Cover Image: The Shift

The Shift

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I really enjoyed Melody Godfred’s Self Love Poetry collection, and this one was no different. Both her words and her voice are so soothing and comforting, and I really like the way she pairs her poems for maximum impact.

I think this collection comes at the perfect time when people need this kind of reminder and reassurance, and I’m very much looking forward to reading more from her!

Thank you Andrews McMeel Publishing and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my honest review!

Was this review helpful?

The Shift: Poetry for a New Perspective by Melody Godfred is a poetry collection with a theme of growth and change. The collection is fairly simplistic and is a rather quick read.
While this collection felt a bit stronger than her Self Love Poetry collection, I still found it too simplistic for my tastes. At times, it also felt like it had a toxic positivity feeling, which didn't sit well with me.

Was this review helpful?

I can not say enough about the author. Her way with words touches my heart everytime.

It takes courage to pour your soul into a book then share that book with the world.

Thank you for your beautiful poetry.

Was this review helpful?

This book of poetry is all about shifting perspective. With much of the book being written post pandemic it is about shifts in thinking from old ways to new ways and resetting your way of thinking.

I will admit up front that I don’t read much poetry and what I have read hasn’t often been in audio form (I listened to this as an audiobook). This was a very short quick read and it kept my attention all through the book. I really liked some of the poems included. They were very lyrical and heartfelt. However some (less than half) seemed a bit generic to me. It felt like things I’ve read before. I really liked the collection overall though.

My main complaint has to do with the audiobook. I don’t know why this was done but there are three sections to the audio. The first section is all the poems, the second section is exactly the same as the first only with some sound effects sprinkled in occasionally, and the third is some of the poems with an explanation by the author or why it was written and the meaning behind it. I think the repetition of having the same set of poems all over again was completely unneeded. I just listened to these why am I having to do this all over again? Either include the sound effects or don’t. It feels like this was something to just pad out how long the audiobook was. The sounds aren’t incorporated very well into the second part either. It just seemed random to me. (I very much liked hearing the poetry background and explanations though it really added a good insight on them.)

Overall I think I recommend this for poetry readers. Most of the writing is well done and I liked listening to it. (It helps that it is a very short quick read). If you have an hour and a half to kill this will do nicely.

Was this review helpful?

With Godfred pairing poems and anecdotes from before and after pandemic lockdowns in 'The Shift,' she poignantly illustrates hard truths we were all forced to examine and the beauty of the change that can come from uncomfortable reflection. Pandemic or no, this collection will speak to anyone going through a metamorphosis in their life. Be that a transition from high school to college, leaving your hometown, removing yourself from toxic relationships and environments, or even self-guided personal growth.

Once again an audiobook poetry collection narrated by the author herself, each poem is delivered exactly as it was meant to be heard.

Was this review helpful?

I had the audio so I did not see the sketches but they sound like they fit perfectly. I loved that the poems were done in pairs. It is also nice to have the author do the narration. She has so much emotion behind each poem. I was really pulled in. Thank you to Netgalley for the audio arc in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Many thanks to Netgalley, Andrews McMeel Audio and the author, for the ALC of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Shift is a beautiful collection of poems that shows the growth and shift in perception. The illustrations in the book adds to the words and brings magic to the pages. The poems are in pairs where the poet notes how she felt about certain aspects of life before the pandemic and now in the after.

As a reader the one thing that delights me is seeing development of character and this poetry collection is exactly that the before and after, the then and now. The poignant low flow ideas touched my heart and that is the beauty of poetry.

I had read this as an ARC, and chose to also listen to this because of two things, one it was read by the author herself, two, the ASMR reading. The poetry was read again with ASMR added to it, that made it even more of an experience with the soothing sounds of nature fitting to the poems added to the reading. The audiobook also had commentary about how and when Melody got inspired to write certain parts of the poetry. This was different experience as you get to see how and when the thoughts flowed through her.

Was this review helpful?

The Shift: Poetry for a New Perspective by Melody Godfred is the poet's second poetry collection, focusing on how we see the world and ourselves since the pandemic. I'm the kind of reader who has avoided reading about anything related to the pandemic but I wanted to pick this up immediately because of how much I adored Melody Godfred's previous poetry collection. I tried going into it with an open mind because I didn't think I could love anything as much as the previous book. While I didn't love it as much, I still really enjoyed it.

It's divided into two parts - one poem about the world before the pandemic and the other after. The poems focus more on the world and our perspective on it than individual emotions, though there are still a few themes around self-love. I definitely prefer the latter, which is why I think I didn't love this as much. Something about it kept me from entirely connecting with it the way I did before.
That being said, the writing in this is still beautiful and impactful, and there is a lot of powerful meaning in a lot of the poems. While some of them didn't resonate with me, many of them did, and I enjoyed the overall experience a lot.

When it comes to the audiobook itself, it is narrated by Melody Godfred herself, and I loved it. Her voice is perfect for this kind of narration, and it definitely enhances the experience. There is a regular audiobook, which is just a normal narration, and then an ASMR version which has sound effects and music. I liked the music but there were some sounds that were a bit jarring, and I got startled by them, which disrupted the overall flow of the poems. If you like music and sound effects, I think you'd enjoy it, but if you're sensitive to specific sounds, it would be better to pick up the regular version.

Overall, I really enjoyed this, and I recommend it if you'd like to read a poetry collection about the world, how it's changed, what is still the same, and how we can be as happy as possible in it.

Was this review helpful?