriters, until he was blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1950. During the 1940s, he was responsible or partially responsible for such great films as The Letter, The Sea Hawk (both 1940), Sergeant York (1941) and Casablanca (1942), for which he shared an Oscar with his co-writers. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: James Wright Jonathan Blunk, 2017-10-17 The authorized and sweeping biography of one of America’s most complex, influential, and enduring poets In the extraordinary generation of American poets who came of age in the middle of the twentieth century, James Wright (1927–1980) was frequently placed at the top of the list. With a fierce, single-minded devotion to his work, Wright escaped the steel town of his Depression-era childhood in the Ohio valley to become a revered professor of English literature and a Pulitzer Prize winner. But his hometown remained at the heart of his work, and he courted a rough, enduring muse from his vivid memories of the Midwest. A full-throated lyricism and classical poise became his tools, honesty and unwavering compassion his trademark. Using meticulous research, hundreds of interviews, and Wright’s public readings, Jonathan Blunk’s authorized biography explores the poet’s life and work with exceptional candor, making full use of Wright’s extensive unpublished work—letters, poems, translations, and personal journals. Focusing on the tensions that forced Wright’s poetic breakthroughs and the relationships that plunged him to emotional depths, Blunk provides a spirited portrait, and a fascinating depiction of this turbulent period in American letters. A gifted translator and mesmerizing reader, Wright appears throughout in all his complex and eloquent urgency. Discerning yet expansive, James Wright will change the way the poet’s work is understood and inspire a new appreciation for his enduring achievement. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: In Rooms of Memory Hilary Masters, 2010-03-04 This mature, exquisite collection of personal essays by Hilary Masters offers a rare pleasure. Here are meditations and reflections distilled in fine prose from a long and varied life--musings that, in the distinguished tradition of essays carried on since the days of Montaigne, articulate the piquant insights of the writer's experience. In this collection, one of the most illustrious contemporary essayists transfigures incidents and observations into something far more--a finely crafted window into the workings of experience and memory. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: I Would Lie to You if I Could Chard deNiord, 2018-07-14 I Would Lie To You If I Could contains interviews with nine eminent contemporary American poets (Natasha Trethewey, Jane Hirshfield, Martín Espada, Stephen Kuusisto, Stephen Sandy, Ed Ochester, Carolyn Forche, Peter Everwine, and Galway Kinnell) and James Wright’s widow Anne, presents conversations with a vital cross section of poets representing a variety of ages, ethnicities, and social backgrounds. The poets testify to the demotic nature of poetry as a charged language that speaks uniquely in original voices, yet appeals universally. As individuals with their own transpersonal stories, the poets have emerged onto the national stage from very local places with news that witnesses memorably in social, personal, and political ways. They talk about their poems and development as poets self-effacingly, honestly, and insightfully, describing just how and when they were hurt into poetry, as well as why they have pursued writing poetry as a career in which, as Robert Frost noted in his poem Two Tramps in Mud Time, their object has become to unite [their] avocation and [their] vocation / As [their] two eyes make one in sight. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Mortal Acts, Mortal Words Galway Kinnell, 1980 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: From the Other World Bruce Henricksen, Robert Johnson, 2008 From the Other World: Poems in Memory of James Wright brings together elegies written by many of Wright's most important contemporaries, including Robert Bly, Galway Kinnell, W.S. Merwin, and C.K Williams. Interspersed with these are poems by a newer generation of writers inspired by Wright. This unique collection attests to the continuing stature of James Wright on the American literary landscape. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Radical Dreaming John D. Goldhammer, 2003 In a world where an increasing number of people feel depressed and powerless, this title shows that everyone can find the meaning and purpose of their lives by understanding and actively using what their dreams tell them. Based on the methods he employs in his popular workshops, Dr. Goldhammer's life changing guide shows readers how to unlock the secret code of dreams and discover their life's destiny. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Columbia Granger's Index to Poetry , 1994 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Columbia Granger's Index to African-American Poetry Nicholas Frankovich, David Larzelere, 1999 Responding to the enormous interest in African-American literature, Columbia University Press is publishing a Granger's(R) index devoted exclusively to poetry by African-Americans. To compile the Index to African-American Poetry, a team of consultants indentified the best, most widely available anthologies and volumes of collected and selected works. The result: this new index includes more than 11,000 poems by 659 poets. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Signifying Pain Judith Harris, 2012-02-01 A deeply personal yet universal work, Signifying Pain applies the principles of therapeutic writing to such painful life experiences as mental illness, suicide, racism, domestic abuse, and even genocide. Probing deep into the bedrock of literary imagination, Judith Harris traces the odyssey of a diverse group of writers—John Keats, Derek Walcott, Jane Kenyon, Michael S. Harper, Robert Lowell, and Ai, as well as student writers—who have used their writing to work through and past such personal traumas. Drawing on her own experience as a poet and teacher, Harris shows how the process can be long and arduous, but that when exercised within the spirit of one's own personal compassion, the results can be limitless. Signifying Pain will be of interest not only to teachers of creative and therapeutic writing, but also to those with a critical interest in autobiographical or confessional writing more generally. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Congressional Record United States. Congress, 1977 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Pushcart Prize, VII , 1982 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: A New Selected Poems Galway Kinnell, 2001 A collection of more than sixty of Galway Kinnell's poems, spanning 1960-1994. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: AB Bookman's Weekly , 1987-11 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: New Letters Review of Books , 1990 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Dreaming of Ramadi in Detroit Aisha Sabatini Sloan, 2024-02-20 An electric essay collection about Blackness, art, and dreaming of new possibilities in a time of constriction This collection of innovative, penetrating, and lively essays features swimming pools and poets, road trips and museums, family dinners and celebrity sightings. In a voice that is at once piercing, mournful, and slyly comic, Aisha Sabatini Sloan inhabits several roles: she is an art enthusiast in Los Angeles during a city-wide manhunt; a daughter on a road trip with her father; a professor playing with puppets in the wilds of Vermont; an interloper on a police ride-along in Detroit; a collector of the dreams of scientists at a biostation. As she watches cell phone video recordings of murder and is haunted in her sleep by the news, she reflects on her formative experiences with aesthetic and spiritual discovery, troubling those places where Blackness has been conflated with death. Sabatini Sloan’s lively style is perfectly suited to the way she circles a subject or an idea before cinching it tight. The curiosity that guides each essay, focusing on the period between the 2016 election and the onset of the pandemic, is rooted in the supposition that there is an intrinsic relationship between the way we conceptualize darkness and our collective opportunity for awakening. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: More Light Jason Shinder, 1993 Collected here for the first time is a wondrous array of over 80 contemporary American voices who all have something to say about the relationship between fathers and daughters. Contributors include Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Gwendolyn Brooks, Richard Wilbur, Bob Dylan, Raymond Carver, Sharon Olds, and others. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Twentieth-Century and Contemporary American Literature in Context Linda De Roche, 2021-06-04 This four-volume reference work surveys American literature from the early 20th century to the present day, featuring a diverse range of American works and authors and an expansive selection of primary source materials. Bringing useful and engaging material into the classroom, this four-volume set covers more than a century of American literary history—from 1900 to the present. Twentieth-Century and Contemporary American Literature in Context profiles authors and their works and provides overviews of literary movements and genres through which readers will understand the historical, cultural, and political contexts that have shaped American writing. Twentieth-Century and Contemporary American Literature in Context provides wide coverage of authors, works, genres, and movements that are emblematic of the diversity of modern America. Not only are major literary movements represented, such as the Beats, but this work also highlights the emergence and development of modern Native American literature, African American literature, and other representative groups that showcase the diversity of American letters. A rich selection of primary documents and background material provides indispensable information for student research. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: When People Publish Frederick Busch, 1986 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: Publishers Weekly , 1990 |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: The Sporting Muse Don Johnson, 2004-04-02 This study analyzes contemporary American sports poetry, demonstrating that poems about sports express common attitudes and showing what the respective sports' poems say about American culture of the last fifty years. While placing particular emphasis on the hero in American sports poetry, the study proves that a considerable body of sports poetry exists in American culture and that it is worthy of serious analysis. The study opens with the analysis done so far on sports poetry, articulates methods of approach, and gives a brief history of sports poetry, beginning with victory chants around the tribal campfire. From Thayer's Casey at the Bat to Gibb's Listening to the Ballgame, the body of the work is organized thematically by sport: baseball, football, basketball, women's sports, and minor sports such as golf, racquet sports, and boxing. The study concludes with a chapter on poems about fans and spectators and a summary of the study's arguments. Each section gives detailed readings of many poems. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: America since 1945 Paul Levine, Harry Papasotiriou, 2010-11-17 The period from 1945 to the present day may not constitute an American century, but it can be seen as the American Moment: the time when, for good or ill, the United States became the predominant political, military, economic and cultural power in the world. This revised and updated new edition introduces the historic and tumultuous developments in American politics, foreign policy, society and culture during this period. It includes coverage of key recent events, such as the: - 2008 election of Barack Obama - global recession - protracted war in Iraq and Afghanistan - rise of the internet - transformation of American Society and Culture - challenges of new immigration and multi-culturalism - changing global status of the US in the new millennium. Examining the American Moment in a global context, the authors emphasise the interaction between politics, society and culture. America Since 1945 encourages an awareness of how central currents in art, literature, film, theatre, intellectual history and media have developed alongside an understanding of political, economic and social change. |
memories of my father by galway kinnell: ROME: Poems Dorothea Lasky, 2014-09-29 “Fearlessly frank” and “unabashedly vulnerable” (Tracy K. Smith), Dorothea Lasky’s ROME confronts love and heartbreak in the modern world. Dorothea Lasky is one of the most talented American poets of her generation. With haunting lines that “recall Frank O’Hara and Allen Ginsberg” (Chicago Tribune) and influences ranging from Drake to Catullus, Lasky fuses the ancient world with the fierceness and heartbreak of everyday life. With each new book, from the grand religiosity of AWE to the flat sadness and nihilism of Black Life to the witchery of Thunderbird, her poems keep gaining an increasingly robust readership and have influenced an entire generation of younger poets. In ROME, Lasky finds herself in the arena of eternal longing and heartsick desire, confronting her ghosts and demons and proving she’s “one of the very best poets we’ve got” (Maggie Nelson). |
Oklahoma City Memories - OKCTalk
Jul 22, 2004 · I'll be 26 in September. I was born at Edmond Memorial Hospital in 1978, and my first home was right across the street from the hospital (now Edmond Regional Medical …
OKC restaurant memories - OKCTalk
Jan 10, 2006 · Hello, I am new here, but I have some OKC food memories. Included: Crystal’s Pizza (Always enjoyed watching Laurel & Hardy, etc. in the movie section). Shakey’s Pizza …
Southside OKC Memories....anyone? - Page 138
Mar 12, 2019 · I'm from southside, mainly gander flats on se 15th where I attended Shidler school from 1960 thru 1965. moved to Capitol Hill area and attended Capitol Hill Junior as well as …
Southside OKC Memories....anyone? - OKCTalk
Jun 4, 2008 · That brings back some memories! I road my bicycle on S. Pennsylvania (back then it was a dirt road south of 89th) to go fishing at a couple ponds around 119th street. Later, we …
Memories of the old Chandel club - okctalk.com
Mar 16, 2016 · Memories of the old Chandel club I recall going to the Chandel club at the top of United Founders very young boy sometime in the late 60's. It was, at the time, pretty …
Childhood Memories of OKC - OKCTalk
Oct 4, 2006 · Wow, you guys are killing me with great memories. My Pie Pizza was great, somewhere around 63rd and NW Highway. Pizza Planet has one of my fondest memories. I …
Nostalgia & Memories - OKCTalk
Sep 25, 2013 · Oklahoma City Memories. Started by okcpulse, 07-22-2004 11:38 PM 30 Pages ...
Restaurant memories - OKCTalk
Apr 10, 2010 · By Steve in forum Nostalgia & Memories Replies: 22 Last Post: 03-25-2009, 07:41 PM. New local restaurant ...
Oklahoma City Memories - Page 8 - OKCTalk
I'll be 26 in September. I was born at Edmond Memorial Hospital in 1978, and my first home was right across the street from the hospital (now Edmond Regional Medical Center). My earliest …
OKC restaurant memories [Archive] - OKCTalk
Jan 17, 2006 · Hello, I am new here, but I have some OKC food memories. Included: Crystal’s Pizza (Always enjoyed watching Laurel & Hardy, etc. in the movie section). Shakey’s Pizza …
Oklahoma City Memories - OKCTalk
Jul 22, 2004 · I'll be 26 in September. I was born at Edmond Memorial Hospital in 1978, and my first home was right across the street from the hospital (now Edmond Regional Medical …
OKC restaurant memories - OKCTalk
Jan 10, 2006 · Hello, I am new here, but I have some OKC food memories. Included: Crystal’s Pizza (Always enjoyed watching Laurel & Hardy, etc. in the movie section). Shakey’s Pizza …
Southside OKC Memories....anyone? - Page 138
Mar 12, 2019 · I'm from southside, mainly gander flats on se 15th where I attended Shidler school from 1960 thru 1965. moved to Capitol Hill area and attended Capitol Hill Junior as well as …
Southside OKC Memories....anyone? - OKCTalk
Jun 4, 2008 · That brings back some memories! I road my bicycle on S. Pennsylvania (back then it was a dirt road south of 89th) to go fishing at a couple ponds around 119th street. Later, we …
Memories of the old Chandel club - okctalk.com
Mar 16, 2016 · Memories of the old Chandel club I recall going to the Chandel club at the top of United Founders very young boy sometime in the late 60's. It was, at the time, pretty …
Childhood Memories of OKC - OKCTalk
Oct 4, 2006 · Wow, you guys are killing me with great memories. My Pie Pizza was great, somewhere around 63rd and NW Highway. Pizza Planet has one of my fondest memories. I …
Nostalgia & Memories - OKCTalk
Sep 25, 2013 · Oklahoma City Memories. Started by okcpulse, 07-22-2004 11:38 PM 30 Pages ...
Restaurant memories - OKCTalk
Apr 10, 2010 · By Steve in forum Nostalgia & Memories Replies: 22 Last Post: 03-25-2009, 07:41 PM. New local restaurant ...
Oklahoma City Memories - Page 8 - OKCTalk
I'll be 26 in September. I was born at Edmond Memorial Hospital in 1978, and my first home was right across the street from the hospital (now Edmond Regional Medical Center). My earliest …
OKC restaurant memories [Archive] - OKCTalk
Jan 17, 2006 · Hello, I am new here, but I have some OKC food memories. Included: Crystal’s Pizza (Always enjoyed watching Laurel & Hardy, etc. in the movie section). Shakey’s Pizza …