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Poet James Merrill once described his fellow writer Elizabeth Bishop as “a genius masquerading as an ordinary woman.” I thought of that line after spending two days this past summer working on a profile for PBS-TV’s Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly on the Quaker folk singer Carrie Newcomer.

Newcomer has been described as a “prairie mystic” (she lives in Bloomington IN) and as “a minister of the wide-eyed gospel of hope.”

She sounds a bit like Joni Mitchell, one of her early idols, and her lyrics, like Mitchell’s are deeply personal, but in a way that plumbs the sacred in the everyday. I think calling her an “Ignatian folksinger” wouldn’t be too much of a stretch.

Newcomer’s recorded 14 CDs in recent years, and my profile on her for PBS corresponded with the publication of her first book of poems, “An Impermeable Life,” which is also the title of her latest CD.

In addition to the TV segment for Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly, I also interviewed Newcomer for WGLT Radio about her writing process. I love one of the things she said in that interview about our modern-day propensity for multi-tasking: instead of trying to see how many activities we can juggle at once, what if we just focused on one activity at a time?

Here is the TV profile as well as the radio interview that aired on WGLT Radio, the National Public Radio affiliate in central Illinois.

Judith Valente is America‘s Chicago correspondent.

Judith Valente, a regular contributor to NPR and "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly," is a journalist, poet and essayist. She is the author of Atchison Blue: A Search for Silence, a Spiritual Home and a Living Faith, named best spirituality book in paperback for 2014 by the Catholic Press Association and one of the three best spirituality books by Religion Newswriters Association. Her book, The Art of Pausing, was runner up for the Catholic Press Association book award in 2014.

Ms. Valente began her work as a staff reporter for The Washington Post. She later joined the staff of The Wall Street Journal, reporting from that paper's Chicago and London bureaus. She was twice a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, first in the public service category as part of a team of reporters at The Dallas Times Herald in the 1980s. In 1993, she was a finalist for the Pulitzer in the feature writing category for her front page article in The Wall Street Journal chronicling the story of a religiously conservative father caring for his son dying of AIDS.