Different Ways On Different Days
Expressions from my soul in verse
by
Book Details
About the Book
The poems contained in this book cover all aspects of the author’s life, his moods, his loves, his work, his love of nature, his patriotism and his moments of inspiration, in short his feelings and attitudes about everything. He writes of his early experiences in the natural settings in Appalachia. He writes of many of the places he visited during his career in the Air Force. He writes of his days while working on the railroad, while exploring the tundra and the tropics. More than write he vents his feelings and bares his soul through his poetry. He believes his poetry should have rhythm and should rhyme as well as expression, and most of them do. He did not set out to write a book. He wrote from day to day to give air to his mood at any given time in his daily life. As a result, he has written verses to express almost any feeling, and to fit almost any occasion. So you, the reader, are invited to look through the pages. You will probably find one that fits your mood just right at any given time. The time of the writings range from mid 1970 to 1999.
About the Author
Lowell Mckinney was born on Tams Mountain in southern West Virginia on August 6, 1937. He experienced first-hand the rigors of hunger, poverty and near death as an “Urchin of Appalachia.” but his is a success story. Though at the time economically poor, he considers himself as environmentally and spiritually rich for having grown up in an awe-inspiring natural environment at the knee of a spiritually devout mother. He worked for a brief time on the Norfolk and Western Railroad during the close of the steam locomotive era, an experience that had great impact upon him. He enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in 1959. While in the Air Force, he took advantage of the tuition assistance programs provided by the Air Force. He spent many hours taking evening college courses, eventually achieving a Master’s Degree in education. He also succeeded in advancing through the ranks, capping off a 22-year career and retiring at the rank of Major, – a far cry from his Appalachian beginnings. His last tour in the Air Force was at Albrook Air Force Base in what was then the Panama Canal Zone. While there, Major McKinney taught Sunday school at the Base Chapel. After retirement from the Air Force, Major McKinney worked briefly at the Arctic Circle as an electronics technician on the Distant Early Warning (DEW) Line. After that, he settled in the Philadelphia area and worked as a logistics engineer for General Electric, Computer Sciences Corporation and Marconi Corporation. He is now fully retired, and lives in West Chester, PA.