May 16th, 2009
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D.R. James
THE DAY I GOT MY TIMING DOWN
It was in that phase of pure
sarcasm, midteens, when guys
work out an awkward stance,work their pack’s patter
till they maybe have it. I don’t
really remember the day butthe single-moment wonder of hitting
my first come-back just right
by accident, then their free, truelaughter and my perfect follow-up,
the never looking back. From there
a career: from Senior Class Clown,to smooth talker in any crowd, to
flip teacher spinning lit, to wordsmith
chiseling chin-up come-backsto the tin-clad sarcasms
every life dishes out as it
disarms or drops you orleaves you hanging, slamming
its clanging locker door in your
gullible, stuttering face.
–from Rattle #27, Summer 2007
May 15th, 2009
Review by Sandee Lyles
ORDINARY GENIUS
by Kim Addonizio
W. W. NORTON & COMPANY, INC.
500 Fifth Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10110
ISBN 978-0-393-33416-6
2009, 288 pp., $16.95
www.wwnorton.com
“Art is therapeutic. It helps you to take something that is within you and make a place for it outside of yourself,” Kim Addonizio declares. Co-author of National Book Award finalist The Poet’s Companion, Addonizio creates a place to find inspiration and tips on birthing a masterful poem in her latest endeavor.
Ordinary Genius: A Guide for the Poet Within is an exceptional book for poets who have lost their muse or potential poets who just need a jump start. Addonizio brings a fresh approach and endless pages of prompts to spark and ignite even the most stubborn writer’s block. She exhibits examples from classic as well as contemporary poets and then teaches how to build, from the examples, one’s own poem. She shares insights from the masters such as Plath, Camus, and Ginsberg, to name a few. She rebukes Ginsberg’s claim about first thoughts being best and proclaims that sometimes “first thoughts are the worst thoughts.” She re-qualifies his statement later by stating, “It’s about letting go of the conditioned mind–all of those received thoughts–and tuning in to some level of thinking that’s deeper than our usual concerns.”
In addition to her countless ideas regarding getting started, the book is also « Read the rest of this entry »
May 14th, 2009
Luisa A. Igloria
CIRCLE OF CRANES
I will stand like the flame in the flame…
I will stand very still in your absence…
—David St. JohnThey have stepped out of one
rectangular sheet, the six
that now touch wingtip
to wingtip and, wordless,
hum the white notes of the song
hollowed out of paper—anthem
of a kind of reverse creation:
folded from substance,
a well of apparently
nothingBut even so the empty
space shimmers: a disc
echoing still with the swift
crosswise slash of scissors
the careful pruning of neck
from neck and wing
from wingNewly sprung, each
genuflects stiffly to the empty
circle, remembering how
the grasp of the world
came coursing through
the limbs; and what
it felt like to lift entire,
like dying, from
the blade
–from Rattle #27, Summer 2007
May 13th, 2009
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Elizabeth Hoover
ATTEMPT
after Imogen Cunningham
She had studied the art of the tea ceremony
in Nagasaki before the war
and said that, although technically perfect,
she lacked something—the translator struggled for a bit
then settled on sad sentience,
but it was more—the beautyof imperfection, the absence
of desire, a hint of perishability.
Something I search forhere on Geary Street all dusted up
in midmorning light—jamming, shattering
glorious in the broken windows of an abandoned shop.When I first started taking pictures I was terrified
of missing things, I struggled to capture
the haze that collects over a morning
spent making love, tried to keepthe thumbprint shadow under the nub
of his collarbone. Now I consider the light
its shifting syntax, the way the glass adds
a playful grammar, before I swingmy camera off my shoulder. Now he is just
a ghost I draw through dripping fingers,
flashes of white on the negative
bring choked love-calls to my throat.If I get the angle right,
this photo will have three layers of glass
and my reflection nested in architectural lines:the machinery of my hands
the ruin of my face.The quality the woman spoke of is elusive
and must contain that which is dying
and that which is exuberantly alive.She said she never achieved it.
She stopped practicing
after the bomb killed her family.Watching the film she brought I wondered
what could I give her
for her story
for her sorrow.Why use a machine to make a bomb
into a brilliant moon that resolves
silently in majestic clouds?All around me
perfect shadows
balanced compositions
go unphotographed.I stand here
in this back alley
finding not perfection
not tranquility surrounding emptiness,but the memory of his face
turning from the dark hallway
into the bedroom where a window
illuminates his cheekbone
darkens his eyes.The light twists into an improbable arc
slicing the frame—I let it pass.
–from Rattle #27, Summer 2007
May 12th, 2009
Peter Harris
WILL BUDDHISM SURVIVE?
Only if we all become that second baseman
who dove to his right, snagged the liner, thudded
to a stop on his belly, too late to get up or change
hands, too late to do anything but what he could
not do, had never tried, could not have done if he had tried:
shovel the gloved ball backhanded over his back
without looking to the shortstop. No,not to the shortstop, but to where the shortstop
would be when he flew across the bag,
barehanded the ball, toed the bag, swiveled,
elevated above the maverick ox of truth barreling
down on him from first, high enough to make the throw
for the double play. Game over.
The not-doable, done. Outside the scriptures.
Outside thought: No sound at all inside
the redundant thunder of applause.
–from Rattle 27, Summer 2007
