A Random Collection of Poems and
Songs Like Nothin' You've Ever Read
What if a book refused to stay in one lane—and instead invited you to wander?
Hodgepodge: A Random Collection of Poems and Songs Like Nothin’ You’ve Ever Read isn’t built like a tidy poetry anthology; it feels more like opening a well-worn notebook found on a kitchen table, its pages filled over years of living. The world inside is stitched together from memory, humor, heartbreak, faith, satire, and sudden bursts of song. One page leans into playful rhythm and country wit; the next pivots toward raw reflection or spiritual reckoning. There’s no single road here—only a series of side paths, each carrying its own mood.
The atmosphere shifts constantly, and that’s the point. Some pieces carry the cadence of front-porch storytelling, where laughter drifts as easily as summer air. Others move inward, grappling with mortality, regret, grace, or the quiet persistence of belief. The tension isn’t plot-driven—it’s emotional. What happens when a mind refuses to filter itself? When sentimentality and sarcasm share the same page? When a song lyric becomes a confession?
There’s a distinctly Americana pulse running through the collection—echoes of old hymnals, country ballads, and small-town conversations—yet it also carries the unpredictability of spoken word. The poems don’t posture. They meander, they jab, they wink. At times they feel like campfire tunes; at others, like late-night thoughts scribbled in the margins of memory.
What makes this collection stand out is its embrace of imperfection. The title signals it plainly: this is a hodgepodge. But beneath the randomness lies a quiet question—can a life ever be summarized in one tone, one genre, one voice? The book suggests otherwise. It honors the messiness of being human: contradictory, nostalgic, faithful, funny, wounded, hopeful.
In a literary landscape that often demands cohesion and branding, this collection leans into variety as its truth. It doesn’t ask to be categorized; it asks to be experienced—piece by piece, mood by mood.
Click here to get Hodgepodge on Barnes & Noble

No comments:
Post a Comment