September 30, 2016

Sarah McKinstry-Brown

LETTER TO MYSELF, 15 YEARS AFTER THE AFFAIR

He said that if he had more lifetimes, he’d give you
at least two. But you really just wanted the one

you made for yourselves between midnight and sunrise
every other Thursday night at the Holiday Inn.

You knew it was easy to be the other woman.
When he pulled you toward him,

neither of you had to work to soften. There was no trash to take out,
no dishes, no children, nothing stacked

between you. Friends said you deserved better,
but deserve had nothing to do with it.

The night he said, Baby, we were born to bruise,
his hand turned up the stars, and that stupid city

finally receded until nothing was left but the two of you,
famous in each other’s arms, your bodies working like cogs,

the thick motel curtains shut tight
against the coming morning.

You didn’t even mind the dark that came after,
when he slipped away to drive his kids to school

and you were left to your dreaming,

their small faces, echoes,
slowly coming into focus.

from Rattle #52, Summer 2016

[download audio]

__________

Sarah McKinstry-Brown: “I’ve wanted to see my work printed on Rattle’s pages ever since I read my first Bob Hicok poem, ‘Elegy,’ in the journal (circa 2003). Hicok’s poem was written in one long stanza with these incredible line breaks, and reading the poem felt a lot like driving along California’s infamous costal highway 101. At night. In dense fog. I know because I’ve driven that highway before under those conditions, my hands at ten and two, gripping the wheel, praying the whole way. I guess that’s how I feel a lot of the time when I’m writing anything that’s worth a damn—it feels dangerous, but I know I have to do it if I want to stay alive and find my way back home.” (website)

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May 10, 2014

Bob Hicok

HOW THE MIRROR LOOKS THIS MORNING

Probably the size of the six volt
made it seem life-giving. I had wires, a drawer
of red and green and black wires
in a thicket where socks belonged,
I had this idea that a six volt battery
would bring the cat back to life
and cut it down from where it hung

but nothing, even when I put wires
in anus and mouth, even when I touched
the Xs of its eyes
with copper. I can ask now
why I believed that,
or why I killed the cat
in the first place, or why can’t I travel
at the speed of sound? The kitty
that comes around every evening for food
purrs closer and closer
to my rehabilitation. God, on the other hand,

sent a train into a bus last night,
if you believe in God, in trains, in time
as something that can be broken down
into units, and spoken of, and held
as much as anything can be held,
can anything be held
that doesn’t cut through what asks
to hold it? Twenty-two dead,
and yet I think of myself
as a happy person.

from Rattle #32, Winter 2009

__________

Bob Hicok: “I think of myself as a failed writer. There are periods of time when I’ll be happy with a given poem or a group of poems, but I, for the most part, detest my poems. I like writing. I love writing, and I believe in myself while I am writing; I feel limitless while I’m writing.”

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December 1, 2013

Cristin O’Keefe Aptowicz

THINGS THAT HAPPEN DURING PET-SITTING I REMIND MYSELF ARE NOT METAPHORS FOR MY HEART

The dog refuses to eat. I keep filling her bowl
anyway: new kibble on top of old, hoping
that it will suddenly becoming tempting.

When I write, the cat watches me from a chair.
When I look at him, he purrs loudly, leans forward
so that I might touch him. I don’t.

Now the dog refuses to come out of her cage,
no matter what I say, no matter how wide I open
the door. She knows that I am not her master.

On the couch, the cat crawls on top of me
and loves me so hard, his claws draw blood.
I was so lonely, I did nothing to stop it.

There are lights in this house I want to turn on,
but I can’t find their switches. Outside, an engine
turns and turns in the night, but never catches.

from Rattle #40, Summer 2013

[download audio]

__________

Cristin O’Keefe Aptowicz: “Last year was a tough one for me and I am grateful for the poets whose work pulled me through it, among them Kevin Young, Bob Hicok, James Hearst, Sharon Olds, Jennifer L. Knox, Shanny Jean Maney, Matt Cook and Jim Daniels. If my poetry offers even half the tender comfort, sweet understanding and/or hard laughs these poets pulled from me, I would high-five the moon.” (web)

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November 25, 2013

Review by Michael Meyerhofer

If I Falter at the Gallows by Edward Mullany
IF I FALTER AT THE GALLOWS
by Edward Mullany

Publishing Genius Press
2301 Avalon Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21217
ISBN: 978-0983170655
2011, 84 pp., $13.25
publishinggenius.com

As a poet, editor, and generally over-opinionated loudmouth, part of my soapbox issue is that many experimental poets seem to be experimental just for the sake of being unconventional and pseudo-provocative—in other words, their poetry is innovative but gutless. Not so with Mullany’s If I Falter at the Gallows. These poems are stylistically unique, mostly short (often just a few lines) with an obvious stream-of-consciousness vibe to them, but what really makes them leap off the page is their underlying tenderness, their unabashed examination of the human condition that reminds me of those famous Chinese poets, Li Po and Tu Fu. There are echoes of William Carlos Williams and James Wright here, too, especially in the following, short poem:

In Praise of Narrative Poetry

Into the bleak
lake on the estate

on which no
one resides, falls

the quiet
rain.

At the same time, these poems are distinctly postmodern, almost always favoring brief, lyrical snapshots over richly textured storytelling. For instance, consider the following, two-line poem in which the title (“The Horse that Drew the Cart that Carried the Condemned Man to the Gallows”) serves as a de facto opening line: “lived for a while longer/ and then died.”

The risk of such a poem is obvious; however, for me, the brevity serves to do an end-run around my natural contempt for blanket statements about mortality by focusing not on the condemned man (referenced only in the title), but the equally mortal beast-of-burden whose survival was simply a stay of execution. In that, it somewhat reminds me of “By Their Works,” a Bob Hicok poem in which Hicok tells the story of the Last Supper by focusing not on the central characters, but on the perspective of a waitress.

While a potential criticism of such short poems is that their ambition is overshadowed by gimmick, that would be missing an additional element that adds tension to Mullany’s work: the element of surprise. Often, that surprise resonates with social commentary that, exactly because of his poems’ blindsiding brevity, has an additional haunting quality. Consider the following five-line poem, New Light:

The sun is hardly
up over

the fields at the edge of the city

when the city
itself explodes.

Usually in poetry workshops, I find myself telling my students over and over again to be specific. What beer did you drink? What movie were you watching? What city were you in when a lover broke up with you over text message? In the case of this poem, though, the lack of background detail—especially when coupled with the points earned by the gentle pacing and pastoral beauty of the opening lines—frees my mind to imagine everything from literal atrocities (such as the atomic bombings of World War II) to more generalized, post-Cuban-Missile-Crisis, Hollywood-inspired fears engraved in our collective subconscious.

As I said, though, Mullany’s poems aren’t simply clever; while his poems are far from confessional, what really drives them is their underlying humanity. Take this short example, “No Children”:

When I come back
as a ghost, and try
to tell you all the things
for which I’m sorry,
you will hear nothing
but the sounds of the dryer,
which doesn’t mean
you’re not listening.

This playful but distinctly metaphysical poem reminds me of Hemingway’s oft-referenced Iceberg Theory in that its sparse details hint at a rich and tragic backstory, despite the fact that the poem also has echoes of dark humor that help carve it into the subconscious for further analysis.

Put another way, many of these poems remind me of Zen koans in that they short-circuit the brain in the best possible way. For instance, I feel like I get the following poem, even though I couldn’t explain it to you for a million bucks (except maybe to say that it has something to do with opposites and contrasts and the tension created between life and death):

The Entombment of Christ

Assume a black
dot on a white

wall and a white
dot on a black

wall are facing
each other.

Probably my favorite poem from this whole book, though, is “The Not So Simple Truth,” which manages to be unabashedly philosophical precisely because it draws its energy not from rote philosophical statements, but tactile, gentle imagery culminating in a musical, final turn:

Potatoes. Dirt and
water. And a soft

towel left for us while
we shower. These

things are no
truer for their

plainness than peas
or pus or leprosy.

Despite the fact that virtually all the poems in this book are crafted with an extreme economy of language, the book itself still feels as broad in style as it does in subject matter. Again, these aren’t confessional poems, nor do they make much use of narrative, but their raw lyricism, twists, and humor speak to a deep intellect bolstered by innovation and, above all, a quiet sense of compassion.

__________

Michael Meyerhofer’s third book, Damnatio Memoriae, won the Brick Road Poetry Book Contest.  His previous books are Blue Collar Eulogies (Steel Toe Books) and Leaving Iowa (winner of the Liam Rector First Book Award). He has also published five chapbooks and is the Poetry Editor of Atticus Review. (troublewithhammers.com)

 

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February 27, 2001

Tribute to the Sonnet

Conversations with
Alice Fulton & Molly Peacock

 

#32Releasing in December, 2009, issue #32 celebrates the “little song,” poetry’s most enduring traditional form. Shakespeare and Petrachan sonnets, a backwards sonnet, free verse sonnets, blank verse sonnets, clean sonnets, dirty sonnets, invented sonnets, sonnets that praise sonnets, sonnets that mock sonnets, a sonnet that uses only one rhyme-word fourteen times…all capped off with a full heoric crown of fifteen sonnets by Patricia Smith. The variations are limitless—there’s nothing more liberating than a little restriction. T. S. Davis introduces the special section with a personal essay on his journey into form.

Also in the issue, Alan Fox interviews Alice Fulton and Molly Peacock. Along with 60 pages of open poetry, we share the 11 winning poems from the 2009 Rattle Poetry Prize, culled from over 6,000 candidates.

 

The Sonnet

T. S. Davis The Recrudescence of the Muse
Tony Barnstone Bad Usage
Michelle Bitting Silence Took My Tongue…
Chris Bullard Back Story
Wendy Taylor Carlisle The Circus of Inconsolable Loss
Peter Coghill Gabriella
T. S. Davis Whooping Rendezvous
Paul Dickey A Knack for Losing Things
Caitlin Doyle Backward Sonnet for a Forward Thinker
Jehanne Dubrow The Cold War, A Romance
Alan Fox Dover
Carol Frith Black Tights, a Halter Top
Ernest Hilbert Cover to Cover
Luke Johnson The Heart, Like a Bocce Ball
Mollycat Jones Unholy Sonnet Number One
Stephen Kessler Any Hack Can Crank Out…
Jeff Knight Knives of the Poets
Gregory Loselle from The Whole of Him Collected
Austin MacRae Library Lovers
Patti McCarty Make Mine Darjeeling
Mary Meriam The Romance of Middle Age
Jessica Moll Costume
Ron Offen Aubade for One Dismayed
Jessica Piazza Panophilia
Catherine Esposito Prescott To a Hurricane
Patricia Smith Motown Crown
Elizabeth Klise von Zerneck Freedom
Thom Ward Rumpus, Cohesion, Mess
Donald Mace Williams The Venturi Effect
John Yohe The Ghost of Frank O’Hara

Poetry

Cristin O’Keefe Aptowicz At the Office Holiday Party
Michael Bazzett The Disintegrated Man
Francesca Bell With a Little Education
Tammy F. Brewer One of Those Topics I Shouldn’t…
Erik Campbell This Small Thing
Claire W. Donzelli Two Haiku
Christine Dresch Nuts
Laura Eve Engel Did You Come Yet?
Joseph Fasano North Country
Matthew Gavin Frank After Senza Titolo, 1964
Glenn J. Freeman The Transparencies
Ed Galing Dancing
Peter Harris Living Large
Lilah Hegnauer Exceptions with the Sloughing Off
Michael Hettich The Wild Animal
Bob Hicok How the Mirror Looks…
Colette Inez The Tuner
John Philip Johnson Midas on the Beach
Michael Kriesel Threesome
Rachel Inez Lane Catch Me, Alfred, I’m Falling
Ken Letko The Power of Light
M Salt
Marie-Elizabeth Mali Campaign Season
Kerrin McCadden Intersection
Laren McClung Confluence of Rivers and Mouths
Sally Molini Meal Ticket
Kent Newkirk Fixing Cars
Molly Peacock A Tale of a T
The Softie
J. F. Quackenbush To a Child
Rebekah Remington Happiness Severity Index
David Romtvedt On Broadway
Ralph James Savarese Nor Yet a Dream of War
Lauren Schmidt Grandma Zolie Gives Unheeded…
Mather Schneider Between Us and It
Prartho Sereno Electrodomestico
Lee Sharkey Berlioz
Paul Siegell 06.25.00 – PHiSH…
Charlie Smith The Casing
John L. Stanizzi S-Plan
Arthur Vogelsang Environmental
David Wagoner Before the Poetry Reading
Mike White Nascar
Jeff Worley Lucky Talk

Rattle Poetry Prize Winner

Lynne Knight To the Young Man Who…

Honorable Mentions

Michelle Bitting Mammary
Mary-Lou Brockett-Devine Crabs
Carolyn Creedon How to Be a Cowgirl in a Studio…
Diana Goetsch Writer in Residence, Central State
David Hernandez Remember It Wrong
John Paul O’Connor Beans
Howard Price Crow-Magnon
Patricia Smith Birthday
Alison Townsend The Only Surviving Recording…
Emily Kagan Trenchard This Is the Part of the Story…

Conversations

Alice Fulton
Molly Peacock

Cowboy & Western Poets

Conversations with
Robert Pinsky & Natasha Trethewey

 

#30 - $7Releasing December 2008, issue #30 celebrates the poetry of the western range with work by 24 cowboy & western poets. Developing primarily as an oral tradition, the genre is often thought of as a hybrid between story and song–a collection of tall tales and folk ballads that sit well around the campfire. But the image of the cowboy has been mythologized by Hollywood, and the image of the cowboy poem has been oversimplified, as well.

Modern cowboy & western poetry is as complicated and eclectic as the modern cowboy–there are plenty of appearances by cattle and corrals and ranchers breaking horses, but the topics range from love and politics to ecology and philosophy. And while many of the poems speak in meter and rhyme, plenty of others roam wild and free. The tribute section even includes the longest poem we’ve ever published, a 20-page western retelling of Beowulf by Donald Mace Williams.

Also in the issue, Alan Fox interviews three-term Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky and Pulitzer Prize winner Natasha Trethewey. Along with 60 pages of open poetry, we share the 11 winning poems from the 2008 Rattle Poetry Prize.

 

Cowboy & Western Poetry

Rod Miller A Brief Introduction to Cowboy Poetry
Robert A. Ayres If You Give a Government Trapper…
Bruce Berger Rider
J.V. Brummels Over the Hill Where Rock and Roll Dies
Joshua Dolezal Duende
Cal Freeman Farrier
Thea Gavin Cottonwood Blues
Christine Gelineau Breaking Babies
D.W. Groethe When There’s Frost Upon the Ponies
Mark D. Hart The Calf in the Pantry
M.E. Hope Cow Songs
Mikhail Horowitz Wild Bill Hacker
Bil Lepp Muscled Loins and Haunches
Lisa Lewis A Question About Horses
Jennifer Malesich Love Letter After the Fact
Al “Doc” Mehl Fence Posts Made of Stone
David Romtvedt Spring in the Country
Luke Shuttleworth Showdown
Red Shuttleworth A Plastic Dashboard Jesus?
Laurence Snydal Authority
Jeff Streeby Sheep Kill
Larry D. Thomas Steers in Summer, Lowing
Donald Mace Williams Wolfe
Paul Zarzyski The Car That Brought You Here…

Poetry

Malcolm Alexander Semiotics
Sherman Alexie Scarlet
Dick Allen Considering the Trebonites
Chris Anderson Reality Homes
Tiffany Beechy On the Poverty of My Imagination
Helena Bell Dalton’s Law
James Best Expiration Dates
Sally Bliumis-Dunn Gratitude
Traci Brimhall At a Party on Ellis Island, Watching…
Trent Busch Dark Coats
Marcus Cafagña Last Meal
Alicia Casey On the Day of Translation Workshop
Bruce Cohen An Honest Man’s Profile for Internet…
Elizabeth J. Colen Aposematic
Jennifer Pruden Colligan Pentimento
Megan Collins My Grandfather Only Wears Brown
Gregory Crosby Everything & Nothing(TM)
David M. deLeon Not Everything I Do Is Magic
Gary Dop Poem of Four Explanations to Poems…
Anna Evans Crash
Alan Fox The Only Thing
Ed Galing Guided Tour
David Lee Garrison Bach in the DC Subway
Ted Gilley Virginia
Paula Goldman Bonnard’s Wife’s Ashes
Bob Hicok Things Rich and Multiple and Alone
A Family Matter
Eric Kocher Dispatches from the Dream…
Hilary Melton Under the Knife
Brenda Paro My Problem with the World
Marge Piercy End of Days
Doug Ramspeck Gift Skull
Eric Paul Shaffer Telephone Lines
Joan I. Siegel Memory
John Spaulding The Tears of India
Alison Townsend Blue Willow: Persephone Falling
William G. Ward A Visit to the SuperMart
Charles Harper Webb Swimming Lesson
Jonathan Wells Please Hold

Rattle Poetry Prize Winner

Joseph Fasano Mahler in New York

Honorable Mentions

Phyllis Aboaf The Neighbor’s Tale
Meghan Adler After Six
John Brehm Dear Internal Revenue Service
Ted Gilley The Tulip Tree
Douglas Goetsch Nameless Boy
Rebecca Lehmann Watching the Wizard of Oz…
Hilary Melton My People
Robert Peake Road Sign on Interstate 5, San Diego…
Deborah Tobola Dream/Time
Amie Whittemore The Calendar

Conversations

Robert Pinsky
Natasha Trethewey

Tribute to Visual Poetry

Conversations with
Marvin Bell & Bob Hicok

 

Releasing June 2008, issue #29 features a tribute to visual poetry, including 37 mixed-media poems in a 64-page, full-color special section on heavy paper. We didn’t know what we’d get when we put out a call for visual poems, and what formed was an eclectic mix of everything but the kitchen sink. We’ve got poem-paintings, collages, comic poems, concrete poems, cut-up poems, found poems, ephemera, landscape haiku, edible poems, and (it’s true) poems written on Venetian blinds. Curious yet?

Also in the issue, Alan Fox interviews Marvin Bell and Bob Hicok, and more of the best poetry around. We needed to stretch to 224 pages just to fit it all in.

 

Visual Poetry

 David Alpaugh  Space Monkey
 Strip Taze
 Ruth Bavetta  I Am Anything
 The End and the Aim
 The Making of History
 Bernett & Worman  Enter the Painting
 Burdick & Foster  Playground
 The Dream of Trees
 Nick Carbo  Saussure’s Remedy
 Amy Sara Carroll  i
 Peter Ciccariello  Drowning Poem
 Daniels & Brodsky  For Rent
 The American Pedestrianus
 Kip Deeds  Walden, Sprawl, and All
 Elevated Findings
 Denise Duhamel  The Johari Window
 Ian Finch  Early Light
 Krista Franklin  Boy w/Joker
 Built by Angels
 Hage & Waber  Self-Portrait with Purple Erogenous …
 Kurt Kleidon  Time Starts Starts
 Susan Landgraf  Founder
 López & Gibson  We All Flew South
 Orr & Orr  To Be Alive
 If To Say
 Autumn
 Voltaire Q. Oyzon  The Love Curve
 Ellen Peckham  Red Fence
 Louis Phillips  The Periodic Table of Elements
 Jessy Randall  Poetry Comic #1
 Poetry Comic #2
 Marilyn Stablein  Winter Walk
 Arlene Tribbia  10,000 Loves You Have Known
 Patrice Vecchione  Oh, No, Not the House, Again…

Poetry

 José Manuel Arango  The Beggar’s Figure
 J. Stiles Askew  Moments
 Michael Bazzett  Expiration Date
 Marvin Bell  Basho’s Frog
 Creatures
 Bonnie Bolling  Reproduction
 Tom Boswell  Harvesting the Carrots
 Jennifer Boyden  Inside This Next Vase, Likely
 Tanya Chernov  Someone Else’s Wet Styrafoam
 Kevin Clark  Class Politics
 Martha Clarkson  How She Described Her Ex-Husband …
 Bruce Cohen  The Jerry Lewis Telethon
 John Colasacco  The Preakness
 Paul F. Cummins  Under Cover
 James Cushing  The Man with the Corpse …
 Paul Dickey  Wheat State Salvation
 ellen  Five Stages of Grieving
 Alejandro Escudé  The Driving Range
 Anthony Farrington  How to Write an Erotic Letter
 Alan Fox  Coupling
 Joy Gaines Friedler  Assisted Living
 Peter Funk  The Town Drunk’s Last Stand
 Jeannine Hall Gailey  Advice Given to Me Before …
 Pamela Garvey  Western Michigan University, 1989
 Maria Mazziotti Gillan  Shame Is the Dress I Wear
 Jack Granath  After the Japanese
 Jonathan Greenhause  Fire Flowers
 Jennifer Gresham  Halfway House for the Incoherent
 Jared Harel  My Grandfather’s 90th
 Jamey Hecht  First Divorce
 Bob Hicok  Show and Tell
 Lovely Day
 Richard Jackson  Silences
 Michael Jemal  Letter to Hugo from Union Street
 Allan Johnston  Goats
 Michael Jon Khandelwal  Hay Elote
 Robert W. King  Work
 Lynne Knight  The Lesson
 Caryn Lazzuri  Monarchs
 Andrew Miller  Claiming to Be Canadian
 Joe Mills  On Attending a High School …
 Dave Morrison  Repairman
 Jason Nemec  Every Drunk Has a Passport
 John Paul O’Connor  Stone City
 Sherman Pearl  Demolition Derby
 Rainer Maria Rilke  Sonnets to Orpheus: Part 2 & #13
 Hayden Saunier  Self-Portrait with the Smithfield Ham…
 Timothy David Shea  Looking at a Photograph …
 J.R. Solonche  The Lover of Stone
 Donna Spector  John Berryman Used to Sway
 Sarah Pemberton Strong  After 75 Years, She Finally Gets Angry
 Jennifer K. Sweeney  Birds of America
 Chrys Tobey  The Loss of Lemons
 Tony Trigilio  Dougie’s Sister Exposes Herself
 Brian Trimboli  Things My Son Should Know …
 Nathaniel Whittemore  Death and Tacos
 Douglas Woody Woodsum  Nocturne with Cat and Spider
 Elizabeth Wurz  After My Third Tattoo
 Meg Yardley  Origami
 John Yohe  You Might
 Matt Zambito  The Louvres
 Jane Zwart  The Perishable

Conversations

 Marvin Bell
 Bob Hicok