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Monthly Archives: June 2025

California: Spring Garden Delights 2025

29 Sunday Jun 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Nature and the Environment, United States

≈ 81 Comments

Tags

Abutilon ‘Tiger Eye’ plant, Adenia glauca, Aeonium ‘Lily Pad’ succulent, Baby Rubber Plant (Peperomia obtusifolia ‘Variegata’), Beauty in Diversity, California Spring Garden 2025, Gingko Biloba, Indoor Garden Los Angeles/CA, Los Angeles/California, Polka-Dot or Bunny Ear Cactus

Rosaliene’s Garden – Spring 2025 – Sons’ Adjacent Apartment

During the warmer and drier spring days, I was finally able to return to my weekend gardening activities. Our garden remains a source of joy and a refuge. With ongoing raids in our Latino communities across Los Angeles County and beyond, it has become clear that one’s legal status offers no protection from being randomly grabbed and disappeared. No criminal record; no problem. They fabricate one: resisting arrest, assaulting an officer. It’s a numbers game: a 3000-a-day quota. Now, I’m wary about going for my scheduled yearly blood and urine tests next month. You see, my medical clinic also serves our Latino and homeless communities.

During the time I spend with our plants, I forget this crazy world I now live in. They respond to my presence, my touch, and my voice. (Yes. I talk to the plants. 😊) They care not about the color of my skin or country of origin. My neighbor’s cat, Pumpkin, couldn’t care less, either. She loves to spend time with me while I’m gardening. At the request of blogger and cat lover, Rebecca Bud at Rebecca’s Reading Room, I’m sharing the photos below of Pumpkin.

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Poem “Wildebeests Migrate Across the Serengeti” by Brazilian Poet Micheliny Verunschk

22 Sunday Jun 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Poetry

≈ 63 Comments

Tags

Brazilian Poet Micheliny Verunschk, Human and Non-human Migration, Poem “Wildebeests Migrate Across the Serengeti / Gnus Migram Através do Serengeti” by Micheliny Verunschk, Poetry Collection The Movement of Birds / O Movimento dos Pássaros (2020) by Micheliny Verunschk, Recife/Pernambuco/Brazil

Brazilian Poet Micheliny Verunschk
Photo by Renato Parada (2023)

My Poetry Corner June 2025 features the poem “Wildebeests Migrate Across the Serengeti / Gnus Migram Através do Serengeti” from the poetry collection The Movement of Birds / O Movimento dos Pássaros (2020) by Micheliny Verunschk, an award-winning Brazilian poet, romance novelist, literary critic, and historian. All the excerpts cited in this article are from this collection.

Verunschk was born in Recife, capital of the Northeast State of Pernambuco, in 1972 during the period of Brazil’s military dictatorship (1964-1985). Her father was in the military; her mother was a teacher. She holds a master’s degree in Literature and Literary Criticism, as well as a doctorate in Communication and Semiotics from the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC). She has lived in São Paulo since 2004.

The young Micheliny spent most of her childhood in Arcoverde, a violent city in the semi-arid interior of Pernambuco. Exposed to violence at an early age, she was curious about what her father was doing in the military. She also lived in Tupanatinga, yet another violent city in the interior. It’s no surprise then, with her father’s encouragement, that she found release in writing poetry and stories as early as nine years old.

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Oh, what joy!

15 Sunday Jun 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Reviews - The Twisted Circle: A Novel by Rosaliene Bacchus

≈ 88 Comments

Tags

British Author Dawn Fanshawe, Five Star Goodreads Review of The Twisted Circle: A Novel, Guyanese African Historian and Politician Walter Rodney (1942-1980), Joy Amid Darkness

Front Cover – The Twisted Circle: A Novel by Rosaliene Bacchus
Cover Art and Design by Rosaliene Bacchus

Amid the crazy going on in Downtown Los Angeles since Friday, June 6, 2025, and subsequent federal deployment of National Guard troops and active-duty marines, I received good news from Dawn Fanshawe, a blogging friend in the United Kingdom, on Tuesday, June 10th. She sent me the link to her review of my novel, The Twisted Circle, on Goodreads.

A Five Star review! Oh, what joy! It’s such a blessing when a reader not only enjoys my storytelling but also takes the time to recommend it to others. Thank you, Dawn, for brightening my day during these uncertain times in an alternate reality not of my making.

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Resilience against Tornadoes on a Changing Planet

08 Sunday Jun 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Anthropogenic Climate Disruption, United States

≈ 62 Comments

Tags

Climate Change, Global warming, Joplin/Missouri/USA, Resilience after Severe Weather Disasters, Tornadoes in the USA, USA Tornado Alley

Tornado Damage Joplin – Missouri – June 1, 2011
Photo Credit: Bob Webster, Pryor/USA

As a resident of Southern California, I’ve yet to come face-to-face with one of those terrifying tornadoes I’ve seen in movies. Tornadoes don’t occur often in our state. Whenever they do occur, they are weak, ranked EF-0 in the Enhanced Fujita Scale, causing little damage. The reality of being pummeled by a violent tornado is a devastating, life-changing, traumatic experience. Such was the case for people living in Joplin, Missouri, on May 22, 2011, featured in the Netflix Documentary The Twister: Caught in the Storm, released on March 19, 2025.

The tornado that struck Joplin in 2011 was rated EF-5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, with maximum winds over 200 mph (320 kph). Ranked seventh among the top ten deadliest tornadoes in United States history, it is the deadliest so far in the 21st century.

With a population of more than 50,000 and a population density near 1,500 people per square mile, Joplin suffered extensive damage amounting to US$2.8 billion. According to the account recorded in President Obama White House Archives, the tornado first touched down in the southern part of the city at 5:41 p.m. local time. During the following 32 minutes, it headed eastward across the city, demolishing everything in its path for 13 miles (21 kilometers) and extending as much as a mile (1.6 kilometers) wide at its widest extent.

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