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Archive for the ‘Poetry’ Category

“Where I Turn Bad” by Michelle Bonczek

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Spring 2008, Volume 32, Number 1

I start thinking of flammable material, the kind
  we buy cheap from India
        but then I remember my grandfather’s story
about a chapel carved out of salt. White steeple, white
  door, white people. We’ve been here way too long.
        So when the light changes, I speed
  until you and I glide
        over the freshly laid road, the smooth road
we fucked into existence, only you
  are not in the car and the white line that splits
the road in half, reminds me of how
  we cannot live without salt. But this all has to do
        with the road. I light a cigarette, change
the subject, only I do not have cigarettes
  and don’t smoke. The road is black
        like someone else’s lungs. The cilia grow
hard, like art, from the tar. Sculptures, scars, bread. The road.
  The turn I made at the light is illegal. But it’s the one
        that brought me
to you. I’m illegal not because I’m too young
  or because I’m a virgin in some country
        where virginity is collateral for land, or wine,
or salt, a country in which you are not a king or a pirate
  washed ashore a beach whose shells tongue your ear
        when you’re not listening.

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“Jubilee Writes to Ten-Cent Pearl on the Ambassador Motel’s Complimentary Stationary” by Ariana-Sophia Kartsonis

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Fall 2007, Volume 31, Number 2

What a sad winter, my God! What a sad winter! An orange petticoat hangs a pink dust cloth and it’s raining.
- Miltos Sachtouris

Recalling how whole Cincinnatis slept while we wandered around in the so-late-it-was-early-again new snow smother of January. January, cold to the bone, January. I confided I know he’s left town because the city feels like a collapsed lung. I pointed to the tree in the row of trees needle-bare and paired off with streetlights as if they were waiting for a square dance to begin. I was there when I knew he’d be in the corner store. I was there, then I felt him before I saw him.

You talked about the novelist, the one you’d written a hundred poems or more for and on St. Valentine’s Day I’ll see you talking to him and your face will look like a young girl face-open and hopeful as your name, Pearl. But I grow ahead of myself now. Because it’s still January and the street is as stopped and serene as a snowglobe village and there’s no one wide awake as we are and we’re laughing like we might have laughed before Eve found a tree not dissimilar to this and before she or God or the whole world bit us and before we learned to bite back. I’m alone now, Pearl. Alone the way you are after you find what you love most in the world and then lose it. I’ve lost it, Pearl. Cities and scripts and they’re asking me to make them laugh, my Lord, isn’t that a riot, though?
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“Boxcar” by Arielle Greenberg

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Fall 2007, Volume 31, Number 2

You’ve got that shiny boxcar
painted Rage-on-Wheels in fire letters on the side
& you’ve been driving for years
& you zip through town on just your own
heidy-ho and I’ll tear you down.

You carjack me and carjack my sister,
carjack my baby sister and my baby girl
& drag us around by the long brown hair
shot with gold that we got from you,
heidy-ho, toodle-oo, names spelt out in fire.

No engine, no motor,
just a little boxcar jacked to the hilt
& its speedy missus, shooting off gold
from the crowns in our teeth, jaws cocked wide
as we’re dragged around, heidy-ho, years on end, end in flame.


Arielle Greenberg is the author of My Kafka Century (Action Books, 2005) and Given (Verse, 2002) and the chapbook Farther Down: Songs from the Allergy Trials (New Michigan, 2003). Her poems have been included the 2004 and 2005 editions of Best American Poetry and a number of other anthologies, including Legitimate Dangers (Sarabande, 2006), and she is the recipient of a MacDowell Colony fellowship. She is co-editor of three forthcoming feminist poetry projects: with Rachel Zucker, Women Poets on Mentorship: Efforts and Affections, an anthology of essays and poems (Iowa, 2008); with Lara Glenum, Gurlesque, a theory-driven poetry anthology (Saturnalia, 2009); and with Becca Klaver, an anthology of contemporary poetry on girlhood (Switchback, 2008). Greenberg also studies American subcultures, and edited a college reader, Youth Subcultures: Exploring Underground America (Longman, 2006). She is the poetry editor for the journal Black Clock, a founder and co-editor of the journal Court Green, and is the founder-moderator of the poet-moms listserv. She is an Assistant Professor in the poetry program at Columbia College Chicago and lives in Evanston, IL with her family.