Poet Hagit Bat-Eliezer is publishing her fifth book of poems, "Broadening the View," published by "Bitaun Shira" and edited by Dr. Oren Eilam.
The poems in the book broaden the perspective on many areas of life. The book includes eight chapters. "You and I" deals with love and eroticism in a passionate and even daring way. The poems in the chapter "Seeing the Other" focus on others out of empathy and identification. In the chapter "Man and Nature" the poet writes about the interrelationships between the two out of a great interest in the animal and plant world.
The poems "Family Pictures" paint different, sometimes hidden, faces of the charged social framework. The poems "Years" express deep sorrow for old age, which is the lot of a person who prolongs life. The poems "In the Field of Creation" refer to the craft of writing. In the poems "A Year of Idleness" the poet opposes the government's forceful attempts to change the system of government, and in the final chapter "This War" she expresses her pain for the victims of the massacre and the victims of this never-ending war.
The poems present an interpretation of emotion in energetic, creative-renewable language. Several poems are written in meter and rhyme and are musical-melodious. The poet often takes an optimistic approach, in which, following the presentation of a problem, comes a proposed solution based on insights from life experience. The poem "The Path," printed on the back cover of the book, and only on it, constitutes a kind of guide to a progressive life.
The book's rich design was masterfully created by Roy Chaik in consultation with the poet.
Every book of poetry by Hagit Bat Eliezer, Pnina. Her compositional wisdom is indescribable, and not only does her writing art meet a standard of uncompromising quality, she also appreciates existing art, and includes poems by other poets as an extraordinary tribute.
Hagit Bat Eliezer is a singing and writing artist without narcissism or selfishness.
Simply a special and unique person.
A highly recommended book!
In Hagit bat Eliezer's words, every word is as strong as iron, and in the reader's mind, it is likened to gold.
Hagit values democracy and a state that is run fairly towards all its residents.
Hagit also knows that although we are humans, we are descended from mammals and, like them, we have a desire to live, to exist in comfort, and also instincts that are sometimes stronger than us.
Congratulations on the publication of the fifth book!