FEATURED POET: LIZ DOLAN. A Secret of Long Life has been nominated for the Robert McGovern Prize. Liz Dolan’s first poetry collection, They Abide, was published by March Street. A six-time Pushcart nominee and winner of Best of the Web and finalist for Best of the Net, Liz has received an established professional in poetry fellowship from the Delaware Division of the Arts and has been chosen for residencies at The Atlantic Center for the Arts and Martha’s Vineyard. She has also won fiction prizes from The Nassau Review, The Master’s Review and The Cobalt Review’s Baseball Poetry Prize. Liz serves on the poetry board of Philadelphia Stories. She is most grateful for her ten grandchildren, all of whom live one block away; they pepper her life.
A Secret of Long Life has been nominated for the Robert McGovern Prize. Please check it out at Cave Moon Press
The Spelling Test
Teach your brother to spell
Sister Caritas said.
So each night Michael and I
fifteen months apart, sparred
at the enamel table over
i before e and double b’ s.
How I relished folding up
my sleeves like Sister,
tossing my braids
as if they were a veil
and stabbing his decieve,
occassion and bubles
with my red pen.
He’d rip the papers to shreds
and convert them to confetti.
Each session ended in poisoned barbs,
You dumb ox, I’d hiss.
Ass kisser, he’d sneer.
Today through a trach,
my brother spits out muddled syllables
his left side paralyzed, his lips trembling.
When I massage his neck and shoulders
I test him still,
Where are my fingers, I ask.
Here,
here
or there?
― Liz Dolan
For My Best Friend 1950
In the cellar was buried the dismembered body
of the cherry-cheeked child butchered by the super of 598.
And even though I thought it a myth to keep girls like me
tethered, I still hugged
the curb as I skipped by. And hugged
it even more closely on that day in June
when your father and mine
bolted up the slate stairs to the roof bellowing,
Get the bastard, get the bastard. Pressing my flesh
against ochre stucco, I, wall-eyed and slack-jawed,
saw your trembling five-year-old body
brindled by the ruby rays of the stairwell’s
stained glass, your flaxen hair buried
in your mother’s corn-flowered house coat,
the X of her arms like crossed swords guarding you.
― Liz Dolan
WRITE YOUR POEM:
Too Soon
You understand that this is a draft
and that my tears keep screwing up the line
You were the only one who heard the chord
of my line breaks. Awkward first steps
where modern poems offer not meter.
They offer few rules.
Han Shan offered no confessions
The Tao understands only still waters
Still, you left yesterday and I cry.
This is all a draft. There is no tomorrow
There is no scrubbing the audio
filling the effects
sanding the burr
tuning to 440
grand flood lights
thunderous applause
perfected rehearsals.
You are only gone.
Please come back.
― Doug Johnson
We write in context. For all the artifice of language, rules and infinitives, our poems die when they only live in a grammar book. Liz wrote "My Best Friend" My best friend died yesterday in a car wreck. She was the first one to recognize my efforts. There is no distance from that event. The river of the internet will wash by. We will talk of cats, grandchildren and politics. Poetry has always been the fleeting record of a drop of water rushing by. Write your poem. Someone needs your words.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Friday, October 24, 2014
October 2014
FEATURED POET: Terry Martin earned a
B.A. from Western Washington
Howling Like a Coyote
The Spelling Lesson
University
and M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Oregon. She’s been fortunate to make her living
reading, writing, and talking with students for 35+ years. An English Professor at Central Washington
University, she is the recipient
of CWU’s Distinguished Professor Teaching Award and the CASE/ Carnegie U.S. Professor of the
Year Award. Her poems, essays, and articles have appeared in hundreds of publications and she has edited
books, journals and
anthologies. Her first book of poems, Wishboats,
won the Judges’ Choice Award at
Seattle’s Bumbershoot Book Fair in 2000. Her second book, The Secret Language of Women, was
published by Blue Begonia Press in 2006. She lives with her family in Yakima, Washington. Check out her
latest release The Light You Find at Blue
Begonia Press
Howling Like a Coyote
Are you authorized
to speak
And howling like a coyote?
For these apple trees
Felled by roaring chainsaws
Acre after acre?
Are you able to explain
What the orchard means to do
With hundreds of stumps
Left in graveyard rows?
What it intends to make
Of this emptiness?
What do you know
About the fierce whirring
Of windmill blades on blue days,
Pickups parked along the
irrigation ditch,
Smudge pots rusting away in
weeds?
Who gave you permission
To look at beer cans and
Tumbleweeds rolling through?
At the For Sale sign in the widow's yard,
Faded laundry flapping on her
line?
Ask yourself if poems are enough,
Or if you'd be better off
Slinking into the sagebrush
― Terry Martin
Root Canal
The even heaviness
of the lead apron
presses down, down.
Then he enters,
minty breath and aftershave,
tips my chair back
again, shines a bright light,
props my mouth wide
open,
shoots in novocaine,
begins poking and
prodding and pulling
and I’m as surprised
as he is
when tears begin
pouring down my cheeks
but, mouth propped,
can’t tell him why.
Am
I hurting you? he
asks, alarmed.
I shake my head
‘no,’ signal him to continue.
I can’t tell him
that the body remembers
what the mind longs
to forget
and for a moment I’m
you.
Surgeries, chemo,
radiation,
and finally hospice,
and the buttery light
of your living room
where, in those final days,
you depended on me
to do for you
those things you
used to do for me.
The stuttering drill
mocks me.
Should
I stop? he asks
again.
Embarrassed, I shake
my head.
Keep
going, I want to
say.
We’ve
all got to just keep going.
Instead, I rub the
pastel hem
of my paper bib like a prayer.
― Terry Martin
WRITE YOUR POEM:
When was the last time your best poem came from your eye doctor? All of us accept our blink of an eye photography. All of us accept our blink of an eye letters in email.
The thing is the photograph all came to us because of a French artist and chemist Daguerre. In 1832 he finally completed the developing process through a happy accident. He started the process after meeting someone through his eye doctor.
Here's the thing. It was a slow artistic process. It was a slow collaboration. Cooking for hours for your family. Long drives in the desert with your friend. The poem is a daguerrotype of words. It creates an image through slow development. A poem offers that chance. What memories do you craft. Check out Liz Dolan's poem in her upcoming release from Cave Moon. Her and Terry have crafted daguerrotypes of love. Write your poem.
Teach your brother to spell
Sister Caritas said.
So each night Michael and I
fifteen months apart, sparred
at the enamel table over
i before e
and double b’ s.
How I relished folding up
my sleeves like Sister,
tossing my braids
as if they were a veil
and stabbing his decieve,
occassion
and bubles
with my red pen.
He’d rip the papers to shreds
and convert them to confetti.
Each session
ended in poisoned barbs,
You dumb ox, I’d hiss.
Ass kisser,
he’d sneer.
Today through a trach,
my brother spits out muddled
syllables
his left side paralyzed, his
lips trembling.
When I massage his neck and
shoulders
I test him still,
Where are my fingers, I ask.
Here,
here
or there?
― Liz Dolan
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
September 2014
FEATURED POET: Lawrence Matsuda was born in the Minidoka, Idaho Concentration Camp during World War II. He and his family were among the approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese held without due process for approximately three years or more. Matsuda has a Ph.D. in education from the University of Washington and was: a secondary teacher, university counselor, state level administrator, school principal, assistant superintendent, educational consultant, and visiting professor at Seattle
University (SU).
University (SU).
In 2005 he and two SU colleagues co-edited the book Community and difference: teaching, pluralism and social justice, Peter Lang Publishing, New York. It won the 2006 National Association of Multicultural Education Phillip Chinn Book Award. In July of 2010 his book of poetry entitled, A Cold Wind from Idaho was published by Black Lawrence Press in New York. His poems appear in Ambush Review, Raven Chronicles, New Orleans Review, Floating Bridge Review, Black Lawrence Press website, Poets Against the War website, Cerise Press,Nostalgia Magazine, Plumepoetry, Malpais Review, Zero Ducats, Surviving Minidoka (book), Meet Me at Higos(book), Minidoka-An American Concentration Camp (book and photographs), and the Seattle Journal for Social Justice.
In addition, eight of his poems were interpreted in a 60 minute dance presentation entitled, Minidoka performed by Whitman College students in Walla Walla Washington (2011).
Please check out his latest book
Glimpses of a Forever Foreigner: Poetry and Artwork Inspired by Japanese American Experiences
WWII Route to Freedom
Idaho does not accept our dead.
Twin Falls mortuaries
turn away Minidoka Japanese.
Dr. Abbot calls Aunt Amy’s time.
Medics in whites gently slide
her from the bunk
for a journey to Salt Lake City,
first excursion outside prison gates.
Cousin Hisako snatches
shadows passing in her dreams.
Don’t worry, Amy
whispers,
tell Tetsuo I am fine.
Tetsuo, her son, a U.S. soldier,
volunteers from Minidoka
to defend freedom in Europe.
He takes aim and blasts a padlock,
gates of Dachau swing open.
Nazis have no coal,
crematoriums silent,
odors of death permeate the air,
something like a mixture
of chocolate pudding, urine,
feces and rotting meat.
Naked bodies stack
like tangled tree limbs,
pungent fluids trickle down drains.
In Minidoka coal rages in potbelly stoves.
When did we hear of crematoriums?
It seems we knew.
It seems we always knew.
When our boys came home
we knew for sure.
WWII Route to Freedom
appears in Raven Chronicles, Volume 19, Winter 2012-13.
― Lawrence Matsuda
They Turn Their Eyes
Away
Minidoka barbed wire
snags hope like tumbleweed.
One thousand miles away
Shoichi Okamoto, at Tule Lake California*
twists and falls, a bullet in his head,
cost of disbelief of a guard.
The soldier walks free,
fined a dollar for “unauthorized use
of government property”.
Wind blows alkaline dust
through the tarpaper barrack.
Bachan prays for
freedom,
strikes her singing bowl.
Minidoka crumbles in her dreams
when black rain splatters Hiroshima
and sunlight sparkles silver
through thin barrack doors.
Freedom will not be open arms
and welcome banners.
Red rose petal showers
reserved for real
Americans.
We are the vanquished foe
walking thorough the victor’s lair,
gauntlet of 1000 eyes.
Anxious to pass unnoticed
in our yellow skin,
we will turn away from
Remember Pearl Harbor
remarks.
Mushroom clouds inhabit
the irises of our eyes.
_______
* Japanese American
Concentration Camp during World War II
They Turn Their Eyes
Away appears in
The Seattle Journal
for Social Justice , Volume 11, Issue 1, Summer 2012. Seattle University School of Law.
― Lawrence Matsuda
WRITE YOUR POEM:
Pablo Neruda wrote love poems. Pablo Neruda wrote about justice. All of his poems had an inherent transcendental beauty. There is no way to get around the political nature of certain poems. If your poems inflame the hearts of the majority then you're poems bring crowds and applause. If your poems inflame the hearts of the minority then you are ignored until lines get drawn. He succeeded with love poems as a young man. He had to flee as an old man.
Write your poems. Write for transcendent beauty. Notice everything around you. Ignore the audiences. Beauty brings about a reaction. Be willing to stand in your own beauty.
Leave me a place underground,
XXVI From: ‘Las Piedras del Cielo’
Leave me a place underground, a labyrinth,
where I can go, when I wish to turn,
without eyes, without touch,
in the void, to dumb stone,
or the finger of shadow.
I know that you cannot, no one, no thing
can deliver up that place, or that path,
but what can I do with my pitiful passions,
if they are no use, on the surface
of everyday life,
if I cannot look to survive,
except by dying, going beyond, entering
into the state, metallic and slumbering,
of primeval flame?
Friday, August 22, 2014
August, 2014
FEATURED POET: Sam Hamill is the author of more than a dozen collections of poetry, including Destination Zero: Poems 1970–1995 (1995), Almost Paradise: New and Selected Poems and Translations (2005), and Measured by Stone (2007). Influenced by Ezra Pound,William Carlos Williams, Kenneth Rexroth, Denise Levertov, and Hayden Carruth, Hamill “presents a model of honest, consistent, undisguised political engagement: he articulates not only a vision of peace with justice, not only his relish for work to achieve that vision, but his sense of the role that poetry can play,” as Publishers Weekly noted in its review of Measured by Stone. Hamill has also published several collections of essays and numerous translations, including Crossing the Yellow River: 300 Poems from the Chinese (2000). Hamill’s own poetry has been translated into more than a dozen languages. Hamill has been awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, and the Mellon Fund, and has won the Stanley Lindberg Lifetime Achievement Award for Editing and the Washington Poets Association Lifetime Achievement Award. (Bio adapted from the Poetry Foundation)
Make sure to check out his latest collection Habitation by Lost Horse Press release party at Elliott Bay Bookstore September 2
Make sure to check out his latest collection Habitation by Lost Horse Press release party at Elliott Bay Bookstore September 2
What the Water Knows
What the mouth sings, the soul must learn to forgive.
A rat’s as moral as a monk in the eyes of the real world.
Still, the heart is a river
pouring from itself, a river that cannot be crossed.
It opens on a bay
and turns back upon itself as the tide comes in,
it carries the cry of the loon and the salts
of the unutterably human.
A distant eagle enters the mouth of a river
salmon no longer run and his wide wings glide
upstream until he disappears
into the nothing from which he came.
Only the thought remains. Lacking the eagle’s cunning
or the wisdom of the sparrow, where shall I turn,
drowning in sorrow? Who will know what the trees know,
the spidery patience of young maple or what the willow confess?
Let me be water. The heart pours out in waves.
Listen to what the water says.
Wind, be a friend.
There’s nothing I couldn’t forgive.
Sam Hamill
Border Song
For Esteban Moore
Sometimes I like to read
the poets of the borderlands,
slowly from their native tongue,
my scant Spanish failing at each turn,
the gists and piths of poetry.
There are images, there are tones,
that crosses the rivers
of time and space and cultural bounds
to touch the heart of one
who struggles in the journey.
Poetry is made of flesh and bone.
What is a nation, what is our song,
and what is a man, a woman, but
a tear and a smile, un abrazo fuerte
por favor, tender and temporal,
wine in the cup, a song in the ear,
when the struggle itself is everything.
It is what we know and what
we have to work with―bare hands,
dreams that restore
dreams that restore
big hungry hearts and minds
made whole by what we share:
mi pan, mi agua, mi canto amor.
Sam Hamill
WRITE YOUR POEM!
The prophets have their secrets
And their certain magic.
I am not a prophet.
I know only the ordinary.
That is my Tao.
Sam mentions in various interviews that poetry by its nature cannot claim to be apolitical. If you are a seeker of the Tao, then where does that put your poetry? The recent events in Ferguson, MO really beg a deep painful silence alongside the protests. Consider Deng Ming-Dao's comments. "In the case of a personal attack, the follower of the Tao would ask if so could they have prevented it? Of course, they would defend themselves, but even then, their self-defense would come from long solitary training and not from frantic outer directed violence." (365 Tao: Daily Meditation San Francisco, CA: Harper)
So read the Tao above. Read Harlem below. Center yourself in the tension. Write a poem that reflects a mirror. If it still beats the heart of others, then write a new poem. When you write the mirror poem put one copy on a leaf before they fall. Float it down the river. Write your poem. It is the lack of a mirror that grieves the souls of our children and elders.
Harlem
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
Langston Hughes
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
JULY 2014
FEATURED POET: Kelly Cressio-Moeller’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Boxcar Poetry Review, Crab Creek Review, Crab Orchard Review, Gargoyle, Pirene’s Fountain, Poet Lore, Rattle, Southern Humanities Review, THRUSH Poetry Journal, Valparaiso Poetry Review, and ZYZZYVA as well as in Diane Lockward’s book, The Crafty Poet. She shares her fully-caffeinated life with her tall husband, two ever-growing sons, and their immortal basset hound in Northern California. She’s at work on her first book of poems.
Speaking of the Crab Creek Review!
Seattle-based literary journal Crab Creek Review is in its 31styear of publishing the best writing from the Northwest, and beyond. New Editors-in-Chief Ronda Broatch and Jenifer Browne Lawrence feature a host of marvelous poets and writers including Judith Barrington, Wyn Cooper, Tom C. Hunley, Tina Kelley, Bill Neumire, and Diane Seuss. The results of the 2014 poetry contest, judged by Sarah Vap will appear soon. Visit Crab Creek Review at Crab Creek Review or find them on FaceBook
Magnolia Soulangiana (saucer magnolia)
Staring at a tree, I
felt the pulse of a stone ~ Theodore Roethke
i
mistrustful of evergreens.
defined as deciduous was part of the appeal.
every living thing should shed its skin once a year.
one left in the back, nearly dead – perfect, i’ll take it.
ii
sculptural as coral, judging by the photo.
slender bare branches promised to proffer dark purple
saucers of tea, goblets of port, depending on my mood.
if she were lipstick, i would name her violet empress.
iii
she didn’t look like much. a few jaundiced ovals resembled
leaves. six years until she felt strong enough in smooth
pewter
skin. long buds broke open in late winter, unexpectedly
white
with pink veins, little scars, along tepals soft as
well-worn suede.
iv
to be transplanted, separated from everything you’ve known,
takes a healthy yawn of time to revive, recover, return to
normal.
offer fertile ground warmed by morning light, roots will
serpent
underground, search for water, take hold. find a way to
thrive.
―Kelly Cressio-Moeller
*first published at Pirene’s
Fountain, Spring 2011, vol. 4, Issue 9 and in the anthology
“First Water: Best of Pirene’s Fountain”, Glass Lyre Press, 2013.
Ode
to Yellow
after
Dorianne Laux
Canary.
Gosling. Bumblebee stripe. The eyes of blackbirds.
Citrine. Pollen.Residue of saffron. The brick road in Oz.
Gold.
Dandelion & harvest moon. Butter & whipped honey.
The middle child traffic light. Chardonnay. Cowardice.
The cabin’s porch light. A newborn’s jaundice.
Eagle’s feet. Iodine. Goldenrod in a mason jar.
Custard. Fireflies. Gingko trees in wintertime.
Sunflowers.
Their lover.
Egg yolks. Telephone books. Black-eyed Susans. Bruises.
Crime scene police tape.
Legal pads my father used to write upon.
German postal bikes. The Beatles’ submarine.
Taxi. Hydrant. Urine. Toenail fungus.
Her fingertips after twenty years of inhaling.
Parchment just before burning.
Flames.
Kelly Cressio-Moeller
first published in Diane Lockward’s, “The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop” from Wind Publications, 2013
first published in Diane Lockward’s, “The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop” from Wind Publications, 2013
The poem above strikes you as a person sifting through snapshots in a box they found in the attic. Before we snapped all our photos on our phone all of would have piles of memories tossed in boxes.
Find one of the boxes. Sift through your cell phone. Write a poem that shows the tension between disconnected images that find their only common place in your life.
Print two copies on recycled paper. Hand one to a friend. Make a paper boat and float the other one in a nearby river.
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