Poetry

Poetry. It's so personal, isn't it? 

I wrote these mainly for myself and specific people. but the few chance readers have found something meaningful in them, so I'm happy to offer them up for sale as well. 

Click on the links to purchase on Amazon or Smashwords :0)

            The Necessary Ones

Vohn’s third book of poetry is about connection: to places, creativity, imagination and, most importantly, to each other.

This collection is comprised of portraits of loved ones & friends, the poet, and a host of fictional characters, all longing to fit within the puzzle of existence.



                     Thin Places

If there is one thing that dominates our lives as much as love, it is loss.

In Thin Places, Tabitha Vohn chronicles the journey through one of her most painful experiences of loss, grief, the search for introspection, and the slow road to healing.

Through self-examination and spirituality, as well as portraits of loved ones, fictional heroines, and lost souls, Thin Places declares that love is not a choice, but how we love, is.



             Only for a Moment

I saw him
Couldn't leave him where I found him
He changed my life irrevocably
Reminded me of the loves and losses
All pieces of me.


Intensely personal, shamelessly honest, and oftentimes an admission of inner ugliness, Only for a Moment explores ideas of transience, transition, and redemption through the battlegrounds of metamorphosis from young girl to woman.

Each poem presents a snapshot; a puzzle piece of what ultimately becomes a collective consciousness. A road map to trace back through the labyrinth of people and experiences that define us

[Sorry guys; this one is currently off the market. Long story short, there are some poems that I wrote while I was estranged from a particular loved one and others I wrote while coming to terms with issues from long ago. These poems do not paint the (albeit unnamed) loved ones in a pleasing light, which I no longer feel comfortable about. They are my truth, but do I really need to put them out there for the world? Perhaps readers could relate, but do I really want to use those I claim to love as object lessons? And so, once I have an opportunity, I will revisit this collection and, potentially, republish an updated edition.]

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